Don't even think about reading House Harkonnen without reading its  predecessor Dune: House Atreides; anyone who does so risks sinking in  the sands between Frank Herbert's original Dune  and this prequel  trilogy by Herbert's son, Brian, and Kevin J. Anderson. The purist  argument that had Frank Herbert wanted to go backwards he would have  done so is, at least in part, negated by the sheer narrative verve, and  by the fact that Anderson and Brian Herbert manage to pull some genuine  surprises out of this long-running space-opera. House Harkonnen is a  massive book, and there are places where it becomes plot heavy, but in  following the story of Duke Leto Atreides and the conflicts with House  Harkonnen, the authors succeed in spinning a gripping adventure while  going off in some unexpected directions. Anderson, who has written many  successful Star Wars novels, has noted his particular admiration for The  Empire Strikes Back, and his desire to emulate that film's dark take on  the genre. In House Harkonnen, the conflict encompasses the tragedy of  nuclear war, marked by grief and horror, vengeance and torment, and all  while the complex intrigues continue to unfold.
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Nora Roberts - Time and Again
Labels: Cultures / Languages