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Folio society dune
Folio society dune











The Folio edition also features an afterword by Brian Herbert. I'm seriously impressed by Dirda and I am going to seek out his Conan Doyle biography (a winner of the Edgar Award). Michael Dirda has provided a notably perceptive introduction in which he talks about the sand worms surfacing in the desert "like Moby Dick rising from the depths." He correctly observes the parallels with Lawrence of Arabia and notes both are stories of "a young man caught up in a myth." And he makes a fascinating - and fresh - comparison between Dune and Poul Anderson's The Broken Sword.ĭirda is amusing on the "idiotic misjudgements" of the 23 publishers who turned down Dune, is insightful on Herbert's prose style and the way his short paragraphs drive the narrative he sensibly equates the Bene Gesserit witches with the Jesuits (even the name is an echo) and makes an effective point about a single-product economy when he says "for 'spice' read 'oil'." And Weber's embossed cover is just a beauty.īut where this edition really scores is with its excellent supplementary text. The endpapers of the Folio volume are devoted to some very nice maps. The Barnes & Noble Dune had no plates, just illustrated endpapers, rather classily using the work of John Schoenherr, the greatest Dune illustrator. Weber's style is sympathetic to the story and there are 12 full colour plates. The illustrations by Sam Weber are impressive - which is far from always the case with Folio Books, which suffer from wildly erratic art direction. Far from cheap, with a retail price of seventy five quid, this is nevertheless the definitive hardcover version of Frank Herbert's 1965 masterpiece to date, and if you can afford it you ought to splash out. However, the Barnes & Noble Dune has been trumped by the gorgeous Folio Society edition, published in 2015.

folio society dune

But when it's available at the standard rate of about twenty bucks it's a tremendous bargain.

folio society dune

This goes in and out of print, with the price fluctuating accordingly. A few years ago the American bookstore giant Barnes & Noble added it to their range of collectible editions in a leather bound, illustrated hardback. With original first printings of the hard cover selling for $10,000, I'm always up for deluxe new editions of Dune at a more reasonable price. What has prompted me to return to it is the release of a beautiful new version from the Folio Society. It's certainly one of my favourites, and I've written about it before. Many people would maintain it's the greatest.

folio society dune

Dune is one of the great science fiction novels.













Folio society dune