31 December 2019

My “I Read This” List for 2019

I finished reading 47 books this year. That’s only a little under my annual average, but it feels padded by a few children’s books, some zines and a few essays. Not reflected in this list is the time I spent reading parts of a couple large books I have been making slow progress in and haven’t finished. I’ll get them finished eventually. One of my goals for the year was to read more books by women. I have 18 on my list, which isn’t even half, but it is more than last year. My top five of the year, in no particular order, are:

Barbara Hambly – The Silicon Mage – This is part two of the series. I read the first one years ago and finally read the other two. The thing I liked most about this book was the writing about two of the secondary characters. She is a noblewoman who secretly trained to be a warrior before her arranged marriage to the land’s second most prominent noble. He’s a mage-born with almost no power so he had to settle for being a body guard to wizards. The are united by their longing for some other life impossible for them to have. It struck me as better exploration of character then I usually read in fantasy books. Also, the main plot of the book about a wizard trying to use computers to gain immortality is pretty cool too.

Patricia McMillan – Marina and Lee – I read a bunch of books over the last two years about the events surrounding Kennedy’s assassination in 1963. This wasn’t the absolute best one, but I love how McMillan explored the story through interviews with Marina Oswald about her life with this infamous man. I particularly liked the chapters about life in the Soviet Union. Whatever else may have been going on, McMillan presents a strong through-line which explains Lee’s defection, his haphazard activism, and his violence all the way through his death.

Maus: A Survivor's Tale - Art Speigelman – This is a classic for a reason. What Speigelman was able to do to tell both his father’s story of life in Poland during the Holocaust and to explore his own relationship with his father is stunning. And he’s done it all with little pictures of mice and cats! This is comics at its best.

Rachel Carson – Silent Spring – Another classic long on my list. It makes it on the best list for it’s importance and legacy. It’s odd to read it now because many of the points she makes about the dangers of untargeted spraying via airplane and “bio-accumulation” of toxins are things I’ve known about since grade school. But that’s the whole point. This is the book which first popularized the idea that more chemicals may not always be better. Carson’s writing is why twenty years later I grew up reading about these ideas in Ranger Rick and Boy’s Life magazines.

A Primate's Memoir – Robert M. Sapolsky – This was one of the most emotional and affecting books I have ever read. Sapolsky is a scientist who has measured stress hormones in baboons as a way to study the impact on humans from the stresses of our social systems. This is not a book of his research, but a memoir of his experiences in East Africa as a younger man. The way he writes about visiting villages, climbing mountains, seeing his baboons roll through the generations is incredible. He made me feel the wonder and horror of the things he saw in a way which I rarely get from travel writing and non-fiction. A triumph of words.

Honorable mentions for this year are Into the Wyrd and Wild, written and (mostly) drawn by Charles Ferguson-Avery. I’d say nice things about this creepy forest supplement to roleplaying games even if I didn’t know him. I also finished book twelve of The History of Middle-earth. It’s been at least 18 years of my life getting through that series (savoring it, not struggling), and now I have that feather in my cap.

