Inspiration From The Distant Past

Inspiration From The Distant Past
Found note in an old book... warms the cockles of my bookish heart...
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query stature. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query stature. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Bloggy Connections and Silliness

Kathy The Literary Amnesiac posted about our adventurous real life momentous meeting and you can read her side of the story here. Kathy is a ton of fun and is not a serial killer so if you ever have the chance to meet up with her: Do It!

If you missed my post about meeting Kathy, click here to read A Tale Of Two Bloggers.


Two Bits Of Silliness

This one isn't remotely bookish but everytime I see myself in a photo I'm taken aback by my lack of stature. Really, no lie, in my day to day life, my height equals that of my friends (except when shopping for pants). So what is the deal: Do I shrink in photos or do I just have delusions of stature? Does anything about your appearance in photos not jive with your mental image of yourself?

This bit silliness is bookish in a roundabout way. Today, my little boy and I drove to the closest town to pick up a friend for a playdate. This was our first time to see the friend's house and what a shock! Never in my life have I seen such a pristine home. Even when my house is perfect it is a hundred times worse than this house. How the woman does it with three boys under age ten boggles the mind.

Lovely as it was, there was one problem I spotted immediately. Can you guess? There was nary a book in sight... or newspaper... or magazine. Hmm... now that I think about it, the kitchen/dining/living areas were devoid of any signs whatsoever of personality special interests (no toys even). Really, I don't feel so bad about my clutter now because that kind of home is not humanly possible. They are obviously...

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Locus Focus: Middle-earth Day!


A good setting is more than just a backdrop!

This is my first time to join Enbrethiliel's  Locus Focus meme. I've enjoyed reading Locus Focus for months and feel like a slug for not participating sooner.  Actually, settings typically don't make me swoon in particular but when E announced Middle-earth Day, I knew I had to join. (E, are you surprised? Shocked?  Like Gandalf said: Expect me when you see me!)

Out of all my favorite books, Tolkien created the one bookish locale where I would dearly love to dwell: Middle-earth!  

Oh, how I wish I could pop right into one of the tales. Can't you see me as a hobbit?  I would positively make a hunky dory hobbit-- and not just because of lack of stature and a fondness for second breakfast-- but because I would be right at home in the rustically rural cozy Shire.  So bucolic!  So verdant! My garden would be out of this world!

But the Shire isn't the focus of my locus today.

Nope, it is Fangorn Forest.

Huh? What kind of bizarre segue is that, you ask? 


Well, if you think about it, what is more rustic than a forest?  And certainly verdant in a sylvan sort of way. And bucolic if you recall the tree shepherds of Fangorn Forest, the Ents. Next to the hobbits, I feel the most affinity with ents and the lost ent-wives.  So not such a stretch in my mind to yearn for both the Shire and Fangorn Forest. 

When E first announced Middle-earth day, Fangorn was the first setting to pop into my mind.  


Wandering among gigantic primeval trees.  


Clambering over gnarly roots and craggy boulders. Listening to the whispers of rustling leaves. Inhaling  earthy woodsy scents.


Seeking the sources of crystal clear streams.



Seeking out hidden waterfalls and secret meadows. And communing with Treebeard the Ent. Ah, my soul would soar...


I've always felt a connection to Fangorn Forest and imagined it so vividly that I was surprised to find that there are no major descriptions of Fangorn Forest in the book. Just little snippets here and there.  E always includes evocative descriptions from the book in her Locus Focus posts-- So what to do?

I considered switching to another beloved setting and, as I pondered, it occurred to me how many of my favorite settings provide respite from the character's harrowing adventures.  When the characters are exhausted, distressed or afraid, a haven of comfort and security is always fortuitously near at hand. 

Hobbit/Man/Elf-made havens such as: Frodo's new house at Cricket Hollow, Tom Bombadil's house, the inn at Bree, Rivendell and Lorien. 

And natural havens such as: the woods above Woodhall in the Shire where Frodo and Sam spent an evening with the High Elves or the Window of the Sunset where they spent a night of peace with Faramir on the border of Mordor. 

All Locus Focus worthy settings but my heart was set on Fangorn Forest. Then, my lightbulb moment!  Wellinghall, Treebeard's house! Merry and Pippen's haven following their escape from the Orcs. 

And here is Tolkien's description of the entrance to Wellinghall:
Suddenly before them the hobbits saw a wide opening. Two great trees stood there... like living gate-posts; but there was no gate save their crossing and interwoven branches...  Beyond them was a wide level space, as though the floor of a great hall had been cut in the side of the hill.  On either hand the walls sloped upwards, until they were fifty feet high or more, and along each wall stood an aisle of trees that also increased in height as they marched inward.


At the far end, the rock-fall was sheer, but at the bottom it had been hollowed back into a shallow bay with an arched roof... A little stream escaped from the springs above, and... fell tinkling down the sheer face of the wall, pouring in silver drops, like a fine curtain in front of the arched bay. The water was gathered again into a stone basin in the floor between the trees, and thence it spilled and flowed away beside the open path, out to rejoin the Entwash.
Sound's lovely, doesn't it. How wonderful it would be to visit Treebeard: sharing a draught, listening to the old tales and learning woodlore. And I would definitely stand under the gentle waterfall, wouldn't you?

And so my first Locus Focus draws to a close.

 Hello? Are you still here? 

Good, because I'm about to reveal a deep dark secret and wouldn't want you to miss it. Here it is: 

Anything Middle-earth transports me. I could talk about it for hours. I may even be a Tolkien geek.

Thank you, Enbrethiliel, for hosting a Locus Focus Middle-earth Day! 

And don't forget:  Havens can be found in unlikely places...




Locus Focus is a fun way to write an insightful post about a book without writing a review.  If you would like to celebrate a favorite setting, visit Enbrethiliel at Shredded Cheddar to check the specs!


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