God Emperor Of Dune

ebook / ISBN-13: 9780575104440

Price: £8.99

ON SALE: 30th December 2010

Genre: Fiction & Related Items

Select a format:

Paperback

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

What The Lord of the Rings is to fantasy, Dune is to science fiction. Presenting God Emperor of Dune, the fourth book in one of the most influential series of all time, which has inspired countless other stories for more than half a century, this is an awe-inspiring world, and a story of truly epic scope.

More than three thousand years have passed since the first events recorded in DUNE. Only one link survives with those tumultuous times: the grotesque figure of Leto Atreides, son of the prophet Paul Muad’Dib, and now the virtually immortal God Emperor of Dune.

He alone understands the future, and he knows with a terrible certainty that the evolution of his race is at an end unless he can breed new qualities into his species.

But to achieve his final victory, Leto Atreides must also bring about his own downfall …

Read the series which inspired the Academy Award-winning and jaw-dropping cinematic events Dune: Part One (2021) and Dune: Part Two (2024). A science fiction spectacular like no other, this is a deeply climate conscious novel, and a compelling family saga for the ages.

Dune reading order:

Dune
Dune Messiah
Children of Dune
God Emperor of Dune
Heretics of Dune
Chapterhouse Dune

Reviews

I know nothing comparable to it except The Lord of the Rings
Arthur C. Clarke on Dune
A tight mesmerising fabric, interwoven with a potent element of mysticism ... intensely realised
Brian W. Aldiss on Dune
Powerful, convincing, and most ingenious
Robert A. Heinlein on Dune
A novel of extraordinary complexity ... the work of a speculative intellect with few rivals in modern SF
The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction on Dune
A fourth visit to distant Arrakis that is every bit as fascinating as the other three -- every bit as timely
Time
One of the monuments of modern science fiction
The Chicago Tribune on Dune
An astonishing science fiction phenomenon
The Washington Post on Dune
It is possible that Dune is even more relevant now than when it was first published
The New Yorker on Dune