The 2019 List:
A+Plus #1-5 - Kevin Siembieda & Alex Marciniszyn, eds. [comics]
Rachel Held Evans - A Year of Biblical Womanhood
JK Rowling - The Tales of Beedle the Bard
Heroic Dark - Dustin DePenning [RPG]
Lee Harvey Oswald as I Knew Him - George de Mohrenschildt
Sarah Elisabeth Orr - Beautiful and Terrible: Women and Power in Early Science Fiction
Barbara Hambly - The Silicon Mage
Hiroko Yoda & Matt Alt - Ninja Attack!
Priscilla McMillan - Marina and Lee
Caitlín R Kiernan - To Charles Fort, With Love
Into the Wyrd and Wild - Charles Ferguson-Avery [RPG]
Ellen Gunderson Traylor - Noah
Maus: A Survivor's Tale - Art Speigelman [comics]
MetalShark Bro - Walter Ostlie, Bob Frantz and Kevin Cuffe, Chas! Pangburn [comics]
Manjane Satrapi – Persepolis [comics]
Microscope - Ben Robbins [RPG]
Umbrella Academy, Vol 1: Apocalypse Suite - Gerard Way & Gabriel Bá [comics]
Rachel Carson - Silent Spring
The Peoples of Middle Earth (HoME XII) - JRR Tolkien
Summerland: Revised and Expanded Edition - Greg Saunders [RPG]
Gail Simone & Brian Bendis - Birds of Prey (1999-2004) #56-61 [comics]
Barbara Hambly - Dog Wizard
TaoLand #1-5 - Jeff Amano [comics]
TaoLand Adventures #1-2 - Jeff Amano [comics]
The World of the Dark Crystal - Brian Froud & JJ Llewellyn
Kids on Bikes - Jon Gilmour & Doug Levandowski [RPG]
Copernicus Jones: Robot Detective #9 - Matt D Wilson, Kevin Warren & Josh Krach [comics]
Sarah Vowell - Assassination Vacation
Cathriona Tobin & Simon Rogers, eds. - Seven Wonders: A Story Games Anthology [RPG]
Barbarella - Jean-Claude Forest, adapted by Kelly Sue DeConnick [comics]
Tales from the Bully Pulpit - Benito Cereno, Graeme MacDonald, Ron Riley & Chad Manion [comics]
A Primate's Memoir - Robert M Sapolsky
Making History: Three One-Session RPGs - Tristan Zimmerman [RPG]
Horrorism #1 - Brendan Carrion
Roquia Hussain - "Sultana's Dream"
Eve Titus - Basil of Baker Street
The Articles of Confederation (1777)
Oh, the Thinks You Can Think - Dr. Seuss
The King's Stilts - Dr. Seuss
The Cat's Quizzer - Dr. Seuss
I Can Lick 30 Tigers Today - Dr. Seuss
Did I Ever Tell You How Lucky You Are? - Dr. Seuss
Karen Armstrong - Mohammad: Prophet for Our Time
The Constitution of the United States of America (1787)
The Jewish Bible Quarterly Vol. XXX:3 July-September 2002
Sharon Stiteler - Disapproving Rabbits
Dark Places & Demogorgons – Eric Bloat & Josh Palmer [RPG]

05 December 2019

Best of The History of Middle-earth, part 2

This is part two of my count-down of my favorite materials from The History of Middle-earth, the twelve-volume series of drafts, alternate versions and supplemental essays produced by J. R. R. Tolkien about his fantasy world over the course of his life. See part one here.

(5)
V: The Lost Road and Other Writings, Part Three: The Etymologies

This is a essentially a dictionary of every root for the two main versions of Elvish Tolkien created, as they existed just before he began writing The Lord of the Rings, circa 1937. Here is single entry:

ÁLAK- rushing. *álākō rush, rushing flight, wild wind: N alag, rushing, impetuous; alagos storm of wind. Cf. Ancalagon dragon-name [NAK]. Related to LAK.

*alk-wā swan: Q alqa; T alpa; ON alf; Ilk. alch; Dan. ealc. Cf. Alqalonde Swan-road or Swan-haven, city of the Teleri [LOD].

Now, it goes on like this for 65 pages! For those who don’t know anything about the Tolkien canon this is complete gibberish, but like any technical writing, it’s full of information for those who already know. In Noldorin the word for a wind took on the implication of rash action. They named a dragon that! There’s more information about dragons at the root NAK. There are cognate words for “swan” in Qenya, Old Noldorin and Telerin (the languages of the three types of “high” elves), as well as in Ilkorian (eventually to develop into Sindarin) and Danian (spoken by the Green elves).

On one level it is completely ridiculous to make such an exhaustive word list for a set of made up languages. Even move so, because the completed word list quickly became opposite as Tolkien revised the language relationships and rejected the idea of Noldorin as a separate language. As a technical tool for studying Tolkien’s elvish languages, The Etymologies is, sadly, a useless (or at least deeply flawed) document. It represents a single moment in time. The crystallization of the creator’s thoughts into one glorious complete whole before the next moment’s thoughts made it obsolete. This is, in many ways, the story of all the History of Middle-earth documents. So many of them represent searing moments of creativity when Tolkien put everything in is head down in one place. Usually, he moved on to other ideas before he even finished and even when he did finish, he almost always immediately began revisions. His stories where never complete because his world was always changing in his mind. But then, on another level, this is what I love about it. I love to experience these rare moments when he did complete a work, even if he later changed most of it. I appreciate the vicarious joy of creation which must have driven him to just get it all down in some form.

I like to visit The Etymologies and wander through the myths, seeing the tenuous links between dragon names and city names. The implied stories in cross-cultural word play. The story of the world is there in the notes behind the words. It’s a fascinating document. I have even used it to pull together names for characters in roleplaying games. One of my characters had a suit of armor named Alagos, because of The Etymologies.

