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Msg# 9524

MEFA Awards for Saturday, November 1, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 01, 2008 - 19:47:59 Topic ID# 9524
Title: The Otters of Imladris · Author: chaotic_binky · Genres: Humor:
Elven Lands · ID: 491
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-01 02:58:42
Binky's stories are usually layered and subversive and this is no
exception. What you expect to see is not always what you will get.
There is a lot more going on there than is immediately evident. In
this case, the title, and the categorization of humor, might lead one
to believe that this is short, fluffy throw-away piece that will bring
a smile and perhaps a laugh. But actually it has a great deal to say
about the characters involved, their individual and often conflicting
ways of considering and approaching a problem. It is very much a story
of a relationship, as well as a story about respect and lack of
respect for nature and the necessity of merging of practicality and
sentiment to arrive at the best result for how to care for a
vulnerable creature. And it has a happy ending.

Title: Another Prometheus · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 85
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-01 08:14:15
A very interesting interpretation of one of the most fascinating and
complicated characters in the Tolkien universe -- Feanor, cleverly
associated with Greek mythology. Well crafted!

Title: Of Cake and Crumbs and Distant Dreams · Author: Lindelea ·
Races: Hobbits: Hurt/Comfort · ID: 688
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-01 09:29:52
Spoilers!
For those who have been forced to grow up too quickly as happened with
Peregrin Took, sometimes they just need the reassurance that they are
indeed young and deserve to enjoy innocence. So it is with Pippin this
day as he sits in a tower in the Citadel of Minas Tirith and wishes he
was at home

Here Frodo is at his best as he seeks to recall the feeling of
stability and comfort Pippin needs at the moment, and I think the
story told is excellent therapy for both him and Pippin. For a moment
they aren't heroes in the King's City who've somehow managed to do
things too large to understand, but just the Hobbits of the Shire they
were born to be.

Oh, Lindelea, how I love this story, one I appear to have missed when
it was posted--but then I was rather young in the craft myself. It is
the kind of tale within a tale that we all have told our children--or
nieces and nephews or younger cousins--at one time or another. It's a
tale of home and the simple desires of children with just enough
prosaic stuff to be comfortable and fantasy to be interesting. I feel
I'm sitting on the stair with the two Hobbits considering the
appetites of Hobbits of various sizes myself!

Thank you indeed for this one, one I'll possibly read to small
children one day.

Title: BRIDGE: Pá Valaraucar ar Námier · Author: Fiondil · Races:
Other Beings · ID: 415
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-01 09:38:20
Spoilers!
In Fiondil's-verse, it was the suggestion of Olorin that those sent to
Middle Earth be invested in Hroa similar to that of Men, able to know
pain, injury, exhaustion, even death. Or maybe that last experience
was more than Olorin truly wanted, for after throwing down the Balrog,
therefore, Gandalf found himself within the Halls of Mandos as would
any slain Elf. And as happens with many slain Elves and Men who enters
Namo's halls, he is convinced he HAS to return--that somehow only if
he is present can all things work out properly for those, particularly
within the Fellowship, who struggle to see Sauron properly opposed and
the Ring destroyed.

["What part of being dead do you not understand?"] has to be one of
the funniest yet most profound lines in the whole story. And when
Gandalf finds he WILL be sent back after all....

Very thought-provoking and poignant as well as humorous. It appears
that Olorin, as happens with most folks, had lost the ability to
accept that death could happen to him as easily as to any other. That
the Creator as well as the Valar in this case agree he's needed back
in Middle Earth comes almost as a surprise to him; and he does help
the various members of the Fellowship to do what is necessary, after
all, and does manage to find and rescue Frodo and Sam.

A good, satisfying read.

Title: The Farmer's Son · Author: Lindelea · Races: Hobbits:
Incomplete · ID: 509
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-01 09:45:49
Spoilers!
This is a marked divergence from Lindelea's usual story arc; Paladin
Took is not critical of his son, but instead is calm and aware. Plus
even though he is Thain, Paladin and his family continue to live in
the Farm at Whitwell rather than within the Great Smials. And Pippin,
as he prepares to leave to help Frodo move to Crickhollow--and for the
journey out into the wilds he knows will follow--hesitates to leave
his home and his family.

In it we see the Time of Troubles beginning, as well as the awareness
hit the Thain's family that their youngest has disappeared with Frodo
and Merry and Sam out into the unknown outer world. Why is Lotho after
particular property within the Tooklands, and is he doing similarly
elsewhere within the Shire? Where have their four gone and why, and
who are the black riders reported by the Bounders? And what is the
meaning of the recent influx of Big Men into the Shire? Why are they
congregating about Bag End in Hobbiton?

This look at the Time of Troubles as seen through the eyes of the
Thain's family promises to be fascinating, and I hope it is added to
soon. It is wonderful to see Lindelea breaking with her usual story
arc to experiment with quite a different Paladin Took, one she has
often regretted she hadn't written. I say, Go, girl!

