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Non-Fiction Barbecuing & Grilling Cooking Cooking Essays Holiday Cooking Outdoor CookingUnlike Dune, this series has been out of print for some time. Shame! No one does it better than Herbert but Dune-Mania has left too much of his best work unread and unknown. Dune was a masterpiece, no question. But the series devolved into action novels - the work of creating his universe did not have to be re-done so the rest was just what happens next (and as Brian continues the series, what happened before). The Voidship...
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This book has all of Dune's intricacy of plot and character development but is a far more concise and elegant presentation. It's actually a sequel to Destination:Void, which I found to be interesting but definitely one of his lesser works. Subsequent books along this story line are pretty good too. I highly recommend that you read this book when you have time to finish it fairly quickly. Otherwise, you'll lose track of the...
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I can't think of a more terrifying world than Pandora, Herbert's world of weird and deadly animals and mutant clones, all created at the whim of Ship, the accidental god-machine from his novel Destination:Void. Again, Herbert places his poor charaters in a constant and dire struggle for survival, only this time it's not just humans who want to stay alive. The whole drama plays out under the watch of the sometimes benevolant,...
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Raja Flaherty (of Destination Void) returns to find a people obssessed with worShip. This is a tale of a very disturbing future on a planet which makes Arrakis seem cushy. As complex as Dune and with some characters far more repugnant than the Harkonnens, here is a bizarre and shocking account of a malevolent/benevolent force shaping man's evolution. Very enjoyable
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