![]() ![]() I just googled ‘Dune characters’ and Thufir Hawat is one person sooo. ![]() And apparently I have no idea who Hawat or Thufir are. I think the politics of it felt a bit vague. I would say that for a Dune-ignorant reader such as myself, this one was a bit harder to grasp than the first one. Frank Herbert was not afraid to kill off characters. ![]() I’m also realizing the story arc of this series spans many ‘main’ characters and Paul is not the ‘hero’ throughout the whole thing which is kind of a new thought for me having only seen one movie. There’s only so much you can portray in 170 pages of pictures and dialogue bubbles.Īpparently book 2 begins 12 years after book 1? If that’s true then I’m not sure where this graphic novel fits into the timeline because Paul is still the same age. Having done that I’m thinking I’m missing quite a bit about the story. It’s interesting to read this book and then go and read the reviews of the actual novels. (Even though I 100% won’t remember any of it by the time I see the movie.) The next movie isn’t coming out until next year so I obviously had to read this because I’m impatient. So I saw the first Dune movie and since I don’t have the dedication to read the original series, I decided to try the next best thing: the graphic novels. If I could describe this book in one word it would be: dry. Anderson (Adaptor)įrank Herbert, Raul Allen (Illustrator), Patricia Martín (Illustrator), Bill Sienkiewicz (Contributor) Dune: The Graphic Novel, Book 2: Muad’Dibīy: Brian Herbert (Adaptor), Kevin J. ![]()
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