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  • ✇Destructoid
  • How to read Frank Herbert’s Dune series in orderJamie Moorcroft-Sharp
    Frank Herbert's Dune series is a hefty one to get into, but one that's very much worth giving a go if you're at all into sci-fi. The books tell a very long and sprawling tale that goes beyond most other sci-fi series, but it pays to read it in order to have the best experience. Regardless of whether you've been playing a Dune game, have watched the movies, or just know about the novels and want to give them a try, there's a reason Frank Herbert told this epic story in a specific order. Howe
     

How to read Frank Herbert’s Dune series in order

19. Květen 2024 v 21:00

dune-2-paul-speech

Frank Herbert's Dune series is a hefty one to get into, but one that's very much worth giving a go if you're at all into sci-fi. The books tell a very long and sprawling tale that goes beyond most other sci-fi series, but it pays to read it in order to have the best experience.

Regardless of whether you've been playing a Dune game, have watched the movies, or just know about the novels and want to give them a try, there's a reason Frank Herbert told this epic story in a specific order. However, Herbert's son, Brian Herbert, and Kevin J. Anderson have also contributed to the series with prequels and expansions of the universe. Not all Dune fans enjoy these books, and they definitely impact the reading orders you could use. That's why I've offered a few of them below.

How to read Frank Herbert's Dune series in order

dune book
Image via Amazon

Frank Herbert carefully crafted the first six books in the Dune series, though many fans know he had a seventh planned based on notes found for it, the conclusion of the sixth, and hints throughout each book. These are the books that started it all, and they're what I recommend everyone reads if they want to get into the series and read the story that sparked so many people's imaginations.

  • Dune - Frank Herbert (1965)
  • Dune Messiah - Frank Herbert (1969)
  • Children of Dune - Frank Herbert (1976)
  • God Emperor of Dune - Frank Herbert (1981)
  • Heretics of Dune - Frank Herbert (1984)
  • Chapterhouse: Dune - Frank Herbert (1985)

If you enjoy these books and want to dip into the other novels that have been added to the universe over time, the next two reading lists allow you to do so and show where they fit with these original six.

The entire Dune series in order of publication

the princess of dune book
Image via Amazon

This reading order features every Dune book, including those written by authors other than Frank Herbert, in order of publication. Outside of the original six, this is the order in which I'd recommend reading the books because it's going to be the best way to digest every extra bit of information about the universe.

  • Dune - Frank Herbert (1965)
  • Dune Messiah - Frank Herbert (1969)
  • Children of Dune - Frank Herbert (1976)
  • God Emperor of Dune - Frank Herbert (1981)
  • Heretics of Dune - Frank Herbert (1984)
  • Chapterhouse: Dune - Frank Herbert (1985)
  • House Atreides - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (1999)
  • House Harkonnen - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2000)
  • House Corrino - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2001)
  • The Butlerian Jihad - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2002)
  • The Machine Crusade - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2003)
  • The Battle of Corrin - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2004)
  • Hunters of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2006)
  • Sandworms of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2007)
  • Paul of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2008)
  • The Winds of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2009)
  • Sisterhood of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2012)
  • Mentats of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2014)
  • Navigators of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2016)
  • The Duke of Caladan - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2020)
  • The Lady of Caladan - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2021)
  • The Heir of Caladan - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2022)
  • Princess of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2023)
  • Sands of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2024)

The way I see it, every book released in the Dune series uses the knowledge of what was available before it. So, even if a book is a prequel, it's based on every book that's been released so far at the time of publication. I'd say that means you need to know everything the authors did at the time so you don't miss out on the more subtle elements of the storytelling.

The entire Dune series in chronological order

dune messiah book
Image via Amazon

This last order is a controversial one. Some Dune fans don't see the books outside of Frank Herbert's original six as canonical. I don't think you should let that influence you, though. Instead, you should read them and then decide for yourself. The list below is the chronological order of every Dune book.

  • The Butlerian Jihad - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2002)
  • The Machine Crusade - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2003)
  • The Battle of Corrin - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2004)
  • Sisterhood of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2012)
  • Mentats of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2014)
  • Navigators of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2016)
  • House Atreides - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (1999)
  • House Harkonnen - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2000)
  • House Corrino - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2001)
  • Princess of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2023)
  • The Duke of Caladan - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2020)
  • The Lady of Caladan - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2021)
  • The Heir of Caladan - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2022)
  • Dune - Frank Herbert (1965)
  • Paul of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2008)
  • Dune Messiah - Frank Herbert (1969)
  • The Winds of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2009)
  • Children of Dune - Frank Herbert (1976)
  • God Emperor of Dune - Frank Herbert (1981)
  • Heretics of Dune - Frank Herbert (1984)
  • Chapterhouse: Dune - Frank Herbert (1985)
  • Hunters of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2006)
  • Sandworms of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2007)
  • Sands of Dune - Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2024)

The strongest argument I've seen against reading in this order is that the writing is much less complex in the prequel novels, making the jump to Frank Herbert's work feel jarring.

A note on Sands of Dune: I've included it at the bottom of this list because it's a novella and collection of three stories set in underexplored parts of this universe. I think you should read it if you're trying to read every book, but it's hard to say exactly where it should fit in the chronological order.

The post How to read Frank Herbert’s Dune series in order appeared first on Destructoid.

