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The Dune Encyclopedia

by Willis E. McNelly

Other authors: Frank Herbert (Introduction)

Series: Dune (The Authoritative Encyclopedia)

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604639,468 (4)12
This 500-page book is a guide to the complex Dune science fiction series.
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Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
Interesting and detailed. I quite enjoyed this. ( )
  LoisSusan | Dec 10, 2020 |
I'm old school. I prefer originals whenever I can get them. So this mini-encyclopedia of Dune biography, culture, history, battle order, and science appeal to me more than modern reconstructions and revisions of the Dune universe. The book will add a lot of background to your understanding of the original Dune novels. The one area where I do wish more attention had been given, is the languages of the Dune universe. What is included is interesting, but woefully deficient in the details I would like to have seen. Nonetheless, this is the best Dunclopeida I've ever seen. ;) ( )
  Validity | Apr 20, 2013 |
Thank you to The Bookman of Orange for allowing me to whittle down their asking price for this out of print oddity I've had my eye on since I was a teenager in the Eighties. Note that the compendium spanning 19,000 years of galactic history preceding The Spacing Guild's rise to power in the imperium, through their then ensuing 10,000 year reign that ended with the messianic arrival of Muad'Dib (a.k.a., Paul Atreides, who conquered the evil Harkonnen empire when he liberated the planet Arrakis, otherwise known as the planet "Dune"), as well as a further 5,000 years of continuing space opera and planetary conflict, was not authored by Frank Herbert (excepting a brief preface to the text in which he gave his blessing to the book in November, 1983, two-and-a-half years before he died), but rather "compiled" and further extrapolated upon the known fiction and passing factoids of Frank Herbert by the late Dr. Willis E. McNelly. It is an unbelievable acquisition for any Dune Diehard; a veritable Mecca of arcana for any Dune Dork or Dune Dweeb still inhabiting the galaxy and still making regular pilgrimages throughout their lives to the sacred pages of Dune, like yours truly.

Published in 1984 and not reprinted since, The Dune Encyclopedia encompasses only the inimitable universe of Frank Herbert's first four novels in the Dune Chronicles: the original Dune (1965); Dune Messiah (1969); Children of Dune (1976); and God, Emperor of Dune (1981). Which for my money were the best books of the bunch. Herbert's final two Dune novels -- published after The Dune Encyclopedia hit bookstore shelves but released just in time for David Lynch's truly terrible film adaptation of Dune -- Heretics of Dune (1984) and Chapterhouse: Dune (1986), lost me somewhat in their denser philosophical leanings, big novel-of-ideas slim on the action adventure, heroics and exciting narratives that mostly comprised the first four sagas in the series and kept this teenager up reading late into the night.

The Dune Encyclopedia is 526 double-margin pages of teensy print, with elaborate illustrations; statistics; diagrams; genealogies; charts; calendars; Dune Tarot cards(!); selected translations of the Fremen's Arabic-influenced vocabulary; "sound and morphology changes" in the history of the Galach lexicon; Gurney Halleck's music scores and lyrics; excerpts of never-before-published Fremen poetry; castle blueprints; extended biographies of little-known characters; the chemical composition and molecular structure drawing of melange or "the spice" that made planet Dune so politically volatile as the Great Houses constantly vied for its acquisition with never-ending violence, much like countries here on Earth do for oil!; voluminous footnotes; various faiths under the jurisdiction of the "Orange Catholic Bible"; a litany of "further references", and a fabulous faux-bibliography "cataloging the Rakis finds" that includes over 360 book and/or article citations, all of it reminiscent of those old World Book Encyclopedias from the Sixties and Seventies -- every letter of the alphabet it's own tome! -- that showed me the world, in abbreviated summary form, one alphabetized entry at a time, and so fascinated me as a boy.

Here's to encyclopedias! Here's to Dune! Long may they both live. ( )
13 vote absurdeist | Feb 26, 2012 |
A strange book -- which was "kinda authorized" by Herbert -- then contradicted by Herbert when he returned to the series later in his life. One can consider it to be the history of Dune in an alternate universe. This is a past and history that I wish Herbert had explored in his books. ( )
1 vote mmyoung | Jan 18, 2010 |
A strange book -- which was "kinda authorized" by Herbert -- then contradicted by Herbert when he returned to the series later in his life. One can consider it to be the history of Dune in an alternate universe. This is a past and history that I wish Herbert had explored in his books. ( )
  mmyoung | Jan 9, 2010 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Willis E. McNellyprimary authorall editionscalculated
Herbert, FrankIntroductionsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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Snippets of poetry from the Imperium; a sample folk tale from the Oral History; brief biographies of over a dozen Duncan Idahos; two differing approaches to Paul Muad'Dib himself and to his son, Leto II; Freman recipes; Freman history; secrets of the Bene Gesserit; the songs of Gurney Halleck - these are just some of the treasures found when the earthmover fell into the God Emperor's no-room at Dar-es-Balat, and are now included in The Dune Encyclopedia.
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