Title: An Autumn Fair in Halabor · Author: Soledad · Times: Mid Third
Age · ID: 165
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-01 09:52:36
Spoilers!
Many stories are told of the kings and queens of the lands of Middle
Earth--stories of royalty amongst Men, Elves, and Dwarves; but not
enough stories are told of simple villagers and those who visit them.
This about the visit of Elves to the Gondorian town of Halabor is
fascinating particularly because it's not about Denethor or Aragorn as
Lord of Gondor, but primarily about the traders and craftsmen among
Halabor's citizens and their counterparts who visit from the Elven lands.

Wonderful look at day-to-day life for Men and Elves. Highly recommended!

Title: Answers · Author: Armariel · Genres: Poetry: Drama · ID: 458
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-01 10:01:24
Spoilers!
Frodo heals, and as he heals he seeks to reassure Sam as to how much
he loves him, and how much what Sam was able to do has contributed to
the healing he knows.

As is always true of Armariel\\\'s poetry, this is poignant and speaks
as much to us as it does Tolkien\\\'s characters. How much we depend
on one another as we find our wounds healed and our lives fulfilled!

Beautiful and filled with an aching brilliance.

Title: Utúlie'n Aurë · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 163
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-01 14:54:41
Spoilers!
A great, poignant view at the impact the final downfall of Sauron and
of evil in the Third Age must have had on one who was there to see the
bitter defeats of the First Age. Also, I like the unobtrusive way you
bring those things that matter fighting for, and for which evil needed
to be defeated, into this. Friendship and caring, raising toddlers,
all those things life matters for - effectively brought in here with a
few, small strokes. Elegant and lovely. I like!

Title: The Stranger · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 560
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-01 15:36:24
Spoilers!
What a powerful short story, hinting at so much more. There are very
different ideas about Macalaure's final fate, and this one is a good
take. I lI feel sad for your choice of the only way for him to find
home, in this tale, especially since there is still that oath looming
in the background. However, the way you bring his fate to our
attention, and confront it with the friendly curiosity of the boy,
here, is very effective. Very well done. Love it.

Oh, and now I really want to read the poem the intro lines are taken from!



Title: Fulfilling Oaths · Author: Nieriel Raina · Times: Multi-Age ·
ID: 332
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-01 16:09:52
Spoilers!
This is a powerful and compelling tale about the history and the
meaning of the Ring of Barahir, and what inmpact it may have had to be
passed along. The short vignettes along the stations of the ring are
very poignant, and work very well. I loved the end, too. Full circle,
indeed! And the title of the story is fitting, too.

Very well done! Thank you for writing and sharing.

Title: Silver Blossoms Blown · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races:
Cross-Cultural · ID: 646
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-01 16:25:29
Spoilers!
This is a beautiful short piece bringing across the perception of one
of the Valar of the new Children of Illuvatar, and their coming into
their maturity. I love the poetic language, and also the very distant
and different perspective. There are few tales giving us the possible
look of events out of the perspective of the Valar, and even less
which take into accountv that this perspective is bound to be very
different from that of mere incarnates. This one brings across this
fact, in spades.

Very well done, and well worth reading. Thank you for writing and sharing!

Title: The Making of Werewolves · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races:
Villains · ID: 42
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-01 16:31:11
As I have said elsewhere, already, I love the powerful language of
this short vignette, and also the deeper view it gives us at a part of
the backstory of the Silmarillion that is mentioned there with only a
few words. The style is very much like the Sil itself, more history
recounting than direct tale, but the tale is still very compelling.
Enhancing indeed! I like, and very much so!

Thank you for writing and sharing. :)

Title: On Canon and Fanfic · Author: Marta · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 123
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-01 16:54:34
Very good essay on what constitutes an AU and what is canon, and why
even a complete AU should at least make sense and be related to the
canon in the original universe. I like the author's stance, although I
do not agree with every part of it. Still, kudos for writing such a
good and clearly stated defense to that most beloved of my reading and
writings genres: the alternative universe. :)

Very well done!

Title: They Also Serve · Author: Marta · Times: Late Third Age · ID: 365
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-01 17:03:50
Spoilers!
An usual approach, giving a small insight in to what had to go on in
Rivendell behind the scenes to keep the whole valley going. The view
into Arwen's longing and worries about her betrothed work also. Nice idea!

Title: Creation Myths · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 300
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-01 17:28:10
A powerful comparison of two very different ways to handle one's own
creations, and poignantly showing the difference between the
generosity given by love, and the jealousy and pettiness generated by
pride. Gripping despite its shortness!

Title: A Taste of Home · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 138
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-01 18:02:56
Moving story, told with a light and humorous touch. Pearl Took shows
Merry and Pippin convincingly as old, but still retaining their
personalities.

The dialogue was especially engaging and lively. And the climax of the
story was hilarious - and thanks for that yummy recipe!

