Dune: The Battle of Corrin: Difference between revisions

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<p>'''Thinking machines''': <br>''Omnius'': Omnius just gets nuttier. After the human worlds are reeling from the plague, he rounds up ALL of his ships for a last attack run... which gives the humans a chance to take out all of his worlds while the door is open, essentially. Corrin's Omnius Prime ends up running alongside two other incarnations brought from other worlds, nicknamed SeurOm and TheurOm by Erasmus. They continue to diverge, and eventually Omnius Prime wants to get rid of them. Of course they don't care for that, and end up smoking Omnius Prime and running things as a duo instead. In the end it seems Erasmus managed to get Omnius Prime barely ticking again while there's still time enough for him to transmit himself as a data burst into space... perhaps he's picked up again. We never did hear what became of the many probes sent out by Giedi Prime Omnius in the first book. <br>''Erasmus'': Though he continues with his various human experiments, his favorite is by far Gilbertus Albans, who he's taught to think like a machine and refers to as his Mentat. In his love and worry for Gilbertus, he truly seems to begin experiencing the human sensations he's tried to rationalize before. This love causes him to deactivate the switch that would've exploded the Bridge of Hrethgir, since Gilbertus was up there. In the end he shuts down, but Gilbertus takes his data gelsphere. <br>''Seurat'': Eventually escapes from the Titans on Bela Tegeuse, which is one of the last straws to make them abandon ship. He returns to Omnius and ends up holed up on Corrin. When the final battle arrives he tries to trick Vorian with talk of negotiations, but ends up being destroyed in a suicide run on Vor's vessel. Goodbye, Old Metalmind.  
<p>'''Thinking machines''': <br>''Omnius'': Omnius just gets nuttier. After the human worlds are reeling from the plague, he rounds up ALL of his ships for a last attack run... which gives the humans a chance to take out all of his worlds while the door is open, essentially. Corrin's Omnius Prime ends up running alongside two other incarnations brought from other worlds, nicknamed SeurOm and TheurOm by Erasmus. They continue to diverge, and eventually Omnius Prime wants to get rid of them. Of course they don't care for that, and end up smoking Omnius Prime and running things as a duo instead. In the end it seems Erasmus managed to get Omnius Prime barely ticking again while there's still time enough for him to transmit himself as a data burst into space... perhaps he's picked up again. We never did hear what became of the many probes sent out by Giedi Prime Omnius in the first book. <br>''Erasmus'': Though he continues with his various human experiments, his favorite is by far Gilbertus Albans, who he's taught to think like a machine and refers to as his Mentat. In his love and worry for Gilbertus, he truly seems to begin experiencing the human sensations he's tried to rationalize before. This love causes him to deactivate the switch that would've exploded the Bridge of Hrethgir, since Gilbertus was up there. In the end he shuts down, but Gilbertus takes his data gelsphere. <br>''Seurat'': Eventually escapes from the Titans on Bela Tegeuse, which is one of the last straws to make them abandon ship. He returns to Omnius and ends up holed up on Corrin. When the final battle arrives he tries to trick Vorian with talk of negotiations, but ends up being destroyed in a suicide run on Vor's vessel. Goodbye, Old Metalmind.  


