Some of the best science and fantasy fiction tends to come in twos, threes and even eights. With the release of Brian Herbert’s “Winds of Dune” Brian Herbert’s “Winds of Dune” and the upcoming finale to “The Wheel of Time” by Brandon Sanderson (writing for the late Robert Jordan), this week’s column is all about those novels that tell fantastical stories with widespread conflicts, life-changing events and dramatic character arcs so deep that they could not be contained within a single volume.
“Dune” by Frank Herbert: Herbert’s eight-book series is a masterpiece of science fiction that successfully blends elements of science, religion and ecology.
The saga begins with House Atreides on the eve of its migration to Arrakis, an arid desert of a planet that is the only source of the spice Melange (which powers galactic commerce).