A Conversation for Ask h2g2

'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 41

Babel o' fish...back to earning a crust!

Don't even compare Tolkien with Dickens!!! But I'm not looking for a fight...honestly. smiley - smiley
smiley - fishsmiley - hsif


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 42

~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum

Dylan...? Did someone say Dylan?

If LOTR is the canon then I say 'fire!' Not that it's worth the powder... Incestuous academic... b*****y do...

Winnie the Pooh is all the mythology anyone needs.

Fantasy (by definition a flight of the imagination) is best in the visual media - comix, cartoons, films, VR. LOTR - too long for a single film - would make an interesting TV series. Then those boring descriptions of blades of grass would just 'be there' in the background and not interupt the 'action'.
Or was that the Smurfs?


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 43

Babel o' fish...back to earning a crust!

No wonder my homebrew is sinking fast...have you been helping yourself? smiley - alesmiley - yikes
smiley - fishsmiley - hsif


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 44

NexusSeven

Just to address MaW's (and others') point about LotR being slow going; yep it is indeed, but that's the *point*. smiley - smiley

Epic journeys to save the world are, well, epic in scope, and the way Tolkien chose to depict this is through detail.

Moreover, Frodo's progress through Gondor, Mordor and the nasty bits on the way to Mt Doom reflects Frodo's own pain and anguish with each step by making the reader experience some of that themselves by making the description of the journey as excruciating and drawn-out as possible. It's not supposed to be pleasant reading.

Personally, I do like the books very much. As an English graduate, though, I am more than aware that the Middle-Earth series is portentous, humourless, overblown, intentionally over-archaic and tortuous to read.

Just like the myths and sagas of which Tolkien was a scholar. smiley - winkeye


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 45

Babel o' fish...back to earning a crust!

smiley - ok


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 46

Huw (ACE)

NexusSeven said:

"Moreover, Frodo's progress through Gondor, Mordor and the nasty bits on the way to Mt Doom reflects Frodo's own pain and anguish with each step by making the reader experience some of that themselves by making the description of the journey as excruciating and drawn-out as possible. It's not supposed to be pleasant reading."

Fair enough, maybe, but then how do you explain the rest of the books? It's ALL boring, drawn-out journeys.


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 47

Babel o' fish...back to earning a crust!

Nope!!! smiley - smiley
smiley - fishsmiley - hsif


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 48

a girl called Ben

Just like my life, really. I do NOT want to take a taxi, and a train, and a bus, and an aeroplane, and a train, and another train tomorrow....

I do remember that recurring phrase about tightening belts. And it irritated me at the time.

A traveller called Ben


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 49

NMcCoy (attempting to standardize my username across the Internet. Formerly known as Twinkle.)

The Harry Potter series is very well written! smiley - smiley What I like about it is the depth of the story. You find out things in the first book that you don't realize are clues to, for example, the fourth, until you go back and re-read it.

smiley - starsmiley - elfsmiley - star -Twinkle
(um, is this topic drift?)


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 50

Bob Gone for good read the jornal

Just slightly love smiley - tongueout
we will start a thred all about harry potter for you smiley - winkeye

and I dont think any one said that there was nothing about the book that was good..but in haw evermany hundred pages it is if there are only 30 or so decend pages it kind of makes for a bad book.


'Tolkien boring' shock!

Post 51

~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum

*normally not very pedantic but*
N7 - please tell me you meant pretentious not portentious.

Yeah, the Olde Sagas are better. It takes a bit of work to translate and get into them but at least there's not a lot of peer pressure insisting on it. And their intent was to inform and entertain a lay audience not to bedazzle fellow scholars.


Morthond

Post 52

typolifi

What's the sense in condemning something?
Haven't you noticed your tastes where subject to change?
Besides I wouldn't claim too loud that I found a book boring. I'd be afraid of having missed the point or, what's even worse, of being judged the kind of person who find books to be boring.


Still round the corner there may wait
A new road or a secret gate;
And though I oft have passed them by,
A day will come at last when I
Shall take the hidden paths that run
West of the Moon, East of the Sun.


Morthond

Post 53

Bob Gone for good read the jornal

if you are really that botherd about how other people see you any way.
I mean I have always ben seen as weird (to tell you the truth I like it tha way people leave me in pece) because In high school I was reading well I read LOTR and another book called the assins aprentice. and now I take my guitare co collage (alright if you are a music corse but I am doing nursing smiley - tongueout) but I do those things to unwind and what they think dosent matter.

is it such a crime to not like books any way??


Henneth Annûn

Post 54

typolifi

No it is no crime not to like books.
And it's not a crime to be limited.
I am limited. We all are. I'm just glad that in my case it's not about books.
Yes I really am bothered about how other people see me.
But I don't think that's the topic, is it?


Morthond

Post 55

Imaldris

A CRIME NOT TO LIKE BOOKS!!!

Let me check. Yes it is! dammit, it's better than sitting in the living room watching a box full of colored dots.

Class, Let us open our books to page 1 in Farenheit 451...


Farenheit 451

Post 56

Lear (the Unready)

Ah! Now there's a book I can appreciate...


Morthond

Post 57

~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum

F-451 (yay) Great book. A hot book. The movie didn't do it justice.

But some books - like LOTR - will only work to a mass audience as film or TV. The self-indulgent academic structure of the book only produces the worst kind of peer-pressure-induced self-flagellation for any 'sophomoron' who feels compelled to wade through it. The intended audience was the stuffiest of old academics - the kind who have their noses in old books all day and night anyway - for whom it must be a droll ray of sunshine.


Morthond

Post 58

Huw (ACE)

This is a reply to Typolifi's first post.

Typolifi said:

"Besides I wouldn't claim too loud that I found a book boring. I'd be afraid of having missed the point or, what's even worse, of being judged the kind of person who find books to be boring."

If I find a book to be boring, I will say so. I do not care if other people agree or disagree with me, or whatever their opinions may be, because I am my own person. As for missing the point - aren't you being fantastically paranoid? Finally, who can judge you? Furthermore, even if someone does 'judge' you, why should you care?


Morthond

Post 59

King Cthulhu of Balwyniti

I've read a lot in here about how slow, and pretentious, and overblown LotR is...and I just want to ask a question back - Why is that automatically assumed to be a bad thing? The words aren't always just there to carry the story - sometimes the language used *is* part of the story, and that is very definitely the case with LotR. It seems that many of the people who react unfavourably to LotR, at least in this forum, are complaining that the language gets in the way, without pausing to consider that there are people who may like to wallow in the rich descriptions and "high" style that Tolkien employs. My point, then, is that this aspect, which has been derided so much in this forum, is an aspect of the work that some people actually enjoy.


Morthond

Post 60

Gullibility Personified

I'm not sure that this adds a whole lot to the discussion, but if you feel it will add absolutely nothing to your intellectual growth you have the right to say whether you want to read it or not...smiley - tongueout

I haven't read the great three for a while so maybe I'm in no position to say this, but I enjoyed it best when Tolkien described things which would generally be recognised as animate. These descriptions really were good, and I think he put a bit much effort into trying to convince us about all the marvellous (or not so) things that the mountain held in its slightly softened heart of mined stone etc. That all may have had something to do with the fact that I was only about nine years old when I read them last...smiley - blushI'll just leave now I think. *tiptoes out door*


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