Title: Rude Awakening · Author: Lindelea · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 692
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-01 18:06:42
Strangely unsettling; I didn't quite know whether to be creeped out or
to laugh at the odd situation Pippin found himself in - which goes to
show how well-written the story is to be so ambiguous and effective.

Title: Dark Dreams · Author: SlightlyTookish · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 550
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-01 18:11:13
Very evocative and atmospheric descriptions. I could feel Pippin's
panic building and building. Merry's sleepwalking and -talking was
eerie, and I can very well imagine that he suffered from such and
similar nightmares after his experiences - and that Pippin can
sympathise because he suffered those or similar ones, too.

Well-paced; the tension keeps mounting up and then slowly eases out at
the end.

Title: O Merry Mine · Author: Larner · Races: Hobbits: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 636
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-01 18:27:13
Touching insights into the relationship between Frodo and Merry
throughout their lives. I liked how the basic premise of each vignette
changed and adapted itself to the various circumstances, sometimes
showing some random event, sometimes pivotal events in LotR.

Title: Denial · Author: Oshun · Races: Elves: House of Finwe · ID: 80
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-01 18:50:51
This ficlet is another great character study by Oshun where nothing
very dramatic seems to be happening and yet by the end of the story
much has been said about the characters.
Here the contrast is between bohemian Makalaure and [picture perfect]
Maitimo. Makalaure's shrewd -and sarcastic- observations and Maitimo's
vulnerability despite his apparent strength tell a lot about these
characters beyond the quick scene that we are given to witness. The
author also makes the depth of affection between the two of them
unmistakably clear (how else could they have reached the end of the
First Age together?).

Title: King Stag · Author: Jael · Races: Elves: Mirkwood Elves · ID: 86
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-01 21:58:07
Spoilers!
In [King Stag], Jael takes the reader deep into the wild and perilous
realm of Faerie through the eyes of Thranduil as he strives to prove
his worth to his new wife's parents and their tribe. Although solidly
set in Tolkien's Middle-earth, Jael's Avorren truly echo the ancient
forest-spirits of Northern Europe, the deep mythology from which
Tolkien derived his legendarium. This gifted writer, with her solid
knowledge of literature and history, takes shamanism (the ritual of
fly agaric - delightful to this reader/reviewer who had entertained
the notion of becoming an ethnobotanist at one time) and primeval
symbolism (running with the stags) and interweaves them seamlessly
into Tolkien's world, thereby enriching it.

Jael bolsters the different elven cultures by the use of Primitive
Elvish sprinkled throughout the story. The use of Primitive Elvish and
Sindarin phrases is not ever gratuitous, but adds a level of detail
that further enhances the story. The culture of the Avari is
beautifully realized in [King Stag] and delves into Tolkien's brief
writings of the Sindar who moved into the Greenwood, wishing to return
to a simpler life.

Then there is the characterization. Jael's Thranduil is such a
well-crafted protagonist that he practically leaps off the page.
Lalaithiel, his wife, is a very satisfying character, again one of
Tolkien's sub-textual women we know had to have existed and who Jael
brings to full and passionate life here and most fortunately for this
reader, in other works of the Jael-verse, too. Likewise, Tûron, her
father and Thranduil's guide in the ceremony, is nicely realized: the
"noble savage."

The story is bracketed by bittersweet bookends in the form of the
prologue and the epilogue, especially the epilogue. Heartwrenching
without stooping to the maudlin, this is a sad coda for the King of
the Greenwood, but there is hope and endurance, too, for the son of
the tall beech.

Thanks to this story, whenever I walk in the local woods (which harbor
black squirrels - really!) and see the tall beeches or scare up a
deer, I think of [King Stag] and let my imagination conjure up Avorren
among the trees.

Title: Early Winter at Himring Hill · Author: Oshun · Genres: Romance:
Elven Lands · ID: 79
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-01 22:33:57
[Early Winter at Himring Hill] is welcome ray of light amidst the
sturm und drang of The Silmarillion. Here Oshun uses my favorite
descriptor of her version of Fingon: irrepressible. Throughout her
story arc of Maedhros and Fingon, that is how I see Fingon, who often
seizes the day and seeks joy in his life, even in the face of
darkness. In this vignette, Fingon's devil-may-care exuberance shines
through Oshun's description of his approach to the fortress on Himring
Hill: banners flying and hooves thundering. The setting is cold --
even grim -- but Fingon's joie-de-vivre (as Raksha so aptly put it)
and Maedhros' warmth melt the frost of this chilly scene of winter.
One would like to think these two fellows returned to the keep of the
fortress and drank wine by a roaring fire in the hearth.

I find Oshun's style to be fresh and therefore immensely appealing,
and I'm in awe of her knack for dialog. Through Maedhros and Fingon's
expressions and conversation, their personalities are distinctive and
fully reflect their natures in her larger works. I also greatly
appreciate the humanity that she imbues in her Firstborn, and this
also shows in [Early Winter] with the fierce embrace and ear-to-ear grins.

