regshoe: The Uffington White Horse: a chalk figure of a horse made on a hillside (White horse)
While checking Jacobite fandom stuff on Tumblr today I was slightly surprised to see dozens of new notes in my Activity. Usually there are only a very few and most of them are spam. Some new, more powerful form of spam, I wondered? No; it's simply that my best Tumblr post of all time, made seven years ago, has somehow been rediscovered and is getting reblogged around again. I'm very pleased to see it still going. XD
regshoe: Redwing, a brown bird with a red wing patch, perched in a tree (Default)
For FemslashEx I was assigned to write for the very intriguing ship Arien/Original Female Balrog in the Silmarillion. I really enjoyed writing this! I've been fannish about Tolkien for years and years but had never written any fic for it before, so getting an opportunity to dip my toe into writing Silm fic was great fun—and this ship was such an amazing idea, I had to see where it might go...

From the beginning a spirit of fire (1557 words) by regshoe
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: The Silmarillion and other histories of Middle-Earth - J. R. R. Tolkien
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Arien/Original Female Balrog
Characters: Arien (Tolkien), Original Female Character(s)
Summary:

Sunrise over Middle-earth brings with it a memory.

regshoe: A grey heron in flight over water (Heron)
I finished a long re-read of Flight of the Heron last week and have been happily upset about the ending ever since. Anyway, reading the last chapter again reminded me of this association, which first occurred to me a while ago and which pleases me even though it breaks my heart:

As he was lifted, Keith came back from a moment’s dream of a shore with long green rollers roaring loudly under a blood-red sunset, to pain and difficult breath and Ewen’s arms.
—from The Flight of the Heron, part 5, chapter 5
...the grey rain-curtain turned all to silver glass and was rolled back, and he beheld white shores and beyond them a far green country under a swift sunrise.
—from The Lord of the Rings, book 6, chapter 9

(Actually, the imagery is kind of opposite, isn't it—sunrise vs. sunset, the image displacing the 'real' world vs. being displaced by it. And of course this is the last we get of Keith's POV, although it comes back at the end in Ewen's thought as that place 'where an enemy never entered and from whence a friend never went away').

Also, it strikes me that some of the lyrics of 'Into the West' from the LotR films (which isn't terribly appropriate in its original context, being clearly about death—despite the above comparison, sailing into the West wasn't supposed to be a literal or metaphorical death) really fit the scene on Morar sands awfully well... 'white shores are calling/You and I will meet again/And you'll be here in my arms, just sleeping...'—oh, but 'across the sea, a pale moon rises/The ships have come to carry you home' is a bit cruel in this context, isn't it?
regshoe: A row of old books in a wooden bookshelf (Bookshelf)
Twenty-Thousand Leagues Under the Sea(s)* by Jules Verne (1870; translated by F. P. Walter, 1991). Picked this one up after reading [tumblr.com profile] the-prince-of-professors's excellent Raffles fic Bleu Profond, inspired by Twenty Thousand Leagues. The book sort of reads like space exploration science fiction except set on Earth, being written at a time when that sort of wild speculation about just what might exist under the seas was still at least plausibly reasonable. It's far more worldbuilding than plot, a lot of the time, but Verne's worldbuilding is great fun and the descriptions of the world beneath the waves are really beautiful (even the endless lists of fish species are charming). The book is narrated by Professor Aronnax, a scientist who joins the expedition to investigate a mysterious 'sea creature' and discovers that the creature is actually a submarine; the rest of the book is an account of his voyages around the world in this submarine, the Nautilus. Joining him are Conseil, his devoted manservant and expert taxonomist, and Ned Land, a hot-headed Canadian harpooner. Then there's Captain Nemo, commander of the Nautilus and quite another mystery in himself... The mystery of just who Nemo is and what he's doing roaming the seas in a submarine of his own strange design is hinted at throughout the book, but the ending wasn't particularly satisfying and I had hoped for a bit more plot resolution than there ended up being.

*The title is usually given in English as 'Under the Sea' but according to Walter it should be 'Seas' plural, which certainly makes more sense in context.

Then I re-read The Silmarillion by J. R. R. Tolkien (published 1977 from various drafts written earlier), an old favourite which always holds up on a re-read. I love Fëanor and the Fëanorians as much as ever. Tolkien has such an amazing feel for the shape of a story, the beautiful evocative language that passes 'from the high and the beautiful to darkness and ruin'; he writes about horrible things happening and good things being destroyed or ruined forever with—I think 'dignity' is the word I want, that sort of noble tragedy. It's very very beautiful. I'm not really in the fandom as such anymore (it's so intimidatingly huge—there are more than twelve thousand fics on AO3 for the Silm, that's at least twelve times more than any of my other regular fandoms), but this will always be up there as a fave.

A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett (1905). A classic children's book that tells the story of Sara Crewe, a rich, clever and imaginative young girl who goes to boarding school and there undergoes a dramatic change in her fortunes. I really enjoyed this one—it has that sense of being a little larger than life that good children's books often have, that mimics the way the world feels when you're a kid, and the suggestions of magic around the edges of a more-or-less realistic story were good fun, as were the colourful characters and their relationships. I loved Ermengarde, Sara's BFF who reminds her that cleverness isn't everything, and Becky, the ill-treated housemaid who becomes a friend to Sara in her misfortunes, as well as Sara herself with her stories and 'supposings', her kindness and her attitude towards the adults who mistreat her. The book suffers from a few unfortunate period attitudes towards class and race (nothing really overtly offensive, but definitely unfortunate), but those were the only real flaws of what's otherwise a charming little story. (In any case, I now want the fic where Sara, possibly accompanied by Becky, becomes a socialist when she grows up, as I think this would be very in character).

Then decided I needed some more Tolkien and re-read Smith of Wootton Major (1967, Tolkien's last completed book), which is my favourite of his minor works. It's the story of a man who travels into Faery, what he finds there and how he leaves it behind. It manages to do a lot of really interesting worldbuilding and evoke a beautiful mood in very few words, and it raises and leaves unanswered so many questions about this Faery—deliberately, for just the right effect. Very good!
regshoe: Redwing, a brown bird with a red wing patch, perched in a tree (Default)
Originally posted here on Tumblr.

This character is a mysterious, quasi-mythological king who is remembered by his people for many years after his disappearance. He is brilliant to an unprecedented level, and is responsible for some of the most remarkable innovations his people have ever produced, which continue to be of central importance to them long after he’s gone. Amongst his inventions is a new system of writing. He’s dark-haired, pale, and handsome, and looks young even though he’s actually hundreds of years old. He is extremely arrogant, and it’s entirely justified. His motives are often complex and/or inscrutable, and he confides in a very few other people, if any. He is a controversial topic for those who remember him, who collectively can’t decide whether to love him or hate him.

John Uskglass, or Fëanor?

Tags: i ship it

June 2025

S M T W T F S
123 4567
891011 121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 14th, 2025 05:53 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios