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Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 05 Aug 2009 21:10
by Omphalos
redbugpest wrote:I will take this opportunity to say that most of the folks here have met what my expectations were upon coming to this site. It's not the "Free and Open" site that some of the folks here would like to claim it to be, but rather the extremist orthodox collective that I expected to find. So far there has not been any room for any other explanation, and it is taken for granted that I must accept what is posted here as Gospel.
Zoinks! I knew he was too smart for us! If it hadn'ta been for this meddling kid, we coulda kept this up forever! :character-shaggy:

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 05 Aug 2009 21:12
by TheDukester
DUNE: that brain-dead zombie let the Scientologist hack take over

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 05 Aug 2009 23:50
by Schu
Sadly, this is not the first time I've seen someone turn "you must justify your views" into "you're all closed-minded".

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 06 Aug 2009 08:14
by Seraphan
Schu wrote:Sadly, this is not the first time I've seen someone turn "you must justify your views" into "you're all closed-minded".
It has fastly grown into an overused cliché, no doubt. Do you think we should keep a score?

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 06 Aug 2009 12:17
by A Thing of Eternity
redbugpest wrote:
Eyes High wrote:
redbugpest wrote:
Freakzilla wrote:It has depth that you can explore further each time you read, it is intelligent and forces you to use your imagination.

That's how I wrote the novel, wanting you to participate with the best of your own imagination. I did not aim for the lowest common denominator and 'write down" to anyone. You and I have a compact and my responsibility is to entertain you as richly as possible, always giving you as much extra as I can. I assume you are intelligent and will enlist your own imagination. You'll see that when you read the Dune excerpt and the other stories in this collection.
FH, Intro to Eye

Writing to the lowest common denominator is KJA's career.
Something we can agree on! :clap:
Exactly what are you agreeing on? Because that can be read that you agree KJA's work is not as....indepth as Frank's. Or are you agreeing that Frank was a writter who challenged his readers to think and imagine. To use there minds. To explore the posibilities?
Please expand on your statement if you would please.
That Frank was a writer who challenged his readers to think and imagine.
I missed the snarky KJA comment at the bottom of his post as i was in a hurry move on other RL items.

I will take this opportunity to say that most of the folks here have met what my expectations were upon coming to this site. It's not the "Free and Open" site that some of the folks here would like to claim it to be, but rather the extremist orthodox collective that I expected to find. So far there has not been any room for any other explanation, and it is taken for granted that I must accept what is posted here as Gospel.
Kinda sad that you wrote that in a response to the nicest and most open person on this entire board.

There is lots of room for explanations, I'm still waiting for yours in several threads and look forward to seeing what you come up with, because I believe the only arguments are "oh shut up, that doesnt matter, just enjoy the action scenes" and really extreme additions to what is actually writen in order to make up for the mistakes.

What do you think about KJA's strengths and weaknesses compared to Frank's?

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 06 Aug 2009 14:37
by GamePlayer
redbugpest wrote:I will take this opportunity to say that, as a troll, I knew I would be met with ardent skepticism prior to joining a board of fans so devoted to Frank Herbert and so critical of Kevin J. Anderson. I also knew many would recognize me from my ongoing insults toward them at various other internet sites. So, as a troll, I decided my goal wouldn't be to earn their respect through genuine intercourse, but to waste nary a single post before launching into petty insults at the very first sign of their criticism. So far there has not been any room for my victimized shtick to work and it has become apparent that even the nice folks have lost patience, accepting that I am a troll beyond reproach as Gospel.
I've got an erection for you like you wouldn't believe. ASL? :romance-inlove: :romance-heartstiny: :romance-heartsthree:

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 06 Aug 2009 15:06
by Nekhrun
GamePlayer wrote: ASL? :romance-inlove: :romance-heartstiny: :romance-heartsthree:
I'm pretty sure Redbug's info. is: 7; F; kja's crotch.

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 06 Aug 2009 22:04
by Eyes High
Thank you Thing for those kind words. :oops:

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 07 Aug 2009 14:57
by desert demon
it is the questions that drive us...
do you know what the question is...? -- trinity
:)

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 08 Aug 2009 05:33
by Secher Nbiw
Nothing keeps me from coming back.

Dune is dead to me.

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 08 Aug 2009 06:07
by SandChigger
:(

Well, I'm happy to see you anyway. :)

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 08 Aug 2009 12:26
by Omphalos
Secher Nbiw wrote:Nothing keeps me from coming back.

Dune is dead to me.
Me too. It's been a long time. Too bad it seems that you are just passing through. :(

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 09 Aug 2009 16:35
by chanilover
Secher Nbiw wrote:Nothing keeps me from coming back.

Dune is dead to me.
You're quite melodramatic for a Dutch guy.

Why don't you post some more pics of your bumcrack?

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 09 Aug 2009 17:20
by SandChigger
chanilover wrote:Why don't you post some more pics of your bumcrack?
Yes, especially since we have a new connwaisseur (sp?!) of such here now. (See thread OP.) :D

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 10 Aug 2009 14:11
by Sandwurm88
Uhh, question.....
:crazy: :crazy: :crazy:

(Is that depressed guy a homosexual too.....?)

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 10 Aug 2009 14:20
by SandRider
I don't think so, but he posted some "provocative" photos
in the member's gallery quite awhile back that Luv can't
seem to get out of his mind ....

{not that there's anything wrong with that ....}

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 10 Aug 2009 17:26
by chanilover
He's a bisexual Dutch guy.

Bi now, gay later.

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 10 Aug 2009 17:29
by lotek
nice one!
:lol:

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 10 Aug 2009 19:58
by SandChigger
chanilover wrote:He's a bisexual Dutch guy.

