J.R.R. Tolkien Epic Reads discussion

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The Silmarillion
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May 15, 2016 12:55PM

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Ch. 8 is a great narrative on Melkor's darkness, his cunning and deceit and how he fomented discord between the Valor and the Noldor. Ungoliant is a great dark character ... nice and creepy.

As for Melkor, am I weird if I find that I admire him? :D I think he is really a badass antagonist. He can influence everyone that easily, though I have to say that it's partly because of Fëanor is a hot-headed (or is it hot-tempered?) too. I guess that's why he will have misfortune fate in his life.
Note: in Indonesian, there is no female/male called for third person (no she/he). So when I read my Indonesian edition I don't know whether Ungoliant is a she or he. I have to read my English edition. And now, I wonder if there is another giant spider in Middle-earth. And if there is, what sex is it? but if there isn't I'm curious about why Tolkien created all female spiders.


I didn't know that Shelob is Ungoliant's daughter, though. But now I remember that there are more spiders in The Hobbit. But I think they aren't like both Ungoliant and Shelob. At least I don't remember one of those spiders that attack Bilbo and the dwarves is gigantic like Ungoliant and Shelob.

I agree the concept of sucking out all the light is really good.
Melkor is great because he's such an effective manipulator, sowing the seeds of discord and then melting into the background to watch the destruction unfold...
As for these female spiders, I found this at sciencedaily.com
Female spiders are voracious predators and consume a wide range of prey, which sometimes includes their mates. A number of hypotheses have been proposed for why females eat males before or after mating.
Maybe this is why Tolkien made his evil spiders female!

I only vaguely remember those spiders at the moment ....
Oh, I love your picture of the two Silmarillion editions! I can see how having the Indonesian one makes all the difference. How did your book hunt go in Japan?

I had great time in Jimbocho though i wished I can spend more time there because the experience itself was pretty amazing :D Btw, Jimbocho is a place in Tokyo that well-known for their secondhand bookstores.
I ended up buy Gone With The Wind English edition that was published in 1951 for less than USD 5, in good condition! How I love secondhand bookstore :)

Now as I read, I guess I should know it from the beginning as Saruman is also a manipulator. It's just I see Melkor is better (as an antagonist) than Saruman.
I didn't know about female spiders! Thanks for letting me know. Now it makes sense and I more appreciate what Tolkien write in his story, as it based on the life of real female spiders. And now they creep me out LOL

So Wita, please join our discussion whenever you can. You can reread it, or if you don't want to that's okay if you just jump up to the discussion every month. As you can see, there are three threads already. One for Preface, Ainulindalë and Valaquenta; the other one is for chapter 1 to chapter 6; and the last one (this thread) is for chapter 7 to chapter 12. You can join us in which ever thread/chapter you want.
Welcome and hope you have a great time here!

Hi Everyone ... Nice to 'meet' you all :)
Silmarillion is my ultimate ME story of Tolkien books. I've finished reading the Sil and also Children of Hurin too. As I enjoyed reading the book, I would love to have a discussion with you guys. And I'll try to catch up your discussion one by one.
Ch. 7 : My favorite parts is about Feanor and Fingolfin. Their characters has began to show. And finally, there are some dialogues! Not much, but it feels so refreshing. The sibling rivalry, especially from Feanor's side is so tensed. You will find on next more chapters.
Ch. 8 : Yes, about Melkor .. I really feel you guys :) Despite of his ability to freely change shape, his appearance was described as beautiful and majestic, in a dark sort of way. He will captivate you, for sure!
And speaking about Melkor, there's an actor who feels kinda related to this character. It's Vin Diesel! When upon meeting Elijah Wood he apparently begged him to speak to Peter Jackson and IF a Sil movie was ever made he wants to be cast as Melkor. His love for the character is so strong that when required to get fake tattoo's for a movie he always ask for the named Melkor to be incorporate somewhere in his body. Have you guys ever heard about this?
Well, salute for Vin Diesel for reading Silmarillion! :)

Well I surely don't know about Vin Diesel loves TS. I only know Stephen Colbert being a big fan of Tolkien works and the guy who played the son of the Green Goblin in Spiderman, gosh I forgot his name :) Those are the only two I know love reading Tolkien books.