(4)
III: The Lays of Beleriand, Part Three: The Lay of Leithian

The story of Lúthien and Beren is one of the two “big” stories in The Silmarillion, so it’s no surprise it’s a story Tolkien told several times. I already have one on this list, but The Lay of Leithian deserves the higher spot for its sheer ambition. Over six years in the late ‘20s into the ‘30s he managed to write over 4000 lines of rhyming couplets, telling about 80 percent of the story. Thusly:
But Thingol looked on Lúthien.
“Fairest of Elves! Unhappy Men,
children of little lords and kings
mortal and frail, these fading things,
shall they then look with love on thee?”
his heart within him thought. “I see
they ring,” he said, “O mighty man!
But to win the child of Melian
a father’s deeds shall not avail,
nor thy proud words at which I quail.
A treasure dear I too desire,
but rocks and steel and Morgoth’s fire
from all the power of Elfinesse
do keep the jewel I would possess.
Yet bonds like these I hear thee say
affright thee not. Now go thy way!
Bring me one shinning Silmaril
from Morgoth’s crown, then if she will,
may Lúthien set her hand in thine;
then shalt thou have this jewel of mine.”

It has all the same beats as any over version of the tale, but told in this very particular way. Like all long-form verse, it takes a little bit to get into the flow of it, but once you do, it’s fascinating for being one of the most detailed versions of the story. To me, that’s one of the great things about reading through the HoME books. Works like this poem have blown apart, for me, the authority of the published Silmarillion. That’s not “the real story” and this is some weird verse version of it. No, this is one version of a story which exists in many forms, just as the edited and pasted-together prose version in The Silmarillion is another version of that same story. Reading this, aside from its inherit qualities, contributes to an overall impression that the heroic stories of Tolkien’s First Age really are timeless tales “of old” because they have been told and retold in so many ways. Knowing full well all the versions are by Tolkien himself doesn’t really diminish that impression. At least, not for me.

(3)
VII: The Treason of Isengard, V: Bilbo’s Song at Rivendell: Errantry and Eärendillinwë

I am unsure why this poem speaks to me so much. I think it is more the process of transformation which is revealed in this chapter. Tolkien wrote a quirky poem in the 1930s about a typical Nineteenth Century fairy riding a grasshopper and wooing a butterfly. The poem was developed and published as “Errantry” in a magazine in 1933. Later, during the writing of The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien revisited the poem and over several drafts transformed the basic structure into a narrative description of the mariner Eärendil and his final journey into the West to summon the help of the Valar in the final days of the First Age. Many of these iterations are given in full in the book.

To me, this transformation illustrates perfectly part of what Tolkien imagined he was doing. Silly songs about fae dancing in the moonlight which he had grown up with were just the pale and half-forgotten memories of heroic deeds in ancient days. He recast the rhyme “Hey-Diddle-Diddle” as an old Hobbit song, which in turn referred back to the man in the moon from the elvish creation myth. In transforming his own poem “Errantry” into Bilbo’s “Eärendillinwë” – good enough to receive a hearing before the elves of Rivendell – Tolkien is again revealing to us the deeper “truth” behind the “diminished” fairy stories we still tell.

It’s very “meta,” in the modern parlance. He didn’t make it explicit in anything I have read, but it seems Tolkien knew perfectly well what he was doing. This chapter contains excerpts of Tolkien’s writings to others about the link between the poems. In the introduction to a 1962 collection where “Errantry” was republished, he supposed Bilbo must have written the “silly” version earlier before he moved to Rivendell. The chapter ends with some fascinating behind-the-scenes information about the poem. The multiple drafts, the statements of the author, the commentary of the editor to put it all in sequence; together, this is the History series at its best.

(2)
IV: The Shaping of Middle-earth, II: The Earliest ‘Silmarillion’