<p>'''League humans''' <br>''Iblis Ginjo'': Grand Patriarch of the Jihad now. Honestly wants to off the machines, but is fine with doing it through subterfuge, deals with the devil, and massive personal power for himself. Heads the Jihad Commission (until Serena wakes up and takes that task over) and controls the Jipol (Jihad Police) who tend to plant evidence and make fake scares. Works with the Tlulaxa to steal organs from minor human colonies for Jihad soldiers, while blaming the attacks on machines to increase fervor. Ends up in a sun by way of Xavier. <br>''Xavier Harkonnen'': Primero, head of the Jihad military, happily married with Octa and several daughters. Is quite upset when cymeks capture his brother Vergyl Tantor never to be seen again (though we know he was tortured to death). He doesn't completely trust Ginjo, but sees them as working to the same end, so doesn't make waves about it, even after Serena ends up dead. When he learns of Ginjo's work with the Tlulaxa, though, that's just too much. He realizes the Jipol probably won't let him survive anyway, so he makes it his duty to get rid of Ginjo by aiming their ship toward a sun and destroying the controls. He is quite successful in this. <br>''Serena Butler'': Priestess of the Jihad now. For a long time she acts as a figurehead while essentially letting Ginjo run the show, until Cogitor Kwyna and her mother convince her to not let Iblis do so much harm. She takes a larger role in things, to Iblis's dismay. Through some trickery of hers and Iblis's, they convince the Ivory Tower Cogitors to help in their cause... sort of. The plan is for a peace agreement between Omnius and the League, which neither Iblis nor Serena thinks will work. Their solution: sacrifice Serena. She ends up killed by one of her guards when Omnius is taking them captive, but faked footage indeed enrages the people, allowing the Jihad to continue stronger than before. <br>''Aurelius Venport'': Now very successful in business with Tuk Keedair primarily due to melange, he helps Norma break away from Holtzman so she can work on her space-folding ideas. Eventually he marries Norma, and they produce a son. Shortly after their space-folding shipyards are temporarily given to/taken over by the League, he's killed when Zufa fries brains. <br>''Norma Cenva'': Her space-folding work comes to success, though Holtzman makes an attempt to steal it shortly before the slave uprising. She's sent away from Poritrin as part of that conflict, and Xerxes takes her prisoner. However, paining her up unleashes her psychic potential, and she fries them while remaining a consciousness herself since she's so powerful. She recreates a newer, healthier, sexier body for herself based on her female ancestors, and goes on. Though the space-folding ships work, navigation problems mean the loss rate is high. She hopes to find a way to make it safer. <br>''Zufa Cenva'': Realizing Iblis Ginjo's psychic abilities of persuasion, she beds him hoping for a succesful offspring, which does occur. Though previously not pleased by her first daughter, she's impressed by the new Norma, and they have a reconciliation... until she ends up frying her brain while killing Hecate. <br>''Tio Holtzman'': After attempting to steal the space-folding idea from Norma, he ends up killed by the interaction of a laser with his personal Holtzman shield. Oops.
<p>'''League humans''' <br>''Xander Boro-Ginjo'': Latest Grand Patriarch. Unimpressive, but also without much of a jihad during the later days. Killed by Yorek Thurr. <br>''Norma Cenva'': After many years of trying, she eventually realizes that her new lumpier, spice-deformed self can be the missing piece of the foldspace puzzle, presciently anticipating and making course adjustments before things go wrong. This seems to work, so the plan is to recruit more capable of doing this on a larger scale. <br>''Raquella Berto-Anirul'': <br>''Quentin Butler'': <br>''Abulurd Harkonnen'': Grandson of Xavier, son of Quentin Butler, born with the Butler name but wants to reclaim Harkonnen as a name of good and erase the tarnish from his grandfather's name. Though his brothers and father aren't with this, he has much support from Vorian. Proving himself capable, he eventually gets promoted to right under Vorian. However, they have a falling out at the very end. Vorian wants to go through the Bridge of Hrethgir, but Abulurd thinks the deaths are unnecessary and that Vorian is acting like a monster. When ordered off the bridge, he deactivates the targeting equipment on their fleet, making things much more difficult. This ruins their relationship, but Vorian requests a punishment worse than death: branding as a coward and banishment. He takes up residence on Lankiveil, where his offspring feel bitter about their poor lot in life due to the Atreides. Thus, a hateful feud. <br>''Vorian Atreides'': Goes on to have a full happy life with Leronica, though he's never very close to his sons, who go back to Caladan when they're older. Abulurd Butler/Harkonnen is more like a son to him. On a quest to find out if he has other offspring from his earlier, pseudonymous days, he does learn of a granddaughter: doctor Raquella Berto-Anirul. Later, when it's clear a massive Omnius fleet is headed to Salusa Secundus, he realizes this gives the humans a chance since Omnius would leave his other worlds undefended. Though the attrition rate is high, they use the unreliable space-folding ships to take out almost all of the synchronized worlds (and the human slaves on them) in short time. However, the Omnius fleet turns back to Corrin having learned something is amiss, so by the time it's the only world left, both sides are at a stalemate which lasts for 20 years. As people feel safe, it's hard to convince them that they must launch an all-out attack on Omnius. Abulurd notes that he's become quite a hawk over the years, so Vorian makes that his symbol. He eventually fake-retires, convincing Agamemnon that he's returned to join the cymeks. A ploy that works and ends up destroying the Titans. Later Vorian leads the attack at the Batle of Corrin, the the results of which are mentioned elsewhere. <br>''Rayna Butler'':  