  • ✇Destructoid
  • Doctor Who: Who could be ‘The One Who Waits’?Paula Vaynshteyn
    The first two proper episodes (discounting the Christmas special) of Doctor Who season 14, starring Ncuti Gatwa as the Doctor, have reached Disney Plus and BBC iPlayer, meaning that viewers are now able to dig deep and overanalyze everything for clues about what’s to come.  If there’s one thing that Whovians do really well, it’s looking beneath the surface to find foreshadowing. This week, there’s one thing that’s got a few fans talking—The One Who Waits. This as-yet-unknown character was me
     

Doctor Who: Who could be ‘The One Who Waits’?

11. Květen 2024 v 22:00

The Doctor and Ruby in Doctor Who

The first two proper episodes (discounting the Christmas special) of Doctor Who season 14, starring Ncuti Gatwa as the Doctor, have reached Disney Plus and BBC iPlayer, meaning that viewers are now able to dig deep and overanalyze everything for clues about what’s to come. 

If there’s one thing that Whovians do really well, it’s looking beneath the surface to find foreshadowing. This week, there’s one thing that’s got a few fans talking—The One Who Waits. This as-yet-unknown character was mentioned during The Giggle, which aired back in December, but the moniker comes back up during this week's second released episode, The Devil’s Chord.

I’m going to hedge my bets and say that The One Who Waits is not a confirmation that Amy and Rory (the Doctor’s companions from the time of the Eleventh Doctor, portrayed by Matt Smith) are about to return. Yes, Rory was known as “the boy who waited”, which is a very similar moniker, but not quite the same. 

Rory, the boy who waited, in Doctor Who
Screenshot via Prime

Now that’s out of the way, there is a theory floating around Twitter and other corners of the internet about the identity of The One Who Waits. Buckle in because this one is a bit of a ride. 

During The Devil’s Chord, during a discussion with Ruby on a London rooftop, the Doctor talks of his Granddaughter Susan, who he says is currently living with a previous version of himself on the other side of the city. He also admits to Ruby that he currently doesn’t know what became of Susan after the Genocide, which took the lives of all Time Lords except himself. 

At the end of The Devil’s Chord, before we’re assaulted by a slightly out-of-place song and dance number, the Doctor breaks the fourth wall and winks at the camera after saying, “There’s always a twist at the end.” Still with me? Good.

Now, if you dig a little deeper into the casting of this series, you’ll find that there is actually an actress called Susan Twist in the cast, and this is where things start to get really interesting. Susan Twist has had a very short cameo appearance in every single one of Ncuti’s episodes so far, one of the 60th Anniversary Specials with David Tennant, and, according to the sneak peek clip that is available for the next episode, Boom, she’s in that one too.

Characters that have been played by Susan Twist in Doctor Who
Image by Destructoid

I’ve raked through all of the episodes so far and pinpointed her character in all of them:

  • Wild Blue Yonder 
    • Twist plays Mrs Merridew, who speaks to Isaac Newton before he heads down to the apple tree 

  • The Church on Ruby Road 
    • She appears in the crowd at the pub where Ruby is playing the keyboard, saying, “give it some welly!” before asking for Gaudete, a Christmas carol from the 16th century, which would make sense if she was around at the time of Isaac Newton.

  • Space Babies
    • She plays Comms Officer Gina Scalzi, who appears on the monitor inside the room where Jocelyn is hiding

  • The Devil’s Chord
    • Twist appears as one of the tea ladies in EMI Studios, which would later become Abbey Road Studios. She says she wishes she could be “Margaret Lockwood”. What a woman, indeed.

According to the cast list for Boom, which is written by Steven Moffat, Twist will appear again, though her role is simply called “Ambulance”.

https://twitter.com/DoctorWhoPN/status/1737050144603095101

There are unconfirmed rumors that Twist will play a bigger part in the future of the series, taking the also unconfirmed role of Susan Triad. She will be the head of a company named Triad, which has already been name-dropped during the 60th anniversary special, The Giggle when Mel Bush is attempting to align the satellites. Remember, this is an unconfirmed rumor, but I'm counting nothing out of possibility.

So what’s the theory here? Well, we know that The One Who Waits has some connection to both the Toymaker and Maestro, considering the apparent relation between the two and the fact that they both issue a warning to the Doctor about The One Who Waits. It’s also been revealed, though in the Doctor Who audiobooks rather than the TV show, that the Toymaker has a sister who goes by the name of Hecuba.

Maestro and the Toymaker in Doctor Who
Image by Destructoid

Hecuba, otherwise known as “The Queen of Time”, would be able to traverse through time in order to appear at any moment, which would explain why Twist’s characters never look as though they’ve aged, regardless of how many years in the past or future she appears. It would make sense, then, to assume that Hecuba, if that’s who this turns out to be, has been waiting a long time to confront the Doctor for whatever reason, likely in retaliation for what happened to her brother. 

Whether or not this theory turns out to be true remains to be seen, but it’s definitely interesting to dive deep into Doctor Who and find the connections or even just speculate. There’s no telling what could happen in the coming episodes, with Russell T Davies (who is responsible for writing the vast majority of this season's episodes) well known for putting twists and turns in his writing.

The post Doctor Who: Who could be ‘The One Who Waits’? appeared first on Destructoid.

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