The Road to Dune
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
US 1st ed. cover art | |
Author | Frank Herbert, Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson; edited by Patrick LoBrutto |
---|---|
Cover Artist | Stephen Youll |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Dune universe |
Genre(s) | Science fiction novel |
Publisher | Tor Books imprint, Tom Doherty Associates, LLC |
Released | September 2005 |
Media Type | Hardback |
Pages | 489 |
ISBN | ISBN 0-765-31295-6; EAN 978-0-765-31295 |
The Road to Dune is a science fiction companion book to the Dune novels by Frank Herbert, Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson. The book was released in September 2005. The Road to Dune is also the name of a 1985 work of short fiction by Frank Herbert, published in his short story collection Eye[1].
Contents |
[edit] The Road to Dune in Eye (1985)
Frank Herbert's own short work The Road to Dune takes the form of a guidebook for pilgrims to Arrakis, illustrated by Welsh artist Jim Burns. The work takes place after the fall of Padishah Emperor Shaddam Corrino IV and the ascension of Paul Atreides to the throne in the original novel Dune. Herbert's Road discusses the major sites in the capital city, Arrakeen, including the Grand Palace and Temple of Alia. It also features images (with descriptions) of some of the devices and characters seen in the novels, including Paul's personal ornithopter, an Ixian glowglobe, Princess Irulan, Duncan Idaho and Reverend Mother Mohiam.
[edit] The Road to Dune (2005)
This companion work to the Dune novels includes an alternate novel based on Frank Herbert's original notes for Dune, letters between Frank Herbert and his editor, the original article by Frank Herbert that inspired the creation of Dune — "They Stopped The Moving Sands" — as well as the short stories in the Dune universe written by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson and unused chapters from Dune and Dune Messiah.
[edit] Spice Planet
Spice Planet is an alternate Dune story written by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson based upon the original story outline that Frank Herbert made for Dune[2]. It features House Linkam, an early House Atreides temporarily taking control of Duneworld from their rivals, House Hoskanner (the forerunner of the Harkonnens) in order to settle a dispute between them: the Hoskanners received a monopoly concession on the recently discovered Duneworld, but as melange grows in popularity in the Empire, other Houses begin to dislike the Hoskanner's wealth and push House Linkam to challenge House Hoskanner; the Emperor, in cahoots with the Hoskanners, orders Linkam to take over Duneworld for two years and if they produce more melange, then they would receive the concession - else it would go permanently to the Hoskanners. Much like in Dune, the Hoskanners sabotage and thwart to the best of their abilities, although the Linkams enlist the help of the Imperial Planetologist to devise a way to neutralize the sandworms and vastly increase the efficiency of operations.
The story holds has some obvious links to the original Dune novel, such as many of the same characters but there are some key themes that are under-developed in this version:
When we arranged all the chapters and read through the remarkable outline, we found that Spice Planet was a unique and worthy story in its own right, not just a precursor to Dune. Although the harsh desert is very similar to the one familiar to millions of fans, the tale itself is thematically different, focusing on decadence and drug addiction instead of ecology, finite resources, freedom, and religious fanaticism.[3]
The work is an interesting view into "what-might-have-been" had Frank Herbert bowed to the pressure of his editors and written a novel at a length of most paperbacks during the mid-1960s — approximately 20,000 words.[4]
[edit] Letters of Dune
This collection of letters details the trials and tribulations that Frank Herbert went through in order to have Dune published in Analog magazine and later by Clinton Books. The letters detail how he was encouraged to cut the length of the novel and to ease up on his descriptions of Paul Atreides's prescient powers.
[edit] They Stopped The Moving Sands
They Stopped The Moving Sands is an uncompleted article about how sand dunes were held in place by specially designed grasses. The article was never published but was the impetus for Frank Herbert writing Dune.
[edit] Short stories
The Dune short stories A Whisper on Caladan Seas, Hunting Harkonnens, Whipping Mek and The Faces of a Martyr by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson are included in this collection. The story Dune: Sea Child, originally published in Elemental, a 2006 benefit anthology for children who survived the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, is also included in the paperback edition of Road to Dune.
[edit] Missing chapters from Dune and Dune Messiah
Also included in The Road to Dune are deleted chapters and alternate scenes from the first two novels in the Dune chronicles, Dune and Dune Messiah. These include alternate and extended scenes between Paul and Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam, between Paul and Yueh, between Paul and Thufir Hawat, between Paul and Duke Leto Atreides, the passage to Arrakis on the Spacing Guild heighliner, the escape from Arrakeen and between Paul and a Muad'Dib mouse. The Dune Messiah scenes include a new chapter between Alia Atreides and Duncan Idaho, a new introduction and a discarded ending that features the death of the conspirators Edric, the Reverend Mother Mohiam and possibly Princess Irulan at the hands of a Fremen mob incensed by Paul Atreides' death.
[edit] References
- ^ Herbert, F. Eye, 1985, ISBN 0-425-08398-5 (US 1st edition) / ISBN 0-7434-3479-X (2001 US reprint)
- ^ "Using Frank's outline, we have written the novel Spice Planet according to the original design, providing a window into the Dune that might have been." pg 27, Introduction to Spice Planet, BH/KJA; The Road to Dune
- ^ pg 26 of the Introduction to Spice Planet, The Road to Dune
- ^ "Ironically, if Frank had written Spice Planet according to his original plan — a science-fiction adventure novel about the same lengthy as most paperback books published at the time — he might have had a much easier task finding an editor and a publishing house." pg 27, Introduction to Spice Planet, The Road to Dune
The extended Dune series |
---|
by Frank Herbert: Dune • Dune Messiah • Children of Dune • God Emperor of Dune • Heretics of Dune • Chapterhouse Dune by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson: |