This story, set in the grey cold of winter, always warms my heart.

Msg# 9525

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 2, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 02, 2008 - 19:52:35 Topic ID# 9525
Title: Denial · Author: Oshun · Races: Elves: House of Finwe · ID: 80
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-02 01:08:34
Spoilers!
Upon reading this ficlet, I am fervently hoping that Oshun will expand
on Maitimo (Maedhros) and Macalaurë's (Maglor) relationship with her
trademark gifts for writing excellent dialogue and finely wrought
emotion. She has drawn the affection between the brothers so well here.

Oshun uses her keen eye for detail to illustrate the differences
between Maefollowing is a fabulous example of the "show, don't tell"
approach with a keen eye to detail. For example, contrast this...
[Idly scratching at a dried spot of egg yolk that had dribbled onto
the front of his threadbare tunic at breakfast the day before...]

with Nelyafinwë's studied aesthetic:

[Nelyafinwë's bright copper-hued hair cascaded past his shoulders in
an apparent state of attractive disarray, which Macalaurë knew with
certainty had required considerable effort to achieve.]

This vivid writing casts the contrast of the two men into high relief:
scholarly Maitimo and artistic, BoHo Macalaurë. Likewise, Nelyo's
blushing, characteristic of a redhead, and Macalaurë's cackling add
wonderful humane touches to these characters and reinforce their
distinctive personalities.

Macalaurë's elusive composition crytallizes into a most satisfying
conclusion for both the character and this reader. Although [Denial]
has humor and light, there is an undercurrent of the somber, too.

Looking forward to reading more of Maitimo and Macalaurë in your WIP
and other nascent works, Oshun!




Title: The Last Messenger: A Tale of Numenor · Author: Fiondil ·
Times: Second and Early Third Age · ID: 8
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-02 01:39:42
In this fascinating adventure, the Valar ask Laurendil, a character
from the story Elf Interrupted, to bring one last message to Numenor,
to the Faithful. Laurendil is not sure why he should be the messenger,
but long ingrained obedience to the Valar makes him go.

During his time in Numenor, he becomes embroiled in the fates of the
Faithful and finally realizes, being the messenger was just an excuse
to get him to Numenor. Since Isildur's attempt to steal a fruit of
Nimlos a young man of the Faithful is missing, and Laurendil helps
with the rescue mission.

The story reels you in and you read on and on to find out what happens
next. Do they make it? What are the consequences. I thoroughly enjoyed
this tale, which helped me to understand some of the older history of
Middle-earth.

The story features a whole cast of strong original characters, but you
forget that they are not originated with Tolkien. So well do they fit
into this world.

Title: Not Yet · Author: erobey · Genres: Romance: Elven Lands · ID: 712
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-02 01:41:19
This is a very enjoyable story about Glorfindel pining for his former
lover and trying desperately to find Legolas of Gondolin in Legolas
Thranduilion. I like the characterization of the characters and how
Legolas Thranduilion stands up to Glorfindel's strange behavior.

Title: Worlds Within Worlds · Author: Rubynye · Races: Cross-Cultural
· ID: 237
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-02 01:42:21
I like the way the contrast between the Shire and the outside world is
described. The Shire is all soft and round edges, the outside world is
tall, harsh and edgy.

Title: Parth Galen · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 705
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-02 01:45:00
For whatever reason, I hadn't seen this before. This is a beautiful AU
gapfiller and I think, for my part, much more worthy of Boromir.
Although, if this would be canon, then the death scene would lose most
of its poignancy. I love it that you brought bits and pieces from your
other stories into it. Come to think of it, Boromir, in your universe,
has a lot of people to show him the right way. The ring's insinuations
are really playing on Boromir's fears and wishes. In this version it
just doesn't encounter a Boromir with no support.

Title: To Be A King · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves · ID: 252
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-02 01:45:51
As Gil-Galad discovers, it is not easy to be King. Seeing his timid
beginning here and knowing what legend he will become, gives the story
an added depth. I like Cirdan's teaching style. He must drive
Gil-Galad nuts at times.

Title: A Woman in Few Words: The Character of Nerdanel and Her
Treatment in Canon and Fandom · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 107
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-02 01:49:40
Nerdanel, even with sparse text-time in The Silmarillion, is a
character who resonates with many fan fiction writers in the
Tolkienian milieu. Dawn, with her characteristically thorough approach
to Tolkienian lore, examines this attraction and fleshes out a canon
character who has captured the attention of fandom. Through her
careful perusal of Tolkien's writings beyond The Silmarillion, Dawn
has collected textual data which reveal Nerdanel to be an
exceptionally intelligent and strong woman. In addition to being a
well researched essay, Dawn's exercise highlights the benefits of
delving deep into the expansive writings of Tolkien for the fan
fiction writer who ventures beyond The Lord of the Rings or even those
who write solely within the realm of the trilogy. Sometimes the
knowledge unearthed is challenging, even discomfiting, e.g., the fates
of the Ambarussa and Nerdanel's foresight concerning them.

