Blog post, "the author delved deep into the game's story to answer...questions" about the game, such as what drives Sev and Rico's actions.
The British authors, a physicist and journalist, respectively, delve into time's linear nature and its relationship to living things.
However, the author never delves into the specifics of the technology or explores in detail how it may have evolved by the time of Dunes far-future setting.
The authors delve into the question of whether more homework equals higher standards and achievement.
The author then delves into Mr. Carsey's childhood and adolescence, trying, without great success, to find some psychological link to his abrupt act of leaving.
A sense of existential questioning suffuses the book, as the author delves into every aspect of Sirius's psyche.
The author further delves into the societal development of the settlers by describing many details of the aforementioned society after it becomes established.
The author also delves into how digital information is now being understood in relation to physics and genetics.
In the other two volumes the author delves more deeply into the psychology of his characters, probing the sources of their anguish.
Here the theme is hatred, not love, as the author delves into the mind of a Protestant terrorist.