Tolkien’s natural working method was iterative. He would begin a text, abandoned it, start over creating a more detailed version of the same material, abandon that as well, start over again but with a different voice (perhaps changing from an annal style to a narrative from). The result of this method is many stories get told many times, in various ways, and in various levels of detail. The meeting of Beren and Lúthien, for example, is one of the most-told tales, even making it into The Lord of the Rings. By contrast, some stories were almost never retold – the siege of Gondolin comes to mind. This is why this selection from the late '20s, which Tolkien called “Sketch of the mythology with especial reference to the ‘Children of Húrin’”, is so valuable. It is a continuous narrative of everything from the moment the Valar entered the newly-made world, through the battles of the First Age. This document is not for poetry or clever names or descriptions of throne rooms, it is focused on the big events – who fought whom over what and the outcome. It’s the only time Tolkien wrote the whole thing down. It’s about 30 pages, a mere sketch indeed! But the whole story is there! We get Melkor’s betrayal, the Kinslaying, the building of Nargothrond and Gondolin, the recovery of one Silmaril, the destruction of each elvish refuge, the birth of Elrond, the mission of Eärendil, and the Last Battle. Then we get hints of what will happen in the future when the world will finally be healed from all Melkor’s damage.

It’s a breathless read. It moves. There is such a wide scope to the mythology in Tolkien’s mind, and it’s all there for the reader to see. The way in which legacies and resonances play out over the generations and the ages are clearly on display. This complete mythology would have been amazing to read. That is the bittersweet flip side of so many of the these drafts and preparatory materials. He never managed to set this whole saga down again. He told most of it in various parts, but as he left it and as it was assembled into The Silmarillion, it is difficult or impossible for most people to get a sense of the whole thing. This “sketch” is a complete, focused version and it’s from the author’s hand as well. So go read it!

(1)
IX: Sauron Defeated, Part Two: The Norton Club Papers

My affection for The Norton Club Papers stems from the fact this unfinished work combines most of what I like about the other selections on this “best of” list. The work is, at once, a “meta” joke about Tolkien’s own life and obsessions, it is presented as one of the many “layers” of myth-retelling which Tolkien built into the back-story of how his ancient stories were transmitted down to today, it sits on the boarder between fantasy and “weird fiction”, and its unfinished nature allows me to imagine the shape of what the finished version could have been.

To describe it simply, Papers is the minutes of a literary club at Oxford college. The members are described, their jovial banter is recorded, and their compositions are read into the record. Then one of their number named Lowdham begins to share the ancient language he hears in his dreams. This leads Lowdham and Jeremy, another member of the club, to travel up and down the west coast of Ireland hoping they can “get” a little more of this language which seems to come to them from the sea. Then in waking dreams, they witness the final days of Númenor.

I love both what Papers is and what it is trying to be. Its ambition and execution as a work of fiction is impressive. I think I like it even more to take it as one of Tolkien’s most honestly personal works. He wrote what there is of it in a rush over Christmas break 1945, so it is remarkably consistent in tone and depth. I enjoy that he was able to indulge his penchant for writing dialogue of fussy English people (the over-long early versions of his forward Concerning Hobbits come to mind). This is explicitly drawn from his experience with his own literary club because the first page of the manuscript suggests the Norton Club was modeling itself on The Inklings of old. He writes about what it is like to hang out with other English professors and challenge each other to impossible games like “let’s guess what the language of Atlantis must have been.” We get to be the fly on the wall. I love that through his various characters Tolkien points out his own real influences; various characters make reference to Atlantis, Avalon, St. Brendon and even Lewis’s Numinor as a way to seat Númenor into its literary context. I love the visions Lowdham has and tries to describe to his friends. He tells them of seeing the dome of a particular building at their college at night with a cloud behind it and inexplicably knowing it looked the same at the great temple in the capitol of Númenor after Sauron had initiated human sacrifice as part of worshiping the darkness. To me, this is Tolkien writing of his own experience of having these sort of “knowing” visions which he is trying to capture and understand through his writing. I love that the Papers are dated in the late eighties, meaning Tolkien was essentially imagining people in the future looking back on him and his peers. Everything about the work is odd and oddly personal in a uniquely great way. It is so like and yet also so unlike his other writings. If only he had finished it...

That does it! My ten favorites, ranked. If you have read The Lord of the Rings and crave some more Tolkien, my first recommendation is The Unfinished Tales of Middle-earth and Númenor. If you still want some more Tolkien after that, then come dive into depths of The History of Middle-earth series. You may find this link to What’s in the History of Middle-earth? helpful in finding your own favorite selections. Thank you for reading.

