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#silmarillion
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Daisey
The Silmarillion | J.R.R. Tolkien
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I‘ve appreciated the world building of this book every time I‘ve read it, but after multiple rereads I can simply enjoy reading it as well. There are epic stories with amazing characters. Yet, it only shows a small part of the world Tolkien created, and now reading it makes me want to reread books with other versions as well. This time I switched throughout between print, ebook, & audio versions.

#FellowshipOfTolkien #Silmarillion #reread

Daisey How‘s everyone else doing on getting through the book? 4w
JazzFeathers That's very true. Every new reread is a new experience, and every time we read it, we become more familiar vit the story and can start to see beyond the complex plot. It's an amazing book. 3w
42 likes4 comments
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Daisey
The Silmarillion | J.R.R. Tolkien
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Sharing a weird word of the week a day late. I‘ve read The Silmarillion several times but never stopped to figure out exactly what weregild meant until this week. In this case, Isildur kept the one ring as a weregild for his father & brother killed in battle.

weregild: monetary value set for a person and paid to their family or lord if slain; also man price or blood money (noun)

#FellowshipOfTolkien #Silmarillion
#WeirdWords #WeirdWordWednesday

CBee Good one! ☺️ 1mo
CatLass007 I‘ve read the word weregild before, I think it was in one or more of the Harry Dresden books. I never looked up the exact definition, but was able to infer its meaning from the context in which it was used. Thanks for sharing! 1mo
Daisey @CatLass007 I had a reasonably good idea based on context, but the clarification of words I wouldn‘t normally look up is one of the things I love about looking for words to share each week. 4w
43 likes5 comments
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JazzFeathers
Silmarillion | J R R Tolkien
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#FellowshipOfTolkien #Silmarillion

Reading this today.
I've read this story many times, in multiple versions. It's always exceptionally beautiful and moving.

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JazzFeathers
Silmarillion | J R R Tolkien
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#FellowshipOfTolkien #Silmarillion

Let's face it. If this story was written in today's fantasy language, it would be extremely dark and desperate.

Instead, Tolkien chose to write it focusing on desires and even goals, twisted as they may be. And because of this choice, a story that might have been very dark, with an underline of will-power, it's in fact a story of strong wills and desires with an underline of darkness.

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JazzFeathers
Silmarillion | J R R Tolkien
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#FellowdhipOfTolkien #Silmarillion

I love the story of the founding of Gondolin. I mean: Ulmo and his prophecy, the secret building, the way Turgon and his people disappear. It's so fairytale-like and yet it makes perfect sense in the narration.
I also love how the Vow starts to work its power. Yet Tolkien was always concerned with showing the Elves as fundamentally fair even when deeply troubled. Thingol's episode shows this perfectly.

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JazzFeathers
Silmarillion | J R R Tolkien
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#FellowshipOfTolkien #Silmarillion

Tolkien has a way to turn the environment into characters. The rivers and the forests, and the hills, the mountains, the plains and the lakes - all have the quality of characters in this narration.

I think this is why, even if at first glance this may seem like a descriptive chapter, there is still a sense of narration here.

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JazzFeathers
Silmarillion | J R R Tolkien
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#FellowshipOfTolkien #Silmarillion

I'm really quite behind 😟
But I'm trying to catch up and am not as far behind as my posts might suggest.

I'm enjoying this a lot. Truly, The Silmarillion Is Better evrybtime you read it, because names and stories become me familiar and nouances come to the fore.

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Daisey
The Silmarillion | J.R.R. Tolkien
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“Of Tuor and the Fall of Gondolin” is one of the stories in The Silmarillion that is only a tiny portion of what Tolkien actually wrote about this event. I had to go look up some other passages and revisit the illustrations by Alan Lee after reading the chapter.

#FellowshipOfTolkien #Silmarillion

52 likes3 comments
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Daisey
The Silmarillion | J.R.R. Tolkien
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I‘m playing catch up again this weekend. This is another epic story, but unlike most of Tolkien‘s stories that end on a hopeful note, the story of Turin is truly a tragedy. It includes the dragon Glaurung and the sword Gurthang, which are both important and fascinating characters as well.

#FellowshipOfTolkien #Silmarillion

CatLass007 Thanks for posting this and thanks for the tag. Is the book dragon a bookmark or some kind of post-it? 1mo
See All 9 Comments
Daisey @CatLass007 It‘s a magnetic bookmark. It tends to live in whichever of my Tolkien books I‘m reading. 1mo
CatLass007 It‘s awesome! I have a book addiction, a bookmark addiction, and a book plate addiction. I‘m not doing a search for a book dragon bookmark. I‘m really not. Really. 1mo
CatLass007 There are some gorge dragon bookmarks but no book dragon bookmarks, so I think my wallet is safe.🤣 1mo
Roary47 I‘m going to have to start this over. I‘m so lost. 🫣😭 1mo
Daisey @Roary47 It‘s completely ok to just let a lot of this one wash over you on a first read. There are several separate stories with the Silmarils being the main connecting link. Don‘t get stuck in trying to keep all of it straight. (edited) 1mo
Roary47 That‘s good to know. 🥰 1mo
53 likes9 comments
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BarbaraJean
The Silmarillion | J.R.R. Tolkien
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“For of us is required a blind trust, and a hope without assurance, knowing not what lies before us... And yet we also love the Earth and would not lose it.”
“…the Valar bid you earnestly not to withhold the trust to which you are called…Hope rather that in the end even the least of your desires shall have fruit. The love of Arda was set in your hearts by Iluvatar, and he does not plant to no purpose.”
#FellowshipofTolkien #Silmarillion ⬇️

BarbaraJean This passage is so fascinating to me, and echoes a lot of my own questions about God and the mysteries of faith and hope and trust. It‘s so interesting to think about Tolkien‘s own faith and how that informed the way he wrote about the “Doom of Men” and the unknown nature of what happens to Men after they die, in the world of Middle-Earth. The Christian parallels are strong here! 1mo
Daisey I would agree very much with your thoughts here. 1mo
35 likes2 comments