Here's scene of Feanor & Fingolfin in Ch. 7

"Get thee gone, and take thy due place!", by Jenny Dolfen
It's James Franco and he's on my cast list as Mablung ;)



1. Elegant twist. I thought Feanor's conflation of Melkor and the Vala as the same, i.e. entities who would take the Silmarils from him was really a great way to set up what came.
2. Imho, Tolkien's naming and renaming and multiple naming is both tedious and fabulous! I love: Morgoth: the Black Foe of the World:)
3. Using Feanor's grief over the death of his father, was another deft plot trajectory.
4. I love Ungoliant's noshing down on the gem stones, lol. "and she devoured them, and their beauty perished from the world", swoons over the poetry;)
5. Morgoth's anguished cries and the creation of Lammoth, more (beautiful) (chilling) dark poetry .
6. The end of Ungoliant ... she devoured herself ... Is Ungoliant a play on gluttony? Lol ...
7. But Morgroth did "save" the Silmarils from her insatiable appetite ... and the burning pain they cause his hands is great stuff ... and I also love "his majesty as one of the Valor long remained, though turned to terror, and before his face all but the mightiest sank into a dark pit of fear."
8. Now, Feanor's story, turns so dark, after losing his father and the Silmarils. (Is this the first mention of Middle-Earth in Silmarillion?) (This is when I wish I had the kindle edition so I could just do a search!) (Oh, have we seen the birth of Men?!?!?! Did I just forget that?)
9. Here is the second mentioning of the Galadriel who will play such a large part in LotR. I always try to note when we're introduced to the LotR characters.)
10. Feanor's betrayal of the Teleri, so dark, so sad. And then burning the boats! Now, whatever sympathy might have existed for his grief over his father is spent. It's interesting that after the revelation of the Prophecy of the North, and Doom of the Nolder"; he's like, well, it doesn't say we'll lack courage!
Whew! So much there! I thought it was really an amazing chapter.

Weren't they asleep the last time we heard about them?!? Or is this just something else I forgot.
All in all, this chapter didn't wow me as much as chapter 9. It tells the backstory of the alliance and troubles between the elves and the dwarves ... how they alternately fought and won and fought and lost to the dark things birthed, encouraged, twisted by Morgoth ... ORCS!!!
I did appreciate the discussion of the dwarves' crafts that set the stage for Mithrael (sp?)
I liked Melian's "unseen wall of bewilderment and enchantment."
Is this the second Denethor? Or is this the same Denethor Rach and I discussed earlier?
Okay. Isn't the opening of TH movie taken from this chapter?

Whew! Again!
Next month's chapters are short. I think that's a good thing:D

1. Elegant twist. I thought Feanor's conflation of Melkor and the ..."
Chapter 9 is my favorite of Silmarillion so far! I cannot believe it took me a whole month to start it :P
To be honest, I'm not too fond of Feanor. He's stubborn, easily to persuade and somehow irresponsible he (most of the time) makes me angry, Lol. But he's a very interesting character I cannot help not to be intrigued by his story. And what story he has!
I'm so sad that he caused the civil war, yes he's grieving for his father death but he also causes so many deaths upon his kin. He's just...I'm not sure if I see him as a protagonist or antagonist. But I guess it's the beauty of his character (and the story and other characters in general). Tolkien makes his characters aren't as clear as black and white, even I find Melkor is awesome :D
I mostly read Silmarillion in Indonesian, so I don't quite get the beauty of the writing, mostly it's so dry because it's also written in Indonesian formal writing. It fits with English writing perfectly but in a way it loses the poetry kind of feeling, I think. BUT I got to learn new thing here! I never heard/knew about kinslaying before, in Indonesian edition it's translated into perang saudara (civil war). When I read it, I was curious I instantly open my English edition to look for it. I thought Tolkien will use civil war, though somehow I just knew that he will mostly not use the word. And I was right, he use kinslaying instead. So I check on my eDictionary, they don't have the word and so I googled it, voila! I get a new word now :D
Hah, Ungoliant is indeed play on gluttony! I cannot imagine she's so hungry he ate herself. It's just eww....
We've seen the birth of Men in previous chapters. I forgot which chapter but it was in earlier chapter. I think not long after it tells about how Eru makes elves as the First Children. I'm not sure about Middle-earth, though. I didn't think about it last night. I'll check about it later on my eBook (yes, I also have the eBook version :D in this time like this eBook comes in handy, Lol).
Okay, those are my thoughts about your thoughts :D I basically have similar thoughts with you. But there is one more thing I found in this chapter, it's about the life of the elves. Before Silmarillion I know that elves are immortal, sort of. They have a very long life, but somehow I never read more about it. I mean, from the movies I know that they can die when someone kill them but I don't think I never read about it in LOTR and The Hobbit. So it's a nice thing knowing that it is really written in the story. Hope you understand what I mean.