The analysis of Nerdanel's hair color via the Vinyar Tengwar was
especially noteworthy. All sorts of tidbits about characters and
culture can be gleaned from study of Tolkien's languages as published
in Vinyar Tengwar or Parma Eldalamberon.

As a writer of technical documentation, I found the appendix to be a
most satisfying back-up to the essay, particularly the table. I'm with
Moreth...a graph with a correlation coefficient would have sent me
into spasms of squeeing.

Overall, an excellent resource for those who write this remarkable
woman into their fiction.



Title: Bears With Honey · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 243
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-02 12:33:05
Very nice view at the implications of being wedded to a skin-changer;
and a very wise woman who knows how to attract her husband in such
circumstances. I like! :)

Title: Child of Hope · Author: Galadriel · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 97
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-02 12:51:03
This is very beautiful, and a nice view at Boromir and Faramir as kids
in much nicer circumstances. I loved the image of the two brothers at
Denethor's court, and the way thy compare to each other. Loved the
surprise ending, too.

Nicely done! :)

Title: Into the Woods · Author: Gloria Mundi · Times: Modern Times ·
ID: 593
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-02 12:59:37
Dropping characters from another world into Middle Earth rarely works
well, but this take on the topic was surprisingly to the point and
indeed worked. Lovely crossover with very lovely characterizations.
And I thoroughly enjoyed the image those two characters together gave
me. The interaction was spot-on, too. And the slashy part just worked
as the icing of the cake. Very nicely done!

Thank you for writing and sharing! :)

Title: Gifts · Author: Gloria Mundi · Races: Villains: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 594
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-02 13:03:32
A striking reinterpretation of the relationship between these three,
and the way Smeagol's thoughts are presented, here. I loved Smeagol's
take on how to show his affection, and I loved the whole idea. Very
unusual, and very intriguing!

Thank you for writing and sharing!

Title: Don't Explain · Author: gwidhiel · Races: Elves: Incomplete ·
ID: 289
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-02 13:43:14
I rarely read stories about the House of Finwe; I am more hooked to
the Elves of the Third Age, as a rule. However, this story has me
hooked and keeps me enthralled with the drma that lies buried behind
the apparently happy opening. Also, it is a wonderful take to see this
enfold from the view of Indis. And so we learn a lot more of the story
that ledt to the fall-out between the parts of the family...

Very compelling tale, very well written, with deep emotions. A very
good read. Thank You for writing and sharing!

Title: Feelings of Superiority · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 362
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-02 13:50:53
This compelling series of drabbles shows very effectively that bias
and prejudices were alive and well in Middle Earth, and not restricted
to any one race, as well. The poignant way in which Gwynnyd brings
those feelings to the point for each race is sharp and clear as a
surgical blade, but very, very fitting for each of these races. Very
well written, and very well done. [Feelings of Superiority], indeed.
Kudos!

Thank you for writing and sharing.


Title: Journeys of Vása · Author: Dawn Felagund · Races: Elves:
Incomplete · ID: 140
Reviewer: Moreth · 2008-11-02 14:47:54
Spoilers!
In these vignettes, Dawn has presented the Rising of the Sun from a
series of unusual perspectives.

The first is a heartbreaking look at Tilion's memories of his
unrequited love for Arien, and her catastrophic encounter with Melkor.
The writing is dark and haunting, and does not leave me with the
impression that there will be a happy ending - which suits the flavour
this particular theme in Tolkien's writing.

The second is less epic in scope, but captures the uncertainty of a
world that has changed and in which 'light' will never quite be the
same again. Mahtan's fears and concerns are convincingly expressed.

The final vignette is much lighter in mood, and looks at just what it
takes to succeed in crossing the Helcaraxë and surviving to watch the
new Sun rise. The answer is, of course, 'good organisation'!

Interesting and entertaining studies - I would certainly read further
vignettes in this series.

Title: The Littlest Warrior · Author: RavensWing14337 · Races: Elves:
Incomplete · ID: 552
Reviewer: Fiondil · 2008-11-02 14:57:43
A creature of evil is brought forth which sucks the life-force from
other beings. Elves of Lorien encounter it first and one of the party
is injured. Only Elrond might be able to save the young Elf's life and
so Haldir and his brothers make the perilous journey to Rivendell with
the injured Elf, unaware that the creature follows.

Meanwhile, three-year-old Estel rules the hearts of the Elves of
Rivendell with his winning ways and ingenuous outlook on life. The
episodes describing Estel's relationship with Elrond, his brothers and
all the other Elves of Rivendell are hilarious and very true to the
way most toddlers act and react. The scene of Elrond chasing after a
wet and naked Estel who has determined how best to bring a smile to
his ada's face is so funny I was laughing out loud.

