Dune Çocukları
"Just like human life, every planet has a beginning and an end."
Frank Herbert is one of the most important representatives of the new wave science fiction movement, where experimental approaches rather than experiments have reached their peak, and which brings together those who say "good literature is good literature" within the genre. Children of Dune, the third book of the Dune series, which uses all the possibilities of the genre to its fullest, is one of the few novels that underlines the fine line between religion and power.
Nine years had passed since Paul went to the desert, and the desert planet was starting to turn green. Spice production was also increasing. With these changes, the desert was being abandoned and deep-rooted customs were being deviated from.
While Alia, deprived of the power of seeing the future provided by the spice, does her best not to lose the Empire, she will find opponents from her past that she had not taken into account. The Preacher emerged from the depths of the desert and was preaching against Paul's religion. Unforgettable blood feuds would come to light again.
Paul's twins, II. Leto and Ganimet were being raised as the new mehdis of the Empire. But they also had their own plans.
Children of Dune is the struggle to stay in orbit of a planet that cannot come to terms with its legend.
(From the Promotional Bulletin)
Number of Pages: 552
Year of Print: 2016
Language: Turkish
Publisher: İthaki Publications
Cover Illustration: Ozan Korkut
Publication Coordinator: Tuğçe Nida Sevin
Prepared for Publication by: Su Akaydın
Editor: Alican Saygı Ortanca
Edited by: Emre Aygün
First Print Year: 2016
Number of Pages: 552
Language Turkish
| Publisher | : | Ithaca publications |
| Number of pages | : | 552 |
| Publication Year | : | 2016 |
| ISBN | : | 9786053756026 |
| Translator | : | Dost Körpe |
| The heart | : | Turkish |