If Dune was a turn-off, go ahead and ignore everything else in the series.
I liked it, I just lost the book a couple times so it was disjointed. And half of the organizations and people (mentats, Bene Gesserit, Fremen etc etc) are never properly explained so I'm running on half comprehension and half of what they do is poorly explained or simply thrown out there with no support.
In short, I need more detail.
And the ending was pretty WTF? Time to go buy the next one.
Everything is explained more than sufficiently. All of it. Who people are, who the various organizations are, what's going on, who is plotting against who... The problem is that it's all twisted together and buried. Nothing is delivered as clearly as "Mentats do this" - instead, you get bits and pieces about where Mentats came from, why they're important, what makes them tick... And eventually you know that "Mentats do this".
But, again, it is
all twisted together and buried. There's got to be about 12 different plots going on at once.
I felt much the same way you did the first time I read
Dune. Then I read it again, and again. It makes more sense every time. I understand a little more every time. I'm still finding new things every time I read it.
I don't know if that's the sign of a good author, or a terrible one... But it's entertaining, at least.
I kind of want to read the Lord of the rings books now. I already did once, but almost nothing sticks to my mind. Although it's the same with the movies too(and I think I've seen all of them twice). I can remember seeing parts, and I can remember reading parts, but I don't know how any of them link together. It's like the whole thing just slips from my mind, except for one part about Frodo and Sam climbing some really steep stairs and then fighting a giant spider.
Everyone loves the LotR books. And I'm a D&D geek. So, of course, I had to read them.
Couldn't do it. Made it part-way through the first book and gave up. Horrible writing style. Just couldn't stand it.
Then the movies came out... Looked absolutely awesome... Thought I must have just been too young to appreciate the books, or I was being nitpicky, or something... So I tried again. Made it a little further before I had to give up.
I simply cannot stand Tolkein's writing style.
I'd like to reread what I've read of The Wheel of Time and then read the ones I haven't gotten to yet.
Jordan lost me on the WoT books a while back. After a full novel or two of absolutely nothing happening, I gave up. I mean... They're interesting enough to read... But we jump back and forth between people planning a wedding and folks wandering the countryside and some scheming and whatnot... For a couple books. And the storyline just doesn't advance. There's several books I haven't read, and I just don't care.
My own rant: Watchmen. The entire production cast was adamant about changing it as little as possible, then of the three major changes, two were flagrantly unnecessary. Dan and Laurie fighting the muggers... movie added gore for its' own sake. They weren't brutal vigilantes, just people in decent shape that were defnding themselves. Rorschach tearing up the pedophile just made him seem like a psychopath. Character derail.
I thoroughly enjoyed the
Watchmen comics. Re-read them right before seeing the movie.
The movie was definitely entertaining. And Rorschach was a bit of a psychopath.
But I was genuinely offended with how they changed the ending. Changes the tone of the whole story.
Similarly...
The Mist by Stephen King. One of my favorite short stories of all time. The story ends with a few people in a car driving through the mist. They're stopping periodically to gas-up or sleep or whatnot. It's been days. There's no sign of it ending. The world has been permanently changed. I always kind of thought, in the back of my mind, that the stars were finally right and the Old Ones had awoken.
The movie, however, paints it like some kind of military fuckup. It ends with the mist clearing out and the military guys shooting the monsters. Normalcy is restored.
Completely changes the story.