The contrast between the idyllic nature of Rivendell and the horror
that approaches unsuspectingly is nicely drawn and RavensWing does an
excellent job of keeping up the suspense without losing the humor of
millennia-old Elves attempting to raise a rambunctious mortal with his
own ideas. As Gilraen is already dead in this story, this is
definitely AU, but very believable in its telling.

Title: The King's Surgeon · Author: SurgicalSteel · Genres: Longer
Works · ID: 90
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-02 15:45:09
I stumbled across this extraordinary novel while wandering around
those Tolkienian fan fiction sites that I visit less often than my
usual haunt, and what a treasure [The King's Surgeon] is!

I stand up and applaud SurgicalSteel's creation of Serindë. I'll speak
frankly here: Tolkien gave us a paucity of strong female characters or
at least not nearly enough for my tastes. Yes, I know there are
exceptions, those notables like Galadriel and Eowyn, but my life's
experience makes me yearn for more. (Full disclosure: I'm a cranky old
woman who worked in a field long dominated by men although more women
work in the discipline now.)

Make no mistake: I love Tolkien's mythology, but there's no denying
that in *certain* respects, his *canonical* work does not fully engage
me. That is to say, his "green sun" is sometimes unconvincing. In part
that is due to the many unnamed women in his works -- as Dwimmordene
aptly calls them, textual ghosts. Unfortunately, there is a reluctance
on many fan fic authors' parts to write OFCs due to the "Mary Sue"
pejorative. However, SurgicalSteel, true to her nom de plume, has
steel in her spine and shows no fear. She gives us Serindë, an
incredible -- and *authentic* -- woman-in-full.

I love Serinde's personality and attitude: irascible, stubborn, warm,
brilliant, sardonic...enough so that I wish I could sit down with her
and listen to the tales of her life's work. SurgicalSteel's fabulous
detailing of medicine and surgery, Middle-earth-style, is tremendously
appealing to me although I will note that it occasionally veers into
the pedantic; I say this with a knowing wink because I (ahem) have a
tendency to do the same thing.

SurgicalSteel's characterizations are excellent. Her characters come
to life as real human beings with strengths and flaws, from the
canonical "headliners" like Aragorn and Frodo to her carefully crafted
OCs. I read Serindë's history with fascination. That back story
provides the foundation of this exceptional woman.

With [The King's Surgeon] now under my belt, I look forward to
exploring more of the Steel!verse.

Title: Tolkien's Parish: The Canonical Middle-earth · Author: Steuard
Jensen · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 91
Reviewer: Moreth · 2008-11-02 16:20:33
An entertaining and thoroughly enjoyable essay that presents an
approach to determining which parts of Tolkien's writing may be
considered 'canon'.

Some wider reading of Tolkien is probably required for the essay to
make sense, 'Leaf by Niggle' in particular. Jensen uses the imagery
from this short story to explore the 'unfinished' nature of Tolkien's
writing.

I'm not, personally speaking, convinced of the necessity of deriving a
'canon of work' but I am happy to share with this author a common [joy
of exploring a true Secondary World]. And that, after all, is the fun
of reading Tolkien's work!

Title: If You Could See What I Hear · Author: Cathleen · Times: Mid
Third Age: Eriador · ID: 614
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-02 19:50:46
Spoilers!
This charming and beautifully written story delivers an unexpectedly
dark and stunningly ethereal realm in the peaceful, pre-Ring War
Shire. "If You Could See What I Hear" is a perfect example of why I
like the MEFAs. The wee hobbit genre is not a place where I normally
venture, but I am very glad to have spent time in Cathleen's world of
Pippin's youth.

Cathleen is building up a body of work based on Pippin-lad's
adventures with his knitted piglet/imaginary companion Tulip. In this
extened story, they have a somewhat perilous adventure into the world
of Faerie, a land populated by creatures from pre-Christian mythology
that has little to do with Tolkien's elves. Tulip becomes the
protective voice of Pippin's mother Eglantine, guarding the overly
curious child as he becomes lost in this deceptive realm.

My favorite moments involve the inhabitants of the Faerie world and
their encounter with Pippin's anxious father Paladin. He inadvertently
wanders into the Faerie world while searching for his son. Through
Paladin's eyes, Cathleen explores the largely fanon theme of the Took
who took a faerie wife. As the story evolves you fear for the father
and son, knowing all the while that the faerie folk will return them
safely to the Shire, considerably wiser for their encounter.

I heartily recommend this story to all who enjoy being enchanted.


Title: Where the Sky Kisses the Horizon, There My Dreams Lie · Author:
Lindelea · Races: Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 689
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 00:29:15
A sweet little piece of the love for Frodo that the Ring-bearer
inspired in others. I love the last sentence the most.



