Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2016-02-20 04:20 pm
[ F!S Anon Meme (the ??th!) ]
Secrets, rants, opinions, anything you want to say about your fandom or a fandom or fandom in general, do it here! Anonymously, of course. Get it all off your chest.
Some ground rules:
1. Going anon is encouraged but not absolutely required (for those who struggle with captchas and stuff).
2. No autoplaying/autolooping embeds, or embeds that cover/stretch the screen.
3. No dropping personal info or IRL contact info, etc.
That's about it, though!
I'll be linking some general/general-fandom threads I see so people don't repost new threads with the same stuff. If you want me to link your thread up here, drop a link in the first comment!
List of threads:
Favorite FSers
Your diehard fandoms
NSFW confession thread
Topics you wish FS would stop wanking about
What do you want FS to talk about more?
(Pan)fandom discussion post
General opinions
Fapping material?
Random rants

Re: Tolkien
(Anonymous) 2016-02-21 07:22 am (UTC)(link)If you're still looking for something to read after that, you could try the two Books of Lost Tales. They're some of the earliest writings so there's a lot that's different. Indeed, some of the stories and characterizations are almost unrecognizable. But, these books contain some of the completest stories for missing scenes (for instance, the Fall of Gondolin is definitely worth a read).
And if you're still up for more after that, there are some short stories like the Athrabeth Finrod ah Andreth, The Wanderings of Húrin, The New Shadow, and Tal-Elmar that I'd recommend. But you're getting into harder core stuff now, and I wouldn't justify buying the HoMe books just for these stories unless you're really digging Lost Tales and Unfinished Tales. Other than the Children of Hurin, all the other books I mentioned include a lot of notes and commentaries. The stories are more fragmented for the most part. So, if that will throw you out, I'd just add Children of Hurin to your reading list.
For resources:
http://askmiddlearth.tumblr.com/guides
There's a "The Silmarillion Reader’s Guide" on this page. The author of this tumblr is generally pretty good about answering questions, though she does present her headcanons as fact on occasion or is just wrong. So, grain of salt. But, overall, her resources are pretty good.
I hope you enjoy!