Weren't they asleep the last time we heard about them?!? Or is this just something else I forgot.
All in all, this chapter didn't wow me as much as chapter 9. It tells the ..."
That's the exact thing I questioned when I read about dwarves in chapter 10! I don't think we missed something, because we only got dwarves in the chapter when Aule created them. That's is, there is no dwarves until now.
And...it's the same Denethor we discussed before! Again, it's another thing that I questioned and I instantly check for it on my eBook :D
I'm not sure whether the opening of The Hobbit movie comes from this chapter, though. I mean if PJ got it from this chapter, he surely have to get its rights, right? while we know that Tolkien Estate is the one who still have The Silmarillion rights now. But then again, I forgot the opening of The Hobbit :D So I cannot say much about it, Lol.

To be honest, I'm not too fond of Feanor. He's stubborn, easily to persuade and somehow irresponsible he (most of the time) makes me angry, Lol. But he's a very interesting character I cannot help not to be intrigued by his story. And what story he has! ."
Ditto:)
That's really interesting about the "civil war" vs. 'kinslaying". Kinslaying is so much darker:(
Okay, so I guess I forgot about the birth of men ... hehe. Oh well, they are here now:)
I really loved this chapter too. I think for me it's up with the Ainlindale and Valaquenta. If I remember correctly I liked those two very much as well.

Okay, good to know:)
It's been years since I saw the first Hobbit movie now, but doesn't it open with the history of the dwarves and how they both fought and aligned with and had misunderstandings with the elves? Reading ch. 10 it just sounded like that history, which you're right, Rach that brings up the whole question of rights.
But I just don't remember all that history in the book The Hobbit. Unless it's told later and then the adaption just brought it to the beginning like was done with the LotR movie?
Well, at least we know this Denethor has been put to rest;) So hopefully we won't see another one until THE DENETHOR!

Notice that The Hobbit the place names are much less like to be normal names and more to be descriptions.

But I think Mary is also right, PJ most likely "created new story" he (and his team) added so many things we barely know what The Hobbit is all about.

To be honest, I'm not too fond of Feanor. He's stubborn, easily to persuad..."
Agree, knowing what kinslaying means now I can feel that it's so much darker and evil than just a civil war.

1). the dwarves, their awakening. I felt the same thing with Heidi and kak Rach. I thought I missed somewhere in earlier chapter about dwarves but I didn't. So, I tried to find more 'explanation/story' about it...
The Awakening of the Dwarves
When Aule first made the dwarves, he made seven in total. Now, there are five different versions of the next part of this story, but they’re all basically the same: after making the seven dwarf fathers, Aule started making dwarf women - the theory being that each dwarf man would have a wife. But after making six, Aule got tired, and so the oldest dwarf, Durin, was left without a wife. So, when Iluvatar set the dwarves to sleep until the elves awoke, each was laid next to his wife, except for Durin, who was alone. (There’s actually another version in which Iluvatar made the dwarf wives, but since he didn’t want to alter Aule’s work too much, he made the dwarf women almost exactly the same as the dwarf men. But this version doesn’t account for why Durin didn’t have a wife…)
Now, in the published Silmarillion, the story is pretty simple: there were a few dwarves, Iluvatar scattered them across Middle Earth, and they woke up and established seven dwarf clans. We know that Durin’s clan was the Longbeards, and that he eventually established Moria. In the Blue Mountains were the Firebeards and Broadbeams. And somewhere to the east (most likely in the Orocarni Mountains) were the Ironfists, Stiffbeards, Blacklocks, and Stonefoots.
But one of Tolkien’s notes on an earlier draft adds these details about Durin: “He wandered widely after awakening: his people were Dwarves that joined him from other kindreds east and west." The note also mentions that other dwarves were laid to sleep along with the dwarf fathers (so, basically, more similar to the awakening of the elves, in which there were three original elves, who then discovered dozens more elves sleeping nearby. This would be significant in several ways. Not only does it answer how only thirteen dwarves were able to establish an entire civilization (with the inclusion of an unspecified number of other dwarves, such population growth is much more believable), but it also gives us an answer for where Durin’s wife came from - obviously, she must have been among those dwarves who started following Durin.
SOURCES: The Silmarillion, The Histories of Middle Earth vol. 11 ("The Later Quenta Silmarillion”), vol. 12 (“Of Dwarves and Men”)


That's an excellent point about Melian and Melkor. It would have been cool if Melkor had tried to break it and it held;)

And about the new folder, what's it all about? Can I add with some information like this dwarves story? As Goodreads tools setting is different and I use mobile device most of the time, I'm afraid I can't give what the folder wants, e.g. link. What should I do? Can I just do the manual like copy paste and mentioned the webpage source? Or is there a way do this stuff? Can you share it with me? I'm sorry, I'm so unfamiliar with this application :)

You can post the link there, but if you can't do it since you use mobile phone I think it's okay if you just write it down. You can add some information there, mainly a specific one (like your Dwarves story), I think. While the link is for the one who wants to know anything about Tolkien related.