<p>'''Others''' <br>''Vorian Atreides'': A Primero second only to Xavier, he remains young in body due to the treatment given to him by Agamemnon. Though he resists getting attached for a long time, he eventually falls for Leronica Tergiet of Caladan, who ends up pregnant by him. Though he's away for many years without knowing this, the children have a loving adoptive father who ends up sacrificing himself to save them when attacked at sea by an elecran. Vorian eventually has the chance to return a time or two through the risk of space-folding ships, though rarely can stay long. After hearing of the death of Xavier, he asks Leronica and the twins to come have a life with him in the League. <br>''Tuk Keedair'': Partnered with Aurelius Vennport, he's not in the slave trade anymore. He ends up forced to use the prototype space-folder to help Ishmael's group get to Arrakis, where they crash. When he ends up lost in the desert, he tells Selim's tribe to rescue them, so Ishmael says he is free to live. <br>''Naib Dhartha'': With increased spice trade, his tribe becomes weaker. His hatred for Selim grows when his grandson is eaten by a worm in an attempt to ride it. Ends up eaten by worms in a mercenary attack on Selim's hideout. <br>''Selim'': As more and more joined him, he ends up with a tribe who regularly raid the spice harvests, guided by Selim's visions of aiding Shai-halud. Marries Marha and has a son. Presciently knows when their hideout will be attacked, and stays alone to meet the attackers. He summons large worms to eat the attackers and he alike. With Marha watching from the distance, he truly moves into the territory of legend. <br>''Jool Noret'': A Ginaz warrior who trains with one of the few reprogrammed thinking machines, Chirox. He altered it to be even more powerful, and forgetting to switch it back to normal mode his father is killed. He feels he now must be even better to compensate for the loss he caused. Is intrumental in many fights, particularly the destruction of the Ix Omnius. He becomes the greatest warrior, with many wanting to emulate him. Though he doesn't teach, others watch and are taught by and practice with Chirox. Ends up killed along with many others when Hecate's asteroid ship plunges into the water causing a great tsunami. <br>''Ishmael'': No longer leader of the Free Men, he's passed the duties on to Selim's son El'hiim, who is a proponent of working with offworlders and forgetting the desert ways. Even raids by slavers on the Arrakis Zensunnis aren't enough to change El'hiim's mind, so Ishmael eventually challenges him to a worm duel for leadership of the tribe. Ishmael loses, but survives. He decides to leave the tribe, and a fair number of others go along with him to live in the older ways.</td></tr>
<p>'''Others''' <br>''Ishmael'': No longer leader of the Free Men, he's passed the duties on to Selim's son El'hiim, who is a proponent of working with offworlders and forgetting the desert ways. Even raids by slavers on the Arrakis Zensunnis aren't enough to change El'hiim's mind, so Ishmael eventually challenges him to a worm duel for leadership of the tribe. Ishmael loses, but survives. He decides to leave the tribe, and a fair number of others go along with him to live in the older ways. <br>''Gilbertus Albans'': </td></tr>


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[[Category:Books]]

Latest revision as of 14:07, 17 April 2023

Authors: Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson {DAYSSINCEBIRTH(birth=2004-08-17,birthphrase=Release)}{DAYSSINCEBIRTH} I read: March 23 - April 9, 2007 Non-spoilery short description:

60-ish years after the previous book, the fightings continue, and eventually conclude.

Totally spoilery summary:TOBEMODIFIEDSOONNOWITSJUSTTHEPREVIOUSONE

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|<td>Again I'll do this character by character.

<p>'''Titans''' <br>''Agamemnon'': The Titans are slowly losing ground to Omnius, and finally end up bailing on Bela Tegeuse. They end up taking over Hessra as an out-of-the-way place, for the electrofluid production facilities, and for the fun of offing the cogitors. He's tricked by Vorian into thinking Vor wants to become a cymek again, and lets his guard down. His canister ends up pushed out a tower and smashed on the ground. <br>''Juno'': Her brain ends up lasered to pieces by a vengeful Quentin Butler, the day the Titans died. <br>''Dante'': Didn't really do much. Ended up being the last remaining Titan, killed when Quentin-in-Agamemnon's-ship rammed into him. Other than being one more Titan this guy really didn't do much over the course of decades and three books. <br>''Beowulf'': Though they've put up with his brain-damaged state, the other Titans finally get tired of putting up with him and the dangers an incompetent ally bring, and off him.