Title: ...and the sound of a battered heart, beating · Author:
Lindelea · Genres: Drama: Ring War Drabbles · ID: 690
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 00:34:18
This is one of the greatest things that Frodo did. He had indeed
"grown very much". Forgiveness is essential to the one who does the
forgiving even if the one forgiven does not accept it or others do not
understand why. Frodo is a wonderful role model for us all and this
little story shows one of the reasons why. Bravo!



Title: The Language of Waves · Author: Claudia · Races: Hobbits · ID: 193
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 00:38:28
A gentle, happy adventure for Frodo in the West.

Title: In the Hands of the King · Author: fantasyfan · Times: Late
Third Age: Gondor · ID: 231
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 00:42:47
Not only in the hands of the king, but the queen as well. A loving
gift to Frodo from Arwen and we all thought the gem was her first
gift! I love the idea that she would have seen that this other gift
would be needed as well. Bless her.

Title: Elanor of Westmarch: The Return · Author: Baranduin · Races:
Hobbits: Family · ID: 78
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 00:52:53
[she who had had so many conversations in her heart and mind with both
Frodo and Sam. As she grew older, sometimes she thought she lived more
with them in her head than she did with her family] - Ah, a lass after
my own heart! I loved that part because it's so me. I talk to Frodo a
lot myself, sometimes out loud.

Title: Blood and Iron · Author: Ribby · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 122
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 00:54:49
I love the idea of Elrond pouring [hope and faith] into the reforged
sword. Very good imagery there.

Title: Utúlie'n Aurë · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 163
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 00:57:43
The celebration of the victory at the Fire is felt far and wide - I
love that the Elves felt that.

Msg# 9526

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 2, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 02, 2008 - 19:54:31 Topic ID# 9526
Title: Temptation · Author: Princess Artemis · Genres: Poetry · ID: 416
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 01:07:15
Spoilers!
A very interesting long poem from the POV of the Ring, working on
those who come into its range. You get a good idea of its terrible
voice as it spoke to the heart and soul of those who it wished to
corrupt and kill and its outrage when the attempted seduction failed.
Heartache for its promise to slay Frodo slowly. Love the ending.

Title: A Cat in King Elessar's Court · Author: agape4gondor · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Friendship · ID: 66
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-03 01:10:05
Spoilers!
I thoroughly enjoyed this smartly told tale told from the perspective
of Lord Denethor's Cat. I especially appreciated the postive light in
which Denethor portrayed, unlike some movie-verse stories. I also very
much enjoyed the Cat's relationship with Pippin, and how he feels like
he needs to be the Hobbit's protector, even all the way to the Black Gate.

Well-told!

Title: A Hobbity Wizard · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Childhood ·
ID: 596
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 01:13:13
A sweet, loving tale. Gandalf certainly had his hands full but likely
he loved just about every moment of it, Pippin certainly did! Love the
whole adventure the two had. Everyone should spend such days like this.

Title: The Ribbon · Author: Gentle Hobbit · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 336
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-03 01:17:18
Spoilers!
I'm glad Frodo found healing and can talk more easily about his
missing finger and the pain he sometimes feels. That healer worked did
not just work on his physical pain, but his spiritual agony and for
that I thank her and bless her for helping such a dear heart.

Title: The Least of Rings · Author: Marta · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Drabbles · ID: 621
Reviewer: nau_tika · 2008-11-03 01:40:32
Well, this drabble was certainly a surprise! A totally different and
unexpected take on my favorite character's last moments with the
Ringbearer.

Title: Eight Weeks · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 273
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-03 01:47:20
Spoilers!
I'm not exactly sure how I should review Dwimordene's humorous drabble
cycle concerning manly fashion in late-third age Gondor. I personally
like a man with a well-tended beard. However, it is clear that
Denethor and Faramir think Boromir has made a mistake when he decides
to grow a chin full of whiskers. In whimsical chunks, drabbles show
the attempts by his brother and father to get Boromir to shave. A
light-hearted look at the Steward's family.

Title: MAGIC: The Password · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor: Elven
Lands · ID: 451
Reviewer: nau_tika · 2008-11-03 01:50:52
This story was cute (though you may not appreciate me saying so). I
especially enjoyed the queen cautioning him on his language. I was
sure I knew what the password would be, but I was wrong. I'll remember
it now, though. Grin.

Msg# 9527

MEFA Reviews for Monday, November 3, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 03, 2008 - 20:20:35 Topic ID# 9527
Title: Diamonds For Forever I, II & III · Author: Elen Kortirion ·
Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 515
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-03 02:03:15
Spoilers!
Elen Kortirion's drabble triplet follows the history of the jeweled
necklace that the first Steward named Ecthelion gives as a bridal gift
to his wife, through to Denethor II, and finally to Arwen Evenstar.
Each drabble gives us a bit of insight into the artistic sensibilities
of the three main characters as each gives their opinion of the bridal
jewels.

