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[community profile] snowflake_challenge #4 is especially intriguing:

In your own space, add something to your fandom’s canon. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.


Oh, I've gone around and around about this. I'm not just a Tolkien fan but a Silmarillion fan, which is a text constructed entirely from partial, unfinished, illegible, and undated drafts in varying contradictory forms. Tolkien left a lot of threads just ... trailing off into nothing. Wouldn't it be nice to have some of those threads resolved? Or to get his final word on a few things that are subject to particularly strenuous debate??

At first, I was like, "Pengolodh!!!" Y'all probably know that I have a thing for Pengolodh. He consumes a lot of my nonfiction and fiction writing. I thought, it'd be nice to have more information about him ... or more definitive information at least. If I had to choose, this would still probably be my answer to the question. (Which foreshadows that, perhaps, I am not going to choose??)

Then, along the same lines, I thought, "Christopher leaving Pengolodh in The Silmarillion!!!" But I immediately nixed that because Monday-morning quarterbacking Christopher's editorial choices is a particular fannish peeve of mine.

Next thought was The Shibboleth of Fëanor, which—despite being called The Shibboleth of F ë a n o r—goes into details about the names of everyone BUT the dang Fëanorians. Read more... )
This is my interpretation of [community profile] snowflake_challenge's prompt for Day 2: Write a Fandom Manifesto:

Seems like we all spend a considerable chunk of our fandom time trying to convince loved ones, friends and total randos alike that our fave is in fact the best. This can take shape of anything from watch parties/read-alongs to capslock squee in DMs to relentless gifsets to PhD dissertations.

One of my favourite forms of this is the "fandom manifesto" or "fandom primer," wherein one writes up an outline of what their fave is, why it's great, and links to where one can find more (with more or less detail and formality, depending on the venue).


This isn't about the typical character, pairing, or fandom, and it's more aimed at existing Tolkien fans than people who have never heard of Tolkien or the fandom, but I think it's close enough in spirit to count so here goes.

Why Tolkien Fandom History Matters



I spend a lot of time on fandom history. If I start typing "fa" in my browser, it doesn't suggest "facebook.com" but "fanlore.org." The universe as it should be!

This might seem an odd thing to spend time on. I don't write a lot of fanfiction anymore, and wouldn't this be a better contribution? Certainly more entertaining! Who even cares about "fan history" (whatever that is!)

I think it's perilously easy, in the moment, to think that what you're doing every day, what is important to your life, won't matter long-term. Or, it will be around and like this forever. Fandom, especially, can feel frivolous. It's a hobby for nearly everyone. It's often very personal. It's often, let's face it, very silly—by design.

I think it's the opposite. I think it's part of a moment—and an important part of that moment—similar to when cultures transition from oral to written traditions, or when cultures that have developed writing transition between scribal and print production. Read more... )
Fandom Snowflake Day 5 asked participants to "post recs for at least three fanworks that you did not create." I went *ahem* a little above and beyond. I did ten. I've been reading a lot of Tolkienfic lately--it is one of my goals for the year to make time for reading, as it is often one of the fandom pleasures that falls first to the obligations of running a website--and I wanted to share some of my favorites from among what I've read. I feel like I need to make up for a few years of rarely reading and commenting while I was in grad school. Most of these stories are Silmarillion-based, but there are a few that are from The Lord of the Rings.

Please check them out and, if you like them, consider leaving the author a note letting them know.

The Choice by Keiliss. Thank goodness the prompt that inspired this story gives away the ending or I don't think I would have been able to take it. I still teared up at multiple points in this tenderly written and beautifully human story about Elladan and his daughter making their choice about whether or not to sail for Aman. Few of Tolkien's unanswered question have inspired the speculation, angst, and fanfic as the question of whether the sons of Elrond sailed, and Kei's story deserves a place at the top of the heap. Her characterization, too, of characters who only appear in passing speak of why she is one of the giants of Tolkienfic. This story is simply wonderful.

Elendili by hadastheunseelie. I picked up this story for the Fandom Snowflake challenge that asked participants to reach out to someone new. I'll admit that I hesitated. It mentions a teenage girl and glitter in the summary, and while I totally support teenagers writing fanfic--a lot of my students do and I think it's awesome!--I also reserve the right not to read said fanfic when it's not one of my students! And the story was long. But, in the Snowflake spirit, I gave it a go and OMG. OMG, y'all. It is probably the strangest story I will rec here--which anyone who knows me will know I mean as a compliment--but Hadas is one of those writers with a gift for wielding words like a knife between my bones where they actually hurt. The imagery is stunning: sometimes gritty and very anchored in Modern-earth (where this story is set) and sometimes ethereal and otherworldly, making that familiar world of colleges and coffee shops Elvish somehow.

Eyes Bright with Honor by heget. Heget is working on telling the tales of the ten companions who died in the dungeon with Finrod in defense of Beren. The Beren and Luthien story has never particularly entranced me (Finrod's on the other hand ... *ahem*), but I walked away from this story getting it: getting some of the magic that people (including Tolkien) see in that story and in the character of Beren in particular. The story meanders through time, mostly looking back to the life of the OC Consael whose story Heget tells in this piece, and it is a story where the pieces all coalesce and make beautiful sense in the end. This is one of the most horrifying episodes in The Silmarillion to me, yet I could walk away from this story with a rare sense of feeling uplifted and hopeful instead of imagining those eyes kindling in the dark ... Heget plans to write about all ten companions, and I will be checking out the other pieces in the series on the strength of this one.