10 October 2019

Nerd Level Up

I have had all twelve volumes since 2008
After a good many years of reading one chapter at a time, here and there between other books, and really taking the time to saver them, earlier this year I have finished all twelve volumes of the History of Middle Earth series. This is a collection of most of J.R.R. Tolkien’s previously unpublished manuscripts which relate to Middle Earth, each with detailed notes from his son, literary executor, and fellow Anglo-Saxon professor; Christopher Tolkien. The books were, for me at least, almost always enjoyable to read. Not only do they contain more, or alternate versions of, stories about Hobbits, Elves, “Atlantis” and even tweed-wearing professors, they are full of the younger Tolkien’s personal reflections. He remembers when and where the family moved to align the dates of scraps of material written on the backs of envelopes. He recounts his trials puzzling out his father’s handwriting in decades-old notebooks. He even admits to mistakes he made in assembling The Silmarillion for publication in the 1970s. This is all value added. I get the sense, though he never admits it in the text, this was an important project for Christopher Tolkien precisely because, in a way, he got to go back and live with his father again in such a personal way.

I’d like to say everything was amazing, but it wasn’t. How could it be? A bunch of the material is incomplete or rejected or deemed to not fit into what had already gone before. Even so, there’s a lot I liked. Here are the bottom five of my top ten materials from all twelve volumes.

(10)
VIII: The War of the Ring, Part Three: Minas Tirith, XII: The Last Debate

Volumes VI, VII, VIII and part of IX contain the draft versions of The Lord of the Rings. I do like reading the early versions of the tale where Bilbo’s cousin Bingo meets Trotter, a very well-travelled hobbit, in Bree. Mostly, the draft texts are a curiosity, but some contain interesting details which ended up getting cut. At one stage of writing, there was a scene after the Battle of Pelennore Fields where Gimli, Legolas, Merry and Pippin catch each other up on what happened on their different roads. The story about the Paths of Dead was later moved to its final place in the chapter The Passing of the Grey Company and was shaved down in the process. In the draft version of the chapter, Gimli tells, very briefly, about how they found the body of Baldor son of Brego, one of the early kings of Rohan along the way. He died beside a door he couldn’t open. There isn’t much more said, but Gimli calls it a sight he cannot forget. I feel the same way. For some reason, there’s a deep tragedy in the idea of this person lost in the dark and unable to open a door. Where does the door even lead? Who else was with him? Why did he want to enter the Paths in the first place? So many questions spiral out from these few lines and no answers are given. We are left to fill in the details. It’s classic spooky storytelling. Let the reader think of something, it’ll be worse than whatever the writer could says. There are a lot of moments like this in Tolkien generally, but even more so in the unfinished and draft versions. I think it is where Tolkien is at his best, giving us just enough to feel like there is a bigger world here. It’s the illusion of other vistas behind the vistas.

(9)
X: Morgoth’s Ring, Part Four, Athrabeth Finrod ah Andreth

Most of the material in volumes IX, X and XI is from after LotR was written when Tolkien returned to the stories of the First Age. There is an early period before LotR was actually published when he still hoped to have the First Age tales published with The Lord of Rings. There is also a later period after publication when he was still trying to bring all the tales of the First Age into a publishable form and also to make the world consistent with what was now canon in the published text. For example, he tried to re-write the creation myth to account for modern astronomy which, he felt, demanded a round earth from the beginning of the story, rather then a flat world later made round. He also wrote an essay trying to describe, for himself at least, how the Elves actually died and if Glorfindel of Rivendell really could be Glorfindel of Gondolin.

From this same later period comes Athrabeth Finrod ah Andreth, which translates to The Debate of Finrod and Andreth. This work is set up as a discussion between the Noldo King Finrod Felagund and Andreth, a Wise-woman of the human House of Bëor. She was the great aunt of Beren One-hand. They discuss the different ways they, as the two kinds of Children of Illuvatar, live and die. Athrabeth is, first of all, a very different view of what happened in the First Age – the other tales are mostly heroic tales of battles, magic and daring do. It’s refreshing, in a holistic, medieval way, to think the same guy who died frighting a werewolf in a pit for dude bro honor also had this reasoned discussion with another mature scholar. The Noldor are always supposed to be the “wise” elves as well as the heroic ones, so it’s nice to have a dialogue of that sharing of wisdom.

Aside from being a cool thing to add to the canon, I find Athrabeth fascinating because it puts ideas Tolkien had written about elvish life cycles in other places into the mouth of an elf. Finrod tells Andreth about hröar and fëa, which roughly mean Body and Spirit. These terms, and the concepts Finrod talks about, don’t really show up elsewhere. Similarly, Andreth tells him lore which shows up nowhere else. In ancient times humans met and fell under the power of a horrible being she has come to understand was Morgoth (Sauron’s boss and the original Dark Lord, for those who don’t know). This is, to me, more of Tolkien putting his Catholic faith into his fiction.

