o h i just realized that one of the trees cut down near bag end was the acorn from the last movie. o h n o

welp, it could have been? But we don’t know for sure. 

In a cut scene, Bilbo buries the acorn in Dale. And it is the most perfectly Bilbo scene in the history of Bilbo Bagginsness. Hope in the face of utter death, the possibility of replanting and rebuilding. I’m still a bit pouty that it was cut.

Here it is. 

At the end of this clip, you hear PJ saying that because they cut the scene Bilbo would still have the acorn in his pocket when he gets home. 

We know that it isn’t the tree over Bag End, because that is already there when Bilbo leaves the Shire. 

(shitty MS paint circle to show Bag End and Tree in the background)

Anyway, we dunno for sure, it’s not confirmed where it is, or even if Bilbo planted it at all. It could have been the Party Tree. 80 year old oaks can sometimes get big enough to be the sort of size Tolkien describes – the Party Tree was massive, apparently. 

But hey, Sam replaces it with an actual mallorn after the Scouring – the only mallorn west of the Misty Mountains. Which imo is a fitting and appropriate successor, and Bilbo would 1000% approve because he is rather fond of elves himself. 

(it would have given Thorin the EPIC sulks)

idk I now and again toy with the idea that Bilbo never planted it at all. Because he can’t bear to put it into the cold dark ground, never to be seen or held again.. 

just like

So I attended a thing where I needed to wear a lot of glitter (like, a lot, I’m still finding it) but the only thing I could thing of was that I’m sure dwarves love glitter? When things are peaceful and they can do things purely for the aesthetic you cannot tell me that dwarves don’t have glitter beards or something. OR the glitter war paint because what is worse than fight in the sun and blinding people? Also glitter is gorgeous and so are dwarves so. I just needed to share. You’re the best ❤

THAT IS THE BEST.

YOU ARE THE BEST.

Hi Dets! Do you have any advice for someone embarking on a very long lotr fic? Also, how can I make OC’s more realistic and fit better into the story? Thank you sm you’re wonderful!

Hey Nonnie! 

ohgod, look, I stumbled into this the way I stumble into everything, but okay, I guess I can tell you what works for me? It will be different for you, but I hope some of this applies anyway 🙂

I began with absurdly high expectations of myself. Frankly, I STILL have absurdly high expectations of myself. 

Never give up, never surrender! See it through, no matter how damn long it takes. You aren’t abandoning it: you’re on hiatus. Totally different thing.

Research is awesome and great and fun, and you can dive into it for hours and get lost in all the minutiae of this world Tolkien gifted us with… but don’t forget to tell the story. The story is what people are here to read, after all. Keep it moving forward and don’t get bogged down by the endless details.

Stop thinking of your OCs as ‘OCs’. Start thinking of them just as characters. Because they are, they are as much a character as the canon characters are. You just have to be the one to establish them, rather than the source material.

Make your characters – ALL of them, original or canon – affect the story. They must affect it, change its direction. If your original characters are only there as wallpaper while the canon ones do all the action, then of course they will feel less real. Real people affect the world. For instance, in Sansukh the original characters that change the direction and even the tone of the narrative are Gimizh, Merilin, Baris, Gimris, Bani, Thira, Laindawar, Laerophen, Jeri, Kara… I could go on!!! They affect each other, they affect the story and they affect the world. They may not always affect the narrative of the canon characters – but they change the story by their presence. They have narrative weight.  

Give characters conflicting views and motivations. Make them struggle and strive for their goal. Let the reader see them fail, and succeed, and fail, and succeed again. If you want your reader to sympathise with a character for a long long time, they need to be able to fail. There need to be consequences for that failure. And those consequences need to be dealt with.

Don’t bash the canon characters – somebody out there loves that character, I promise you, and will be hurt and pissed if you demonise them. Find more motivation for them instead, or a journey that takes them into their challenge zone. I did this for Thranduil especially. But I was also careful not to demonise Denethor – he was poisoned by the Palantir and Sauron, after all.

Think of the building of tension as a slow SLOW crescendo, leading to the high point (peak tension or change of circumstances!) and then a swift decrescendo (denouement/new situation or result). Rinse and repeat, don’t waste a moment before allowing the tension to begin building again. Don’t allow the tension to slacken entirely. Make a change of circumstances count. Otherwise, why have the climax in the first place? This makes your action more dramatic and meaningful in the long term. It also helps with working out the flow of a long story.

If you are desperate to write a particular scene, write it. Skip the stuff in between, and write the scene that is bugging your brain and won’t leave you alone. Then fill in the intervening stuff. 

Write notes. Take photos. Write other things (music, for me). Draw pictures. Enjoy this, it’s meant to be fun!

Finally sitting down with the newest chapter because I want to give it the attention it deserves, and work and life have not allowed that until now. Here we go! SQUEE! Tauriel!!1!!lkjfdsfiew!! The description of Namo is breathtaking. Oh ho! Sneaky Namo! Jeri is da boss! Etc and so forth! Is Jeri discalculic? Ah Kara, you’ll be in charge eventually, get used to it. Laindawar is starting to get it. Smartass Nori. Oh Nori. Darling Fili. Sleep, dummy. The Shire is rising! 1/3

2/3 Bilbo, Merry has made a choice and needs to set an example! Thorin gets it. Oh Frodo. Rosie you sweet darling. Bilbo, some things don’t really heal. We all have to learn that. Gaffer Gamgee, full o’ hobbit sense. Snoring arguments! Oh Thorin. Cuddle Puddle! Sweet Frodo, we all wish things could be solved without violence. Bad farming=pissed Hobbits. A fine match indeed Bilbo. Kick him in the berries? Not a bad plan. The aftermath is always the worst.

3/3 Tolkein didn’t break my heart with the description of the devastation, but you did. Sandyman, I’ll break your face. Oh Bilbo, your home. Saruman finally shows himself. Thorin, you remembered! Merciful Frodo. Kick a dog too many times, Saruman… Barum! *snrk* Saruman is denied the West by Manwe, then? Yes, time for a drink. I need one after reading that. 

THIS REVIEW OMG

is the BESSSSSST ❤

(Yes, Jeri is dyscalculic! AND JERI IS STILL VERY SMART AND LOGICAL. Bc screw stereotypes, honestly.)

lswgflwjhwljhgwj THANK YOU, THANK YOU SO SO SO SO MUCH! *hugs tight*

My mom always talks to me about having ‘Mom Instincts’ which is like when I get hurt she knows something’s wrong without me telling her. That got me to thinking maybe Dís had ‘Mom Instincts’ and thinking about that just makes me want to cry.

(holy shit, when do I develop these instincts, all I have is the SW-esque ‘i got a bad feeling about this’ and the ‘it’s quiet. TOO quiet’ instincts so far…)

Also – ARGRGHRBSFKSLGJKSFS no wonder she latched onto gloin’s kids so hard, when you put it like that. Ouuuuuch.