Epic Tolkien Bookclub: Week Four
Feb. 1st, 2013 03:27 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Epic Tolkien Bookclub: Week Four (The Hobbit)
Chapter VII: Queer Lodgings
Chapter VIII: Flies and Spiders
Rules
I very much doubt we'll require much in the way of formal rules, but just for the sake of formality and clarity:
Chapter VII: Queer Lodgings
Chapter VIII: Flies and Spiders
Rules
I very much doubt we'll require much in the way of formal rules, but just for the sake of formality and clarity:
- Discussion is welcome and encouraged, as is disagreement. Name-calling and personal attacks will be punished by forced attendance at the Vogon-Orcish Poetry Recitation Competition in Minas Morgul.
- There is no spoiler policy in place. Although we're reading the Hobbit, please feel free to bring in things from other Tolkien works, any of the films, the History of Middle Earth, the Letters of JRR Tolkien, and, if you should like, other literary sources.
- There is no such thing as too much geekery. Or taking the text too seriously.
- If you have any concerns at any point, I'm the closest thing this gong show has to a mod, so feel free to get in touch. I can be reached either by PM through this site, or directly by email at sigridhr.lokidottir@gmail.com.
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Date: 2013-02-04 08:39 pm (UTC)I love this reading of it a lot.
The naming of Sting is, I think, one of Bilbo's major turning points (between the mirrored besting of Gollum in the riddle game, and his riddles with Smaug). It's also the point where the Dwarves start expecting him to have the answers - which he does manage, in the end. I second your Hobbit feels because agehagoehawl; Bilbo absolutely rocks in this chapter.
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Date: 2013-02-04 09:03 pm (UTC)One of the books I read recently - Olson? - pointed out that we're working from a Nordic frame of reference by now, and that the right and proper thing for someone to do with that much gold is to give it away. Which is exactly right: in the culture that produced those sagas, the king's job was not to acquire gold but to distribute it. (Poor Thorin. He fails utterly at being king.)
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Date: 2013-02-04 09:07 pm (UTC)Mmm - yes.I remember from Beowulf, and there's a line in the Wanderer too, I think - about the king being the "giver of rings and filler of cups" or something like that.
I wrote a thing about Thorin's heroic journey, but I think I'm starting to seriously disagree with myself and I should probably go back and re-think it all through, tbh. I'm not sure I really know what to make of him anymore.
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Date: 2013-02-04 09:34 pm (UTC)(I see why they put Thorin's more personal hatred for Elves in general and Thranduil in particular into the movie, but I do think it simplifies things in a way that makes them less interesting.)
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Date: 2013-02-04 09:50 pm (UTC)He fails as a leader too, though, really even before Bard. He's defaulting to Bilbo already when they're outside the Lonely Mountain.
There's something really tragic about Thráin to me - who goes mad and essentially wanders off (I think it's implied this is at least in part due to his bearing of one of the seven?), leaving Thorin alone (with no knowledge of what had happened to him) and stripped of yet another heirloom of his family - and yet in all that time he'd never told Thorin of the backdoor to Erebor or the key.
I'm really really curious as to how Beorn knew Thorin's name and lineage but not Gandalf's. I suppose if his name proceeds him in that fashion it would contribute to his feeling like he had a greater purpose and life to fulfil than the one he'd been living.
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Date: 2013-02-04 10:14 pm (UTC)Except for Gandalf, who only figures it out years later, because it never occurred to him that the pathetic creature in the Necromancer's dungeons would be Thrain, son of Thror.
(I've always thought Gandalf very much redeemed of his frequent dick moves in The Hobbit simply for the fact that he never tells Thorin how he came by the map and key. Thorin does not need to know that.)
...I'd quite forgotten that, too. You're right, running across people who know his story like that can't be good for Thorin's ego. And since this is Tolkien, I do think that ego is a huge part of it. Thorin never succumbs to Tolkien's greatest sin, despair; his failure is much more like Boromir's, in that he has an idea of how the world is going to work and he doesn't let little things like the greater experience of wiser people get in his way. Both of them do learn, but they learn the hard way, and too late.
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Date: 2013-02-05 12:15 am (UTC)Yeah, there are a lot of interesting parallels between Thorin and Boromir.
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Date: 2013-02-05 01:03 am (UTC)(And by "hopes" I mean "oh god I already know I'm going to sob like a lost child at the end of the third movie, do they really have to do it to me more than once?" But y'know.)
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Date: 2013-02-05 01:11 am (UTC)Yeah. The waterworks will be out in full if they do include it, I think. And I'll probably just have a cardiac arrest in the theatre during the third film.
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Date: 2013-02-05 11:27 pm (UTC)Thank you!
Yes, Bilbo definitely seems more confident, and competent, in Mirkwood, despite the fact that he is finding their journey extremely difficult and he is still thinking about Bag End. I love that about him - as he progresses through the book and slowly grows in courage and skill, he still retains this realism and longing for home, and it's just so believable. I want a protagonist who's dreaming about bacon and eggs for breakfast one minute, that stabbing a spider between the eyes the next! It makes him the everyman's hero.
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Date: 2013-02-11 07:18 pm (UTC)THIS! Skadi-of-the-North pointed out in her review that in the film the narrative shifts from a focus on Bilbo's story, to a Thorin's, and I think we really lose that sense of dreaming of bacon and eggs and reluctant adventuring in the process, a little bit. Which is a pity, because Bilbo is much more relatable than Thorin, I think.