What I found so interesting about it, however, is Andreth presents this information as a great shame and something she can barely discuss. Since it shows up no where else, is it really such an important idea for Tolkien that his fantasy humans also had a -capital F- Fall? I get the feeling from reading the Athrabeth, as well as what Tolkien wrote to friends in his letters, that is was an important part of his thinking, at least in later years. His was retelling Christian theology and so a Fall, a period of tension between good and evil, a final battle, and the ultimate removal of humans from the created world are all there; just but recast in fantasy terms. It’s not always so clear when Samwise is reciting Bilbo’s silly song about trolls, but it’s very clear in some other these other works what Tolkien was doing.

(8)
V: The Lost Road and Other Writings, Part One: The Fall of Númenor and The Lost Road, III: The Lost Road

Tolkien was haunted by a tale he could never rightly tell. He tired several times and in different ways to tell the story of the fall of Númenor. Aragorn is descended from the Númenorians and some of his family history is told in The Lord of the Rings. There is the annalistic list Tolkien prepared of the rulers of Númenor for inclusion in the Appendices to LotR. Then, there is The Lost Road. Legend says Tolkien and his writing buddy, C. S. Lewis, challenged each other to write a tale of travel. Lewis was to write of “travel in space” and he produced the novel Out of the Silent Planet, and went on to expand it into a trilogy. Tolkien was to write of “travel in time” and he began to write The Lost Road, which progressed no further than a first draft of sketches and some connected poetry. Like so many of his other abandoned stories, the parts of The Lost Road which exist hint at a powerful finished work about family legacy and human tragedy writ over thousands of years.

In brief, The Lost Road begins in the modern era with a son and father beside the ocean. The son feels a strange pull to go to sea, almost like it is a memory of the past. The father admits he felt it too as a young man. This scene repeats again and again, each time going deeper into history. According to the story, fathers and sons have always stood on the beaches of England, looked out over the Atlantic, and thought they really belonged “out there somewhere.” This leads all the way back in time to Tolkien’s Second Age of the Sun when humans really did live on a huge island, Númenor, in the middle of The Great Sea. Then the tale begins to tell of the beginning of the end of Númenor’s age of bliss and the political machinations and betrayals which led to its destruction by the gods.

I like most of the ideas The Lost Road plays around with. I actually like the sentimentality of using generations of father-son conversations to bring the reader into the story. Tolkien was someone who loved his children very much. Many of his stories emerged from ones he told his children and his letters to his son while his son was in uniform during the Second World War positively gush with affection and worry. There is not so much familial love on display in his major published works, but it was clearly part of who he was. I like seeing him write these intimate scenes for this story. I enjoy that the idea of “racial memory” or “generational longing” is how a fantasy writer and linguist would tell a story of “time travel.” He certainly wouldn’t write about a time machine, as any Tolkien fan should know. I have experienced false nostalgia from reading particularly moving descriptions of the past, but the longing to be someplace you have never been is not something I have felt spontaneously. It seems Tolkien himself did feel that way and he tried to work through those feelings, in part, with this story. He explored this in more depth in another abandoned story I will discuss later in this countdown.

Should I mention how the whole Númenor is remembered as Atlantis aspect of the story and the Númenorians being a “blessed” and “better sort” of people is problematic? Maybe I should.

(7)
XI: The War of the Jewels, Part Three: The Wanderings of Húrin and Other Writings Not Forming Part of the Quenta Silmarillion, I: The Wanderings of Húrin

This is a prime example of an unnecessary text. I’m sure that’s why material from it was not incorporated into The Silmarillion. It’s a remarkably complete text, though, so that suggests it was important to Tolkien. Or it could be he just got a wild hare to write it and dashed it off all at once.

Húrin was a human warrior, one of the lords of the Edain, who allied with the Elves against Morgoth. He was also the father of Túrin and Niënor whom Morgoth cursed and whose downfall has a prominent place in The Silmarillion. The doom brought upon the brother and sister is technically Morgoth’s torment of Húrin whom he captured, chained to a seat on a fortress, and cursed with supernatural sight so he could watch the tragedy of his children’s lives unfold. Then, to rub salt in the wound, after his children were dead, Morgoth released Húrin and sent him to do what he willed. What he did, as told in The Wanderings of Húrin is go get revenge on the Folk of Brethil. Túrin had lived and fought for this forest-dwelling people for many years, but they would not assist him in his final battle with the dragon Glaurung. He essentially attempts to shame them for not being braver, but he doesn’t really want to inspire them, he wants to incite them to revolt against their hereditary lord. This he does and the fight effectively ruins Brethil and another stable land holding the line against Morgoth is ruined. It’s a tragedy in all respects. Húrin oversteps decency out of anger, the lord of Brethil oversteps decency in response out of fear, with the Folk of Brethil caught in the middle; genuinely remorseful they let Túrin be killed and genuinely torn about whom to follow.

