gareth19 (imported) wrote: Sun May 31, 2009 1:12 am Trusting Lit. professors to give correct information about writers is like trusting politicians to tell the truth about society, not a wise idea. On page 6 of the Foreword of the 2nd ed. of LOTR, Tolkien wrote "these chapters ... were written and sent out as a serial to my son, Christopher, then in South Africa with the RAF," so you should have gotten that information by reading Tolkien. Tolkien is a tough read; he never really had a sense of audience and so his stories flounder around at the beginning until he finds his voice a bit later, and that puts many readers off. All of the arch nonsense about the invention of golf at the beginning of the Hobbit is a waste, and the story doesn't begin until Gandalf enters. Much of the beginning of LOTR is tedious until Frodo gets out of the shire and the story picks up, but the confrontation between Gandalf and Saruman in the Two Towers is splendid.
Herbert is a different matter altogether. It is really very easy to read Dune, what is difficult is to reread it because after you have read the damn thing, picked up all the homoerotic references to Paul and Feyd and gone to the comic opera finale with the overthrow of the Padishah Emperor, nothing much has happened to you. I, at least, can reread Foundation, Foundation and Empire, and Second Foundation again and again or reread the Earth Sea series by LeGuin or Card's Ender's Game and still be moved by it. I have even been tempted to reread The Worm Ouroboros, and discovered that I was right; it was a tedious pastiche by a remarkably unimaginative writer, but I have never been tempted to pick up Dune a second time and never even opened Son of Dune or Stock Options of Dune or whatever.
I have not read the Dune series after the first one. Enjoyed the movie immensly. Talk of favorite authors (in a way). I like Alan
Dean Foster's Flinx series. I have all of them. I also have all of Ann McCaffry's series dealing with life on P.E.R.N. All about dragons and their riders. On P.E.P.N. you can have the sex life you like...many of the males are gay. THW the planet got its name from the explorer note Parallel Earth Resources Neglible. Have to like SciFi.
I have a young friend ( A. H.S. junior) who uses things from LOTR in many of his talks. He Loves the series.