Scratches

Comments on life, the universe and everything from an aging Sixties survivor.

Name:
Location: Massachusetts, United States

Ummm, isn't "about me" part of the point of the blog?

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Signs of Geek-dom

Now of course, the merits of the signs it depend on what kind of geek you are. I am certainly an unrepentant LOTR geek, so it shouldn't surprise anyone that I spent Sunday afternoon, evening and well into the night a consecutive showing of the three films. This takes 10 to 10 1/2 hours, if you're counting, and we had a couple of intermissions as well. In this case you're a geek if:
  • You think Peter Jackson skipped the entire Tom Bombadil episode (three chapters of The Fellowship of the Ring) because he wasn't up to the creative challenge.
  • You think that while the film of The Two Towers succeeded visually with the Ents, it came rather close to slandering their commitment to the war. You also find it inexplicable that he didn't take on the Huorns.

  • You can distinguish between original dialogue and film dialogue without having the books in your lap. I confess to having read LOTR 43 times including back matter.
Speaking of back matter, there's another, new test of literary geekishness. The first volume of The Autobiography of Mark Twain appeared last year in hard cover. This is a tome of over 700 pages plus index, of which about 250 pages are actual autobiography. The rest is a lengthy introduction and a body of notes quite as long as the autobiography. I approach introductions and footnotes with the bias of one who began life as an academic. I love this stuff, but I maintain that these notes make the autobiography more complete. They include more of Clemens own writing, but also contemporary views of the man. From the whole one sees why Clemens insisted on having this published 100 years after his death.

When I finish the notes, I'll read the autobiography again... and probably go back for LOTR 44.

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4 Comments:

Blogger massmarrier said...

Oh, geeky historian Tolkein-ite, tell me why the houses in the Shire have postboxes? Is there any reference in the LOTR books of letter carriers, a government with postal service, or any need or ability to send mail from anywhere in Middle Earth?

8:22 pm  
Blogger Uncle said...

Indeed there is, but the service was strictly confined to the Shire. The Prologue to 'The Fellowship of the Ring' says that "the offices of Postmaster and First Shirrif were attached to the mayoralty [of Michel Delving] ....These were the only Shire-services, and the Messengers were the most numerous, and much the busier of the two. By no means all Hobbits were lettered, but those who were wrote constantly to all their friends (and a selection of their relations) who lived further off than an afternoon's walk."

Thus we saw no post-boxes in Moria.
This is now a case of chronic geekdom.

10:09 pm  
Blogger massmarrier said...

Indeed...thank you. I suppose with wee legs and a proclivity for distraction even travel about the Shire might take a while. Now I wonder whether it was the precursor of the British-style twice a day deliveries and what family of Hobbits would have the drive to sort and deliver.

1:21 am  
Blogger Uncle said...

Hmm..what is the average stride of people around three feet tall? That would have to influence perceptions of distance.

Given the hobbits' apparent proclivity for minding other hobbits' business, perhaps post messenger was a highly sought-after job, providing plenty of gossip fodder, even if they didn't steam open the letters.

1:43 am  

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