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Dune author
Dune author










dune author

He said, “I don’t want to have to tell my grandchildren, ‘There’s no more Earth left for you. He spoke at the first Earth Day in April 1970 in Philadelphia. I mean, I went to school in Berkeley, so I don’t want to sound derogatory. The Whole Earth Catalog, which was … I don’t want to say it was a hippie publication. So if water were your finite resource, well, let’s make it all a desert. So he started thinking about that and he started thinking about finite resources, and he zeroed in on water. And what that meant was that the party-the group that controlled the water in, say, Mesopotamia-would control the environment. One of the things he noticed was that in history there was something he called hydraulic despotism.

dune author

He told me once that he couldn’t read one page of an encyclopedia without reading the opposite page. Perhaps the most relevant layer, right now, is the environmentalism. It’s like a great old movie-you watch it and there’s stuff in there you’ve never noticed before. I mean, that’s incredible, finding more and more. He also liked to say that he’d like to send his readers spinning out of the end of the book with detritus clinging to them from the characters and the events and the scenes. It was kind of a tricky, psychological thing that he did. He wrote these layers so that you could go back and reread the book. Was that something your father ever talked about?ĭad told me he did that intentionally.

dune author

WIRED got on the phone with him to talk about the novel’s legacy, its many interpretations, and why now might be a good time to reimagine the book that inspired so many works of sci-fi that came after it. He’s been advising on the script and believes it will be the definitive adaptation of his father’s book. In 2003, Brian released a biography of his father, Dreamer of Dune, and he estimates that he’s contributed nearly 3 million words to the canon himself.īrian Herbert is also, yes, involved with the upcoming Dune film from director Denis Villeneuve. For much of his youth, he butted heads with his dad, and it wasn’t until he was an adult and doing his own writing that he began to appreciate Frank’s influence. The younger Herbert also manages his father's estate, which essentially makes him the keeper of the canon-a big deal when it comes to one of the most beloved stories in all of science fiction.īrian’s OK with that-he’s been working in the Dune universe for decades-but it wasn’t always so. Frank Herbert, who wrote the original book and many subsequent novels, died in 1986, but his son, Brian Herbert, went on to cowrite several more novels set in the world Frank built. Pictures and HBO Max are creating, it is possible Dune will be a cinematic experience only - which is oddly suiting considering the material.ĭune: Part 2 is set for release on October 20th, 2023.It’s not an easy thing, being the heir to Dune. Of course, it is interesting to note that Spaihts is no longer directly involved in the show and no updates on its progress are available. In fact, we’d be shocked if The Sisterhood isn’t somehow based on Herbert and Anderson’s additions to Dune.

#DUNE AUTHOR MOVIE#

We presume part of Spaihts job will be looking at those spinoff books for other movie or TV possibilities.

dune author

Anderson, it concluded the initial Dune cycle, but also allowed the pair to carry on writing books within the universe. Completed by his son Brian Herbert and author Kevin J. But beyond the six novels Herbert wrote in his life time is the seventh he partially wrote. It’s philosophical, sometimes obtuse, and interesting in all the ways that make it hard to adapt to a big budget studio film. As the writer notes, it gets “stranger and more epic as it carries on” with the God Emperor setting up for an eventuality which will not occur for thousands of years after his death and the whole of humanity thrust into a new status quo because of his choices. Beyond those practical production issues is Herbert’s tale itself. Although originally set to produce the Dune: The Sisterhood television series, he told the site he “ended up getting moved off of it to work, not just on Dune: Part Two, but to investigate other cinematic prospects in the Dune universe.” We’re going to presume his mission is to build a pitch for the remaining novels past Dune Messiah that account for eventually losing all but one member of the cast and the filmmaker who made Dune as success. And it seems, Spaihts is in charge of navigating that jump in time.












Dune author