This is a classic Tolkienesque conflict of ancient rights and personal motives. To me, the central scene is one in which Húrin speaks to a moot gathered at Doom-rock (it reminded me of the scene at a natural stone amphitheater early in Richard Adams’ Shardik, even though that was written later). This is where Húrin gives the speech which upsets the Brethil society. It is similar to Tolkien’s other “mental contest” scenes, such as Gandalf breaking Grima’s hold on Théoden or Aragorn talking to the Mouth. It also has something of Marc Antony speaking over Caesar’s body in Shakespeare. It’s very much about the power in words and working one’s will through words almost like magic.

It’s all well-developed, mature storytelling. Tolkien had it in him. He didn’t write many scenes like this, but he could write them. Wanderings is what’s good about Tolkien on display. Then again, it’s his weakness as a writer too, because this fully-realized story fragment doesn’t connect to much of anything. It’s way too detailed to be included in the annals of the First Age, but it’s not given a proper beginning or ending, so it can’t be called a proper short story. It’s a very striking couple chapters orphaned from an novel which was never written.

(6)
II: The Book of Lost Tales Part 2, Part One: The Tale of Tinúviel

The first two volumes of the History of Middle Earth, unsurprisingly, contain the earliest versions of what eventually became The Silmarillion, begun while Tolkien was convalescing from a bout of flu during the First World War. In 1917 he first wrote the story which eventually developed into a touchstone for his life: The Tale of Lúthien and Beren.

What amazes me most about all the Lost Tales versions of the stories is how similar they are, in broad strokes, from the first to the tales as later written. At the same time, the details and the tone of the stories are so different, they are hardly the same stories at all. The Tale of Tinúviel is emblematic. In short, Beren wishes to win Tinúviel’s hand from her stern father Tinwë and so they go off together, make friends with a great hound named Huan, fight an evil prince, take on Melko himself to claim a Silmaril only to have Beren’s hand bitten off by a giant wolf named Karkaras, which Beren and Tinwë eventually slay to recover the jewel. These fundamentals of the story did not change over 60 years of development! It’s remarkable. These stories arose almost fully formed from some deep, very personal place, it seems, and just stuck around with Tolkien forever.

But the tone is so different. Firstly, the language is full of constructions to sound “old timey” like “surely, my thane” and “then did she lave her hand.” Then Tinúviel’s magic is totally fairy tale. She sings a song of all the longest and tallest things to make her hair grow long enough so she can weave it into a rope to escape from the tree top house where she was being kept. Lastly, while telling the story is part of the point, Tolkien can’t help but make it something of a just so story along the way. The tale contains the line, “Wherefore it is that there is hatred between the Elves and all cats even now.” Yes, that evil prince I mentioned is a large black cat called Tevildo Prince of Cats and he menaces first Beren (by making him hunt rat-sized mice) and then Tinúviel. That’s where Huan, the great hound, comes in and he chases Tevildo off. If this part of the story sounds familiar too, it’s because through various mutations, Tevildo eventually becomes Sauron who, in the form of a werewolf, fights with Huan and loses.

I love this version of the story. It’s so goofy and charming, which was clearly what Tolkien was originally going for. The valor, dignity, and complex relationships between fate and heroism he later explored with the same First Age stories just isn’t here. These are “simply” new fairy stories in the vein of the ones Tolkien had read as a child.

I’ve got five more to talk about next time!

21 March 2019

Irons in the Fire

I am in the thick of putting the Never Going Home manuscript to rights. Almost all of the writing is in, but the wildly different styles of the authors have to be reconciled. This is a big job and I’m really not sure how I’m going to get it done by the date we’ve set for ourselves. I see I’ve got all this work to do, but I also see my inbox full of questions from other writers who are doing adventures for an adventure collection. There are all sort of skill levels represented in this group of 31 writers as well as different levels of experience with role playing games and with the First World War. I’ve found it hard to keep them all on track and explain the game mechanics over and over and still have the energy to sit down and work on my own word counts. It’s just another aspect of how NGH is bigger than we ever expected. My role as creative director is really stretching me when there are so many places my attention is being drawn. Learning. We are still learning how to do this.