Bi now, gay later.
:laughing:

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 21 Oct 2009 15:35
by insidiom
another dead thread that i wanted to post on....curse my gimpy timing.

a very personal topic. i cant tell if the person who created the topic was being sincere, but i will take the opportunity to share:

i keep going back to dune (and god emperor) because they are, what i consider, to be nearly perfect works of science fiction (or literature). i never went to college, so the majority of my knowledge of literature is reduced to cherry comics and star wars technical manuals. dune is one of the most complex and multi-layered books i have ever read.

ive found many of FHs observations about humanity (in general) and all it's pros/cons, when spoken through the words of his characters, are immediately applicable to my daily life. i quote dune characters almost every day (much to the continued irritation of my wife), and because of FHs ability to express nuance and dual meanings of words and phrases (as well as situations), i always try to look beneath the surface of everything and everyone.

dune taught me about patience, respect, and kindness; that the greatest men and women usually have the greatest burdens and responsibilities--the fastest and easiest path is almost always the most ruinous. in humanity's context, there is no extreme good and evil and everyone exists on the good/evil spectrum, motivating one other to do good or evil. life truly is an existential journey full of obstacles to overcome and decisions to make. gods are created and worshiped because people want to believe in something more powerful than they are, then beg that something to help them through their hard times when they dont have the strength. we are all "vectors" in the grand life cycle until we collectively kill ourselves.

i believe everything in dune was a metaphor that FH was using to speak to us about who we are, where we come from, and what we are capable of doing if we dont "snap out of it" and "get our shit together". the greatest thing that dune taught me, i have to be completely frank (no pun intended), was love. after reading FHs afterword to chapterhouse, i wanted to die inside. to this day, i have never heard anyone express love and loss in such a profound way. its one of the reasons why i try to live every day to the fullest, appreciate what i have, those who love me, and remind myself to tell my wife how grateful i am for her and our baby girl. leto II also taught me this. love and the consequences of a solitary life--which is a struggle for me.

to me, this is the golden path: giving up the ridiculous, meaningless shit you think you desire/deserve and truly work to make this world a better place for those around you and those yet to come; using your knowledge of the past to avoid making similar mistakes in the present while doing your best to be mindful of how your actions/decisions affect not only your future, but those around you.

im not sure if FH meant for the golden path to be something inside his world. i think he meant it to be in ours.

these are a few reasons why i continue to read these books over again and eventually share the experience with my child. to me, its not about lasers, ships, or power, dune is about all of us. one of the feelings that i believe i share with most of the people here is a reverence for how these stories, and FH, have impacted my life in many ways. that is why i am able to empathize with some of the most abrasive dune fans.

lastly, while typing this out, ive reminded myself of a review i made of one of the dune 7 books. i commented that holding KJA and BH (i have to say both because i still have trouble coalescing how their writing process works) up to the same standard was unfair since FH was such a badass. a responder said that he disagreed with it and i wasnt entirely receptive at first. having given this topic some thought and "putting it to paper", ive decided to 180 my original claim and agree with that person. i now believe that achieving that standard is highly improbable. as improbable as ludicrous speed.

and thats my opinion.


"A man is a fool not to put everything he has, at any given moment, into what he is creating."--Frank Herbert

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 21 Oct 2009 15:49
by A Thing of Eternity
insidiom wrote: ...after reading FHs afterword to chapterhouse, i wanted to die inside. to this day, i have never heard anyone express love and loss in such a profound way..
That hit me pretty hard too. The only other thing I've read that equalled it was Bill Ransom's introduction to the final book in the Pandora Saga, which Frank left mostly up to him to write because he died shortly after they had worked out the outline. Very deeply touching.

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 21 Oct 2009 16:09
by SandChigger
insidiom wrote:"A man is a fool not to put everything he has, at any given moment, into what he is creating."--Frank Herbert
Great quote. :)

It doesn't matter that the goal is impossible, it's the attempt you make that's important. Doing something half-assed just because failure is a given should not be acceptable. ;)

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 21 Oct 2009 16:30
by SadisticCynic
the greatest thing that dune taught me, i have to be completely frank (no pun intended), was love. after reading FHs afterword to chapterhouse, i wanted to die inside. to this day, i have never heard anyone express love and loss in such a profound way.
Glad you noticed this. Love seems to be (one of) the main theme(s) of Chapterhouse: Dune.

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 21 Oct 2009 19:04
by Freakzilla
SadisticCynic wrote:
the greatest thing that dune taught me, i have to be completely frank (no pun intended), was love. after reading FHs afterword to chapterhouse, i wanted to die inside. to this day, i have never heard anyone express love and loss in such a profound way.
Glad you noticed this. Love seems to be (one of) the main theme(s) of Chapterhouse: Dune.
Heretics, too.

Re: What is it about Dune that keeps you coming back for more?

Posted: 22 Oct 2009 18:35
by SadisticCynic
Freakzilla wrote:
SadisticCynic wrote:
the greatest thing that dune taught me, i have to be completely frank (no pun intended), was love. after reading FHs afterword to chapterhouse, i wanted to die inside. to this day, i have never heard anyone express love and loss in such a profound way.
Glad you noticed this. Love seems to be (one of) the main theme(s) of Chapterhouse: Dune.
Heretics, too.
I thought that as well, but couldn't remember well enough to be sure. Since the Golden Path is established, one of the remaining things to re-instil into humans was love, especially in the Bene Gesserit. (Although, it took me more than one reading to notice the importance of that theme; love is such an ambiguous concept).