Galadriel: There and Back Again by Himring. If someone were to task me with writing the life of Galadriel, I would sweat over it for a year and turn out a sprawling, half-million word epic. And I still don't think I could top this story. Himring is perhaps one of the most underappreciated masters of Silmfic, and this story shows why. Her Galadriel manages to be stubborn, strong, and vulnerable with a no-nonsense wisdom that probably explains her survival alone (almost) of her family. And in well under 2000 words! Every wrenching, poignant word counts in this piece that stitches together the Galadriel who competed with (and feared) Fëanor and she who gave Frodo the light of Eärendil that saved him.

Home for Midwinter by Tallulah Red. I will echo Tal's several reviews on the LotRGenFic community--this was written for their annual Yule Exchange--who praised the world-building in this story. The story was written for Indy, who wanted to see Maglor adopt a family from among the Avari. Although a short piece, it sparkles with believable characters and culture, taking a different take on the Avari than most writers do. And in a fandom that has a Maglor-walks-by-the-shore-and-laments trope, it was refreshing to read a story that allows him happiness in the future while also not shying from his history.

Journeys by Independence1776. This story was written for me, for the MPTT/LotRGen Yule Exchange. I remember writing a story once for a friend that she described fitting like a pair of gloves that could only be selected by someone who knew her well. This is such a story. It is Maedhros and Maglor and a conversation in a cave, yet the dialogue simmers with much more than can be seen on the surface, and Indy achieves an easy camaraderie between the brothers that is delightful to read. It is simply wonderful, like Indy dove into my mind and extracted a story I would have loved to have written for my own verse. I'm officially adopting this one into the Felakverse.

The Purple Dress by Avon. This story gave me chills. Set in Númenor, a young woman flouts convention in her choice of dress color ... but this story is so much more than that. It is one of those pieces that unspools in slow revelations so that, as a reader, you're never entirely on steady ground. And once you realize what is going on, you're not there yet; the ending simmers with delicious double entendre. There's A LOT going on in this short piece, and every word and image count.

Though the Road Darkens by Marta. Marta's story tells the tale of Gorlim the Unhappy through the eyes of his companion Gildor. The voice in this story is simply magnificent; you feel like you are sitting at the fireside, hearing Gildor tell his tale. A complicated story, it brings in folklore, myth (Middle- and Modern-earth), and questions the historical tradition, offering different look at Gorlim's story. Oh, and it's beautifully written, the kind of words you want to lean back and savor like wine. If you're thinking--like I probably would have if Marta hadn't asked me to read this story--that you'd never be interested in a story about Gorlim, take a chance and prove yourself wrong. (I'm happy to admit that I was! :)

Winter Came Earlier by Oshun. She calls this "just a bit of fluff" in the summary, but saying this is "just" fluff is like saying the Grand Canyon is "just" a sidewalk crack. This is a layered and thought-provoking story in which Elladan faces, through Arwen and Aragorn, his own worries about mortality and what it means to be Peredhil. But don't let my summary scare you into thinking that this is a deep, heavy story that one can only read in a bright-lit room. This is Oshun, after all, and her work is as ever sweetened with romance and humor that balance perfectly with the deeper themes of this short, lovely work.

Winter Sons of Gondor by Elwen. It was my turn this month on MPTT to archive the challenge stories. This necessitates skimming each piece so that I can add the meta-data to it about character, genre, et cetera. Most of the time I do just that--skim--and I started to do so with this story but got hooked in despite my intentions to make quick work of posting it. Young Boromir and Faramir are coping with the pressures of their father's growing madness when they decide to escape for a morning to enjoy a rare snowfall. But their journey takes an unexpected turn. This story is a page-turner, and I could not have left off reading it and gone back to skimming if I'd wanted to.
In your own space, create a love meme for yourself. Let people tell you how amazing and awesome and loveable you really are. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so. Surf the comments and find people to give love to.

I totally understand how people are saying this one is hard. It is! I read it and thought, "OMG totally going to skip this one ..." But then I started searching for people I knew in the comments and saw how many kind and talented people I knew were prefacing their posts with, "I'm not deserving of praise but ..."

But you are. Even as I understand where the impulse comes from, it makes me sad when I see people--especially women--downplay their contributions and talents. Women, this is part of the reason why guys with half of your talent and none of your generosity of spirit are publishing and getting promoted and collecting accolades while you go mostly unacknowledged.

One of the most difficult things I ever typed was the first time I admitted, "I am intelligent and a good writer." I deleted it, retyped and deleted it again, before retyping it a third time and click POST before I could change my mind. It was such a simply statement and not even that grandiose, but I was convinced that I was being prideful and big-headed because I was saying "out loud" what was abundantly obvious to the people around me.

So forgive me if, even if you tell me not to, I show you yourself through my eyes. Some of the best people I know are part of this fandom! So as awkward as it feels, please consider doing this challenge (and please tell me or post to the challenge thread if you do so that I can show you the love you deserve! :)

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