Never Going Home is certainly the biggest iron in my fire pit, but I also have a few more in there. Since Wet Ink Games has created a new system for NGH, we feel we can use it to make more small to medium-sized games. We are developing a few at the same time, but the one off to the fastest start I will be called Project Equus. We have someone whom we have worked with before who had a really good handle on the +One system. We’ve basically given this person a free hand to create a game and they are off and running. My involvement should be slight, but it’s still something I have to keep an eye on.

We have also started to move forward on a large project I am going to call Project Nimbus. It will very likely be in development for several years and will take a lot of work – mostly in the world building and in hemming and hawing to get the tone absolutely right. Aiming from the start to make a “prestige” product is not something I have done before, but with the success of NGH and the working methods we are trying, I think we will be ready to make a great finished product by the time we have all the contents written.

Lots to do. Better get to it.

07 March 2019

Strife Liberated!

You will know already if you were a backer of the project, but Wild Skies: Liberating Strife is done and set out to everybody. It’s available at fine retailers everywhere and has even been reviewed. It’s March and I feel like I have not come up for air since I started putting the Liberating Strife manuscript together in August of last year. Well, I am taking this moment to breathe. *three deep breaths*

When we chose to set the first Wild Skies book in Europe we always knew “The America Book” was going to be the next one we did. Being two “Yanks” ourselves, it only made sense. We took the same assumptions about the period and the technology level we want for the Wild Skies world and adjusted everything to an America context. What if everything Nikola Tesla said he could make actually got made? What if there was no “trust busting” and bigger and bigger companies unified into one mega-corporation? What if American politics of the period was stanch isolationism backed by the highest level of tech in the world – all leased to the army and air navy by said mega-corporation? Well, that’s the America we present in Liberating Strife.

That was what Brandon and I brought to the table. This was bigger than our previous project with two additional writers brought on. To over-simplify their contributions, John Kennedy was our “company and dissidents” specialist and Josh Sinsapaugh was our “culture and counter-culture” expert. The depth of research those two went to and the results they produced fill me with joy. Instead of just giving players a bunch of American tech and some American animals, this book paints an almost complete picture of the United States of American in this alternate reality diesel punk time line. Corporate structure of the United Dennington Trust; it’s there. Boardroom politics at the highest levels; covered. The popular and underground music scenes; explained. Traveling the roadways and airways; yes. All the countries of North America; have their own section. This is a 130 page book and it’s page 67 before you get to anything with game statistics; before that it’s all world information. Considering three of the four main writers grew up with Palladium’s Rifts* Wold Books, maybe it’s not a surprise.

The book also has a lot of great art in it. Showcasing art is another thing we get from the game books which are our roots. The cover by Chuck Walton and Eduardo Domínguez is another great one. Inside, in addition to another slate of great pieces from Mike Mumah of animal people doing all the things (shout out to my favorite, the Jazz Age party on page 87) and Aspen Aten doing another map for us and Brian Manning’s work on the weapons and vehicles, we have 30s-looking national parks posters from Steven Wu and action scenes by Steven Cummings. All together Wild Skies: Liberating Strife doesn’t just give you some stuff from America, it lets you play Wild Skies in America.

Case in point: In January I ran a game of Wild Skies using some adventure seeds we had sent to Kick Starter backers right after we funded and the pre-gen characters in the book. I was laying awake in bed the night before thinking about the game and trying to account for everything the players might want to do. I knew my game was full of people who had signed up specifically to play Wild Skies – I knew they would want to test the full potential of the game. As I lay there, I feel like I went through all the stages up to cosmic brain, because with all the material in the book flashing through my head and all the sessions I have run over the last few years I knew I could handle any situation which came up. If they wanted to go on a road trip, or try to take over a night club or ride the rails, or become air pirates, or stay in the work camp and investigate the original mystery, I could run that. When it came to it the next day, I could indeed run it and we had a great time. People like a game I helped create! It’s an amazing feeling.

Wild Skies: Liberating Strife is Wet Ink Games product number WIG-108, which means there are 9 Wild Skies products out there now. I haven’t talked about them all here so be sure to check them all out on DriveThruRPG.