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 *smashes a bottle of champagne over the post* And we're off!

Epic Tolkien Bookclub: Week One (The Hobbit)
Chapter I: An Unexpected Party
Chapter II: Roast Mutton

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 a barefoot gauntlet walk across a set of lego pieces. 
  • 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 nerdy. Or too excited. 
  • 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 11th January 2013 to Friday 18th January 2013. However, the post will remain open after that point, so you're more than welcome to continue discussions on. 

(I'm cheating a bit, as it's not quite the 11th here yet, but I want to get this up before I go to work tomorrow, and 6am posting is just asking for disaster). Have at it, guys! :) 

Date: 2013-01-13 02:16 am (UTC)
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)
From: [personal profile] j_quadrifrons
You are 100% right about hope being central to the narrative. (Also, I am impressed by your ability to pull out Gilraen's deathbed pun in the original Elvish.) (Ever noticed that every SINGLE time they use the word "hope" in the movies they cut to a shot of Aragorn? It gets hilarious after a while.)

I was a little bowled over, on this last re-read of The Hobbit, at how much of it does improve with the perspective of a little more maturity. Well, not improve exactly. I loved it as a child, but I also remember being deeply skeptical of the idea that not killing Gollum was the single best thing Bilbo ever did.

I think you're right about Aragorn and Frodo. They're two very different kinds of people and they're heroic in very different ways, Aragorn in an old-fashioned epic way and Frodo in a much more modern, understated way. What I find so significant is that Tolkien gives both of them their due: Aragorn gets all the traditional rewards of the hero, and so does Frodo. In the world of the story, everyone recognizes that these two very different people are both extremely valuable in their own ways. (...And no one but Frodo recognizes how invaluable Sam was, but that's a different issue entirely...)

Date: 2013-01-13 02:25 am (UTC)
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)
From: [personal profile] j_quadrifrons
Glad to share. :D

I know what you mean - Jo Walton once said that she can't really read Lord of the Rings any more, she's read it too many times and what she does isn't reading, it's remembering. But I like that too, sometimes.

I think he did - and while I've always considered Sam's lack of recognition to be a manifestation of Tolkien's own class bias, I'm starting to think it might have been intentional: one of real heroes of the whole thing doesn't even get that much acknowledgement. (I originally wrote "the real hero," but I don't think you can say that, it's so complicated, the way that war ends.)

Date: 2013-01-13 02:35 am (UTC)
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)
From: [personal profile] j_quadrifrons
Very true - Sam doesn't get covered in glory or anything, but he does most definitely get a happy ending. Which no one else gets, so.

Date: 2013-01-13 02:41 am (UTC)
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)
From: [personal profile] j_quadrifrons
That's what I meant - everyone else gets, at best, a bittersweet ending. Sam gets to go home to the Shire, have a million children, be Mayor, write his books, and then, in the end, go west to the Undying Lands to be with Frodo. No one else gets it anywhere near that good (with the possible exception of Merry and Pippin, who get the same except for going west.)

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