It also likely is a reference to the character Sheeana from the novel Heretic of Dune, who possesses the rare ability to control the sandworms, allowing her to ride the sandworms with ease, almost as ...
Dune: Part Two has been called an instant classic ... to communicate with the sandworms of Rakis (previously Arrakis) is Sheeana. A young child, when her small village was wiped out, she was ...
and a girl named Sheeana, who can control Arrakis’s sandworms, the book touches on religious themes. That brings us to the final novel in Frank Herbert’s six-book series, Chapterhouse: Dune ...