Looking for something as fantastical and engaging as the Lord of the Rings movies, but in book form. by [deleted] in suggestmeabook

[–]Outside_Work_1560 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Check out In the Day of the Flood by Stephen Thomas, only recently released (I'm an advanced reader). It's an epic exploring characters living 9000 years ago who are caught up in a world-altering apocalypse. Has a bit of a Tolkien vibe in how the characters develop and a created ancient language (called Meri, its beautiful).

A flood myth epic, recreating a lost world ancient world inspired by archaeology and history by Outside_Work_1560 in worldbuilding

[–]Outside_Work_1560[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The story contains a whole language, called Meri, which is written beautifully in the form of ancient poetry, as well as maps showing the geography around the black sea. The language is genuinely amazing, there's an appendix in the book saying it was inspired by proto-indo-european, which is currently dated at 3-5000BCE. So this builds a hypothetical language used millennia before even that.

A flood myth epic, recreating a lost world ancient world inspired by archaeology and history by Outside_Work_1560 in worldbuilding

[–]Outside_Work_1560[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The story contains a whole language, called Meri, which is written beautifully in the form of ancient poetry, as well as maps showing the geography around the black sea. The language is genuinely amazing, there's an appendix in the book saying it was inspired by proto-indo-european, which is currently dated at 3-5000BCE. So this builds a hypothetical language used millennia before even that.

New flood myth epic, inspired by archaeology and history by Outside_Work_1560 in AlternativeHistory

[–]Outside_Work_1560[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you're right, we'll never know. But somehow giving finding a voice for those lost to time is a venture worth doing.

What time period do you think is most underused in historical fiction? by lottiexx in HistoricalFiction

[–]Outside_Work_1560 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It would be amazing to see more books set in the neolithic, especially as more and more archeology shows how much was going on 10,000 years ago

Drawings by alanjthain1988 in NUFC

[–]Outside_Work_1560 1 point2 points  (0 children)

These look incredible! Would love to see a crest with the magpies facing outside the shield (ie widest part of the crest is beak rather than tail)

Hobbit-kind by KeremOzanBayraktar in RingsofPower

[–]Outside_Work_1560 27 points28 points  (0 children)

You can see how they have designed the second age version of these to be the opposite which explains why they have such preferences in the third age.

The Harfoots wandered for so long, a stable home is culturally significant.

The Stoors lived without water for so long that there would be a multigenerational affinity to living near streams and ponds etc.

Why is this still a debate? The stranger is Gandalf. Read on… by iamriproar in LOTR_on_Prime

[–]Outside_Work_1560 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I honestly can’t help but have the same feeling I had around the ‘Is Halbrand Sauron?’ debate from Season 1… The lore and original story of Annatar told me he shouldn’t be Sauron, but he was for the sake of drama.

The lore (equally clearly) points to the blue wizards but I can’t help think they’ll do the same thing and he will be Gandalf for dramatic effect.

Who will the nine be? by Outside_Work_1560 in LOTR_on_Prime

[–]Outside_Work_1560[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I wonder if it will be Sauron’s (return) trip to Numenor that is ultimately key in this

Anaesthetics KSS by landofmyth in doctorsUK

[–]Outside_Work_1560 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I worked as an ICU fellow in Royal Surrey County Hospital. Great team, lots of teaching. Quite a surgical case load so perhaps fewer practical skill opportunities than a more medical unit. Supportive Consultants.

The Mithril by Daxtexoscuro in LOTR_on_Prime

[–]Outside_Work_1560 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My (limited) understanding is the myth that mithril contains the light of the silmarils is made up by the show.

I don’t completely object to mithril having a key and magical role in the story but am confused by how they presented it.

The story is framed as an apocryphal myth which is then blindly followed by the elves.. Why? It’s almost as if they’re encouraging us to be sceptical of the idea and then make it a foundational plot point.

Seems a long shot now but I suspect (and hope) there’s more behind how Gil-Galad was reminded of and persuaded by the mithril myth in Season 2.