Chapterhouse: Dune
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Varies, see individual formats and editions
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Language
English
Description
Frank Herbert's Final Novel in the Magnificent Dune Chronicles—the Bestselling Science Fiction Adventure of All TimeThe desert planet Arrakis, called Dune, has been destroyed. The remnants of the Old Empire have been consumed by the violent matriarchal cult known as the Honored Matres. Only one faction remains a viable threat to their total conquest—the Bene Gesserit, heirs to Dune’s power. Under the leadership of Mother Superior Darwi Odrade, the Bene Gesserit have colonized a green world on the planet Chapterhouse, and are turning it into a desert, mile by scorched mile. And once they’ve mastered breeding sandworms, the Sisterhood will control the production of the greatest commodity in the known galaxy—the spice Melange. But their true weapon remains a man who has lived countless lifetimes—a man who served under the God Emperor Paul Muad’Dib...
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Contributors
Brick, Scott Narrator
Herbert, Brian author of introduction
Herbert, Frank Author
Kellgren, Katherine Narrator
Morton, Euan Narrator
Herbert, Brian author of introduction
Herbert, Frank Author
Kellgren, Katherine Narrator
Morton, Euan Narrator
ISBN
9780593201770
9781427207494
9781440619236
9781427207494
9781440619236
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Similar Series From Novelist
NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Readers of the Dune saga will find similarly thought-provoking stories in the Hainish series. Both contain complex, vividly described worlds and emphasize the characters as much as their adventures, which provide food for thought as well as physical challenges. -- Katherine Johnson
While Dune contains more complex world-building and Song of Ice and Fire focuses on characters' descriptions and actions, themes of social struggle and individual loyalty drive both dramatic series through generations of characters. Song of Fire and Ice is more violent, sexual, and morally ambiguous. -- Matthew Ransom
Dramatic, descriptive, and richly detailed, these character-driven science fiction sagas set on strange planets in distant galaxies, boast extensive world-building and intricate plotting, immersing readers in their complex stories. In both series, societies in crisis seek salvation from unlikely sources. -- NoveList Contributor
Strong protagonists control the fates of worlds in these intricately-plotted science fiction series, where the detailed setting is a fully realized character in its own right. These series create new cultures and include space travel and complex political machinations. -- Kaitlyn Moore
These world-building series, both starring strong female protagonists, imagine a far future where psychic ability plays an important role in the fate of humankind. Each series is a richly detailed vision of the possibilities of technology, science, and alien life. -- Mike Nilsson
Though Dune is a space opera and Broken Earth is an Afrofuturist science fiction tale, both of these intricately world-built science fiction series feature complex family relationships within a world filled with political strife and hidden mystical power. -- Stephen Ashley
These cinematic space operas with a strong sense of place and coming-of-age themes feature bewildered protagonists who are destined for greatness in fantastical worlds suffused with elements from Greek tragedies (Dune) and Japanese mythology (Kojiki). -- Andrienne Cruz
These dramatic, sweeping series feature large conflicts between worlds and smaller ones as powerful families get embroiled in political intrigue. Both feature detailed world-building and characters with psychic abilities, though Dune's tone is darker and more thoughtful. -- Kaitlyn Moore
Fans of speculative stories with complex world-building and political intrigue will enjoy both of these sweeping series. Dune is a space opera, while Masquerade is more of an epic fantasy. -- Stephen Ashley
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NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Readers of the original Dune books by Frank Herbert will want to continue with the series taken over by his son, Brian, as well as exploring Brian's other fiction and his nonfiction, including a biography of his father. -- Katherine Johnson
These world-building authors create thought-provoking science fiction by invoking engaging characters in fascinating settings with imaginative technology. The schisms and alliances between spirituality and science are themes shared by their intricately plotted novels. Descriptive narrative, shifts of perspective, and dramatic action fuse into compelling reading. -- Matthew Ransom
Wil McCarthy and Frank Herbert share a penchant for galaxy-spanning science fiction. Their work is focused on immortality -- attained either through a natural substance or highly sophisticated technology -- and its long-term social effects. Both thought-provoking writers create world-building space operas filled with rousing adventure and wild invention. -- Mike Nilsson
In their intricately plotted and sweeping science fiction epics, both N.K. Jemisin and Frank Herbert create worlds with complex mythologies and characters forced to make difficult decisions amid their grand heroic plans. -- Stephen Ashley
Alien worlds spring vividly to life in the works of Frank Herbert and Arkady Martine. Impressive world-building and creatively imagined nuances among alien cultures set the stage for political intrigue between large casts of characters in both authors' dramatic, complex, and intricately plotted space operas. -- Alicia Cavitt
Both Frank Herbert and Neon Yang write sweeping space operas that incorporate complex mythological and political elements. Herbert's writing tends to be more descriptive than Yang's spare prose. -- Stephen Ashley
Fans of Frank Herbert's epic science fiction series Dune will appreciate Seth Dickinson's science fiction and epic fantasy novels. Both authors create intricately plotted stories with impressive world-building featuring imaginary battles, imperialism, alien life, intrigue, betrayal, conspiracies, and revenge. Flawed characters add depth to their suspenseful and thought-provoking stories. -- Alicia Cavitt
Fans of high concept, sweeping science fiction epics will enjoy the works of Frank Herbert and Cixin Liu. Both authors write stories that intensify as they progress, but Liu's tales are focused more on hard science, while Herbert's incorporate more fantasy elements. -- Stephen Ashley
Both China Mieville and Frank Herbert create inventive and intricately plotted science fiction novels featuring detailed world-building that vividly describe life, politics, and commerce on remote planets. Fantasy elements like giant earthworms, krakens, and psychic abilities add complexity to their thought-provoking stories which can often be read allegorically. -- Alicia Cavitt
Though Tamsyn Muir's work is snarkier than Frank Herbert's more serious writing, both are known for writing dramatic and complex science fiction with deeply intricate world building. -- Stephen Ashley
Readers who enjoy speculative fiction featuring intricate world-building will appreciate the work of Frank Herbert and Ken Liu. Both Herbert's space operas and Liu's Asian-influenced epic fantasy novels revolve around rivalries, schemes, military strategies, political ambitions, intrigue, and imaginary battles involving large casts of characters. -- Alicia Cavitt
Science fiction authors Frank Herbert and Kim Stanley Robinson create richly detailed worlds set on alien planes inhabited by large casts of characters whose ideas and backgrounds vary wildly. Their stories are atmospheric, issue-oriented, and thought-provoking. Robinson writes hard science fiction while Herbert's stories contain fantasy elements. -- Alicia Cavitt
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