About the Author

Brian Herbert is the author of multiple New York Times bestsellers. He has won a number of literary honors including the New York Times Notable Book Award, and has been nominated for the highest awards in science fiction. After more than five years in development, he published Dreamer of Dune, a moving biography of his father (Frank Herbert) that was a Hugo Award finalist. His acclaimed novels include the Timeweb trilogy (Timeweb, The Web and the Stars, and Webdancers); The Stolen Gospels; The Lost Apostles; The Race for God; Sidney’s Comet; Sudanna, Sudanna; and Man of Two Worlds (written with Frank Herbert).

He also wrote the Hellhole Trilogy (Hellhole, Hellhole Awakening, and Hellhole Inferno) and many international-bestselling Dune-series novels with Kevin J. Anderson. Recently, Brian published Ocean, an epic fantasy novel about environmental issues (based upon a concept by his wife, Jan). The premise of Ocean is highly original and revolutionary—the ocean and its dangerous sea creatures declare war against our civilization, in retaliation for human-caused pollution and other abuses to those waters. Like many of Brian’s novels, it exposes an important social issue in a thought-provoking way.

Brian’s highly original SF novel, The Little Green Book of Chairman Rahma, came out in 2014—the imaginative story of a green utopia that is not a utopia for those living in it—the ecologically oriented government enforces its edicts with deadly police state methods. Publishers Weekly referred to this work as “a fresh and forbidding near-future world.” That was just one of many excellent reviews that Brian’s works have received, going all the way back to his first SF novel, Sidney’s Comet, which Publishers Weekly described as “unusually inventive and original.”

He recently completed a new SF novel, The Assassination of Billy Jeeling, and is working on another one. He and Kevin are also polishing up their 14th Dune series novel, Navigators of Dune.

Many of Brian’s novels involve not only environmental issues, but issues involving politics, religion, and the history of human civilization. His new short story collection, Dangerous Worlds, includes many of his original ideas, including the startling premise for the collaborative story he wrote with Bruce Taylor, “Death of the Internet.”

If that is not enough to do, Brian also manages business matters for his famous father’s fantastic Dune legacy. In his free time, Brian enjoys jogging, bicycling, backpacking, and world travel. He and Jan have visited most of the countries in the world in the past few years, where they have seen political, religious, historical, and environmental situations first-hand—providing plenty of information for writing. On one of their world cruises, Brian met a US Merchant Marine veteran, and learned that they had been treated unjustly after World War II. Brian wrote about this in an acclaimed non-fiction work, The Forgotten Heroes. He also submitted written testimony to the US Congress, in an effort to obtain benefits for those heroic merchant seamen.