
Basil | Christian, gal, 24. Amateur writer and doodler, and an avid mac n’ cheese enthusiast. Hobbies include playing around with story ideas, finding the best textposts, and expanding my WIP collection. Internet scrapbook of my favorite things be upon ye!{ Fandoms right now include Tangled: The Series, Lord of the Rings, Breath of the Wild, and The Wingfeather Saga! 🌻}
1289 posts
Actual Feral Child Heinz Doofenshmirtz


actual feral child heinz doofenshmirtz
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More Posts from Confetti-cat

Reincarnation
Prompt from the Zelink week challenge for August 19th! A little different for me because I’ve been meaning to practice light values.
Hylia & Original Link / Skyward Sword / A Link Between Worlds / Wind Waker / Breath of the Wild
So I played Breath of the Wild recently, and it is such? A cool? Game??
I've always loved open-world games where you can just explore and talk to people and have tons of fun doing it, and BotW is like the open-world game to top all open-world games. You can explore absolutely everything for miles and miles and miles. There's an awesome plot and a trail of Link's missing memories to follow, but you don't have to do anything in any particular order. If you want, you can jump on a horse or a deer or a bear and take off for the sunset to explore every hidden secret the entire kingdom.
It's my first time playing such a huge game with a huge amount of creative ways to get to the main quest and it's so cool.
One of the things that’s really struck me while rereading the Lord of the Rings–knowing much more about Tolkien than I did the last time I read it–is how individual a story it is.
We tend to think of it as a genre story now, I think–because it’s so good, and so unprecedented, that Tolkien accidentally inspired a whole new fantasy culture, which is kind of hilarious. Wanting to “write like Tolkien,” I think, is generally seen as “writing an Epic Fantasy Universe with invented races and geography and history and languages, world-saving quests and dragons and kings.” But… But…
Here’s the thing. I don’t think those elements are at all what make The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings so good. Because I’m realizing, as I did not realize when I was a kid, that Tolkien didn’t use those elements because they’re somehow inherently better than other things. He used them purely because they were what he liked and what he knew.
The Shire exists because he was an Englishman who partially grew up in, and loved, the British countryside, and Hobbits are born out of his very English, very traditionalist values. Tom Bombadil was one of his kids’ toys that he had already invented stories about and then incorporated into Middle-Earth. He wrote about elves and dwarves because he knew elves and dwarves from the old literature/mythology that he’d made his career. The Rohirrim are an expression of the ancient cultures he studied. There are a half-dozen invented languages in Middle-Earth because he was a linguist. The themes of war and loss and corruption were important to him, and were things he knew intimately, because of the point in history during which he lived; and all the morality of the stories, the grace and humility and hope-in-despair, was an expression of his Catholic faith.Â
J. R. R. Tolkien created an incredible, beautiful, unparalleled world not specifically by writing about elves and dwarves and linguistics, but by embracing all of his strengths and loves and all the things he best understood, and writing about them with all of his skill and talent. The fact that those things happened to be elves and dwarves and linguistics is what makes Middle-Earth Middle-Earth; but it is not what makes Middle-Earth good.
What makes it good is that every element that went into it was an element J. R. R. Tolkien knew and loved and understood. He brought it out of his scholarship and hobbies and life experience and ideals, and he wrote the story no one else could have written… And did it so well that other people have been trying to write it ever since.
So… I think, if we really want to write like Tolkien (as I do), we shouldn’t specifically be trying to write like linguists, or historical experts, or veterans, or or or… We should try to write like people who’ve gathered all their favorite and most important things together, and are playing with the stuff those things are made of just for the joy of it. We need to write like ourselves.