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  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:
  • 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. 
Discussion on this post will officially run from Friday 1st February 2013 to Friday 8th February 2013. However, the post will remain open after that point, so you're more than welcome to continue discussions on. 

Date: 2013-02-04 09:03 pm (UTC)
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)
From: [personal profile] j_quadrifrons
Well, the narrator does say that Smaug knows the market value of all of his treasures; it's the hoarding that's the specific source of the disdain, I think.

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.)

Date: 2013-02-04 09:34 pm (UTC)
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)
From: [personal profile] j_quadrifrons
Thorin is kind of a mess, isn't he? And it's hard to make sense of him in the book as we don't know very much about him before now, but what I tend to think is he's got an ideal of kingship that he's never had a model for, and a lot of experience of failure and ruin, and a very strong sense that the world is not the way it ought to be but no clear idea of how to put it back together again, which is why he fails so miserably when actually faced with a kingship decision, ie, Bard demanding a (perfectly justified) share in the treasure.

(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.)

Date: 2013-02-04 10:14 pm (UTC)
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)
From: [personal profile] j_quadrifrons
Thrain just kind of kills me. He goes off determined to retake Erebor alone (at least, given the direction they were heading, that's what I always assumed) and Balin and Dwalin go along, presumably to try to talk him out of it and get him to see sense, and then he up and disappears on them and no one ever knows what happened to him.

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.

Date: 2013-02-05 01:03 am (UTC)
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)
From: [personal profile] j_quadrifrons
PJ does love to start his movies off with flashbacks, so I have hopes that we'll get some of Thrain in the start of the second or third film.

(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.)

Date: 2013-02-05 11:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gallifaerie.livejournal.com
I think Smaug is definitely another category - he loves treasure, but he has no use for it (except possibly for sleeping on, and making himself a protective undercoating with a strategically-placed vulnerable spot). I suppose he exemplifies greed - just wanting more things for the sake of it.

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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