<p>'''Thinking machines''': <br>''Omnius'': Omnius just gets nuttier. After the human worlds are reeling from the plague, he rounds up ALL of his ships for a last attack run... which gives the humans a chance to take out all of his worlds while the door is open, essentially. Corrin's Omnius Prime ends up running alongside two other incarnations brought from other worlds, nicknamed SeurOm and TheurOm by Erasmus. They continue to diverge, and eventually Omnius Prime wants to get rid of them. Of course they don't care for that, and end up smoking Omnius Prime and running things as a duo instead. In the end it seems Erasmus managed to get Omnius Prime barely ticking again while there's still time enough for him to transmit himself as a data burst into space... perhaps he's picked up again. We never did hear what became of the many probes sent out by Giedi Prime Omnius in the first book. <br>''Erasmus'': Though he continues with his various human experiments, his favorite is by far Gilbertus Albans, who he's taught to think like a machine and refers to as his Mentat. In his love and worry for Gilbertus, he truly seems to begin experiencing the human sensations he's tried to rationalize before. This love causes him to deactivate the switch that would've exploded the Bridge of Hrethgir, since Gilbertus was up there. In the end he shuts down, but Gilbertus takes his data gelsphere. <br>''Seurat'': Eventually escapes from the Titans on Bela Tegeuse, which is one of the last straws to make them abandon ship. He returns to Omnius and ends up holed up on Corrin. When the final battle arrives he tries to trick Vorian with talk of negotiations, but ends up being destroyed in a suicide run on Vor's vessel. Goodbye, Old Metalmind.

<p>'''League humans''' <br>''Xander Boro-Ginjo'': Latest Grand Patriarch. Unimpressive, but also without much of a jihad during the later days. Killed by Yorek Thurr. <br>''Norma Cenva'': After many years of trying, she eventually realizes that her new lumpier, spice-deformed self can be the missing piece of the foldspace puzzle, presciently anticipating and making course adjustments before things go wrong. This seems to work, so the plan is to recruit more capable of doing this on a larger scale. <br>''Raquella Berto-Anirul'': <br>''Quentin Butler'': <br>''Abulurd Harkonnen'': Grandson of Xavier, son of Quentin Butler, born with the Butler name but wants to reclaim Harkonnen as a name of good and erase the tarnish from his grandfather's name. Though his brothers and father aren't with this, he has much support from Vorian. Proving himself capable, he eventually gets promoted to right under Vorian. However, they have a falling out at the very end. Vorian wants to go through the Bridge of Hrethgir, but Abulurd thinks the deaths are unnecessary and that Vorian is acting like a monster. When ordered off the bridge, he deactivates the targeting equipment on their fleet, making things much more difficult. This ruins their relationship, but Vorian requests a punishment worse than death: branding as a coward and banishment. He takes up residence on Lankiveil, where his offspring feel bitter about their poor lot in life due to the Atreides. Thus, a hateful feud. <br>''Vorian Atreides'': Goes on to have a full happy life with Leronica, though he's never very close to his sons, who go back to Caladan when they're older. Abulurd Butler/Harkonnen is more like a son to him. On a quest to find out if he has other offspring from his earlier, pseudonymous days, he does learn of a granddaughter: doctor Raquella Berto-Anirul. Later, when it's clear a massive Omnius fleet is headed to Salusa Secundus, he realizes this gives the humans a chance since Omnius would leave his other worlds undefended. Though the attrition rate is high, they use the unreliable space-folding ships to take out almost all of the synchronized worlds (and the human slaves on them) in short time. However, the Omnius fleet turns back to Corrin having learned something is amiss, so by the time it's the only world left, both sides are at a stalemate which lasts for 20 years. As people feel safe, it's hard to convince them that they must launch an all-out attack on Omnius. Abulurd notes that he's become quite a hawk over the years, so Vorian makes that his symbol. He eventually fake-retires, convincing Agamemnon that he's returned to join the cymeks. A ploy that works and ends up destroying the Titans. Later Vorian leads the attack at the Batle of Corrin, the the results of which are mentioned elsewhere. <br>''Rayna Butler'':

<p>'''Others''' <br>''Ishmael'': No longer leader of the Free Men, he's passed the duties on to Selim's son El'hiim, who is a proponent of working with offworlders and forgetting the desert ways. Even raids by slavers on the Arrakis Zensunnis aren't enough to change El'hiim's mind, so Ishmael eventually challenges him to a worm duel for leadership of the tribe. Ishmael loses, but survives. He decides to leave the tribe, and a fair number of others go along with him to live in the older ways. <br>''Gilbertus Albans'': </td></tr>

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