I agree with Rachmi, if you can copy and past things like the dwarf story with attribution (mentioning the source) that would be great. I don't use the mobile app, so I'm not familiar with it:(
If you have other links can you copy and paste those? But if you do that they don't work? Maybe Rachmi or I could repost them so they work?
The resources folder is to help the group gather a collection of stuff around the web that is Tolkien related that group members might enjoy and find interesting as we progress in our reading:)

Chapter 12, I thought I'll get more about men here, like the numenor and such but it's quite a short chapter. Maybe we'll get another explanation about men in next chapters? I wonder who are Dark Elves, though. I don't think I missed something, this is the first time I read about them but there's no description about them here in chapter 12.

It is my opinion that Tolkien used the (seemingly) most powerful characters as antagonists to show that, no matter how small or weak or lowly a person might seem, they are capable of overcoming the greatest of evils. Good can overcome evil if just one person is willing to fight it. But it may have also been a matter of practicality. Those in positions of great wealth, might, and power have a greater opportunity to become evil because they have more resources that can be used for evil purposes.
On to the Dark Elves. I may be mistaken, but I believe the Dark Elves are the elves who never journeyed across the sea to Valinor and Aman in the first few chapters.( I am still getting caught up to the rest of the group and I think I just read this part.) They are called "dark" because they never saw the light of the two trees that lit Aman in those days.
Hope this helps.

I think so too! The powerful one definitely has more resources and opportunity to do evil things.
I think I missed that dark elves part. The problem with reading only two chapters a month is I often forget the detail of previous chapters. So I have to go back to them just to make it clear. Looks like I have to do it again with this dark elves :D
Thank you Sydney!

But ... is Morgoth = Melkor? I'm thinking not, but I get confused when Tolkien has multiple names for a single entity. I understand the purpose, but as a reader I still get confused:)
My thoughts on Chapter 11, which was a real beauty imho.
"...the Valar sat long unmoved on their thrones ... For the Valar may work many things with thought rather than hands and without voices in silence they may hold council with one another. Thus they held vigil in the night ..."
I was like that is meditation! lol. The Valar meditated. What a beautiful expression of that kind of stillness.
I liked it that the trees didn't heal but that they yielded final fruits: the flower of silver and the single fruit of gold. Such poetry in creating the Sun and the Moon. That kind of stuff just makes me swoon.
More poetry: "But the Noldor named them also Rana, the Wayward, and Vasa, the Heart of Fire, that awakens and consumes; for the sun was set as a sign for the awakening of Men and the waning of the Elves, but the moon cherishes their memory.
So lovely, huh?
Arien is pretty awesome: "too bright were the eyes of Arien for even the Eldar to look on"
Also love this reversal: "Evening, the time of the descent and resting of the Sun, was the hour of greatest light and joy in Aman."
Plus, cool that he included—and the way he wrote about—eclipses: "... at times it will chance that he comes so nigh that his shadow cuts off her brightness and there is darkness amid day."
Also ... (I really loved this short chapter!) This passage is beautiful:
"But neither the sun or the moon can recall the light that was of old, that came from the Trees before they were touched by the poison of Ungoliant. That lives in the Silmarils alone."
It shows how time and actions and events leave their marks, these things that are done cannot be undone ... and life keeps moving forward. Sigh:)
And I love how Morgoth lost power: "for as he grew in malice, and sent forth from himself the evil that he conceived in lies and creatures of wickedness, his might passed into them and was dispersed."
Not sure if that circles back to Rachmi''s question and Sydney's answer:) Event the most powerful can diminish and ...Maybe that's why Tolkien makes his antagonists so powerful? To show they can be weakened, reduced, defeated ... ultimately by the smallest in LoTR. The contrast of the powerful being defeated by the humble and small is great story juice:)
So, chapter 12 felt like an introduction/summary for me. It kind of went back and forth chronologically? As it ends with "in the dawn of years Elves and Mens were friends" after it talks about how the mortals got entangled in Morgoth/Feanor/Simaril saga ... i.e. "they (the mortals) went down in ruin," and then provides an overview of the distinct biology of elves and men.
So the most interesting is ELROND! Is he half-mortal half-elf?
The Dark Elves: Chapter 3 (on my edition pp. 53-54) Tolkien breaks down all the elves, which I found very confusing and hard to keep up with at the time ...
Sydney is right!
"Those elves the Calaquendi call the Umanyar, since, since they came never to the land of Aman and the Blessed Realm; but the Unmanyar and the Avari alike they call the Moraquendi, Elves of the Darkness, for they never beheld the light that was before the Sun and the Moon."
Whew! A lot for two such short chapters! I may be late in September's read too! August and this month have been/will be a bit taxing for me. But if I get behind I'll catch up!