Title: Bears With Honey · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 243
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-03 02:13:29
Spoilers!
This ficlet gives us a glimpse into what I suspect is largely
uncharted territory--what it must have been like to be married to
Beorn. As Gandalf's Apprentice would have it, the missus is quite used
to her husband's skin changing episodes. Very clever.

Title: Moonset over Gondor · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 652
Reviewer: nau_tika · 2008-11-03 02:19:07
I love the way this story begins with a wonderful decsription, before
moving on to a poignant conversation and concluding with the couple
looking to the future. Well done!

Title: Oathbreakers · Author: Thundera Tiger · Times: Late Third Age ·
ID: 470
Reviewer: nau_tika · 2008-11-03 02:32:41
I've re-read this story several times, trying to rreview it properly.
There is no doubt that the story is well written, but it has a
deepness to it that challenges me. I appreciate the points of view of
each of the twins in the way they see their brother and in their
opinion of Eowyn. I'm sorry I cant do it justice.

Title: O Merry Mine · Author: Larner · Races: Hobbits: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 636
Reviewer: nau_tika · 2008-11-03 02:58:53
Spoilers!
This is a wonderful story following Frodo and Merry from just after
Frodo's parents died throughout the rest of their days. The overall
story taught me things I didnt know, and the ending brought tears to
my eyes. Thank you and well done!

Title: The Flute · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring War ·
ID: 150
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-03 06:39:07
Beautiful prose, particularly in the beginning paragraphs. It sets the
mood very well in its melancholy tone, and also somehow captures what
Gandalf says the flute expresses in its music.

I very much like that parts of the story are told from the perspective
of some wild animals, it gives the story a special insight, at once
more removed yet also in some ways more observant. The shift between
places and times was used to good effect: At first, it showed the
distance between Pippin & Merry, and Frodo & Gandalf; and at the end,
it all came together in one moment.

The deep emotions of all the protagonists are conveyed very vividly.

Title: No Man's Land · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 726
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-03 09:37:11
A very skilfully crafted AU drabble. I am even scared to think what
might have been if... this scenario had come to pass. This little
story gives me chills. Very well done, in so few words. Bravo!

Title: Writer's Bloke · Author: stefaniab · Genres: Humor: Drabbles ·
ID: 431
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-03 09:45:44
Very amusing and very true. This made me giggle. Well done!

Title: Autumn · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 489
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-03 10:01:50
A very nice and warm drabble that presents the differences between
Aragorn's life as a ranger and then as the king of Gondor. What he
might miss, and what he might actually enjoy? Here, Linda gives us a
glipse at the possible answers to these questions. Very gentle and
well written!

Title: A Moment Away · Author: Elen Kortirion · Races: Men: General
Drabbles · ID: 474
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-03 15:09:37
Moving and very unexpected. I was very pleasantly surprised to see
that Éowyn did not have to suffer some horrible vision or other, like
I would have thought. I found this a wonderful idea, as my expectation
only hightened the effect of the touching scene between Éowyn and Morwen.

It shows a more vulnerable and softer side to Éowyn that seems to fit
with her immediate mood before and after this moment. But though there
is the touch of despair in it that she displays then, here she shows
more resilience, and is given new courage that perhaps she can't
immediately tap into once she awakens, but that nevertheless is there.

It's a convincing take on where Éowyn might have inherited her
strength - Morwen "Steelsheen" seems like a better fit than her mother
Théodwyn. A moment for a strong queen to give good advice to her
granddaughter the shieldmaiden, yet coupled with a deeply loving and
caring feeling.

Title: Relief · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Men: General Drabbles · ID: 446
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-03 15:10:33
Woo-hoo! Erm... *clears throat* A delightfully picturesque scene is
conjured up here!

But aside from painting this lovely scene for (suscepticble) readers
to swoon over, what I like most about this drabble is how it captures
the feeling of a person immersing themselves in cool water on a hot
day - how the freshness gradually creeps up and envelops the body, how
one can really feel as if one can breathe freely again etc.

And another lovely feature is how Tanaqui presents the water as almost
a living being, with awareness and motion, as if it actually interacts
with Boromir. My favourite of these moments is this: ["rivulets ...
meandering around old scars"], because it not only captures this
notion, but also because it "individualises" the scene, gives Boromir
a distinct personality.

Title: If You Could See What I Hear · Author: Cathleen · Times: Mid
Third Age: Eriador · ID: 614
Reviewer: Pearl Took · 2008-11-03 15:30:09
Spoilers!
This wonderful story takes us on quite a ride. First, you have the
terrifying situation of a lost child with all the family and friends
becoming frantic, but then, Cathleen adds to it all the wonder and
mystery of the Took faerie heritage.

Pippin is usually portrayed as an overly curious lad, so it isn't
surprising that he wanders off into the woods with his knitted piglet,
Tulip. Tulip is up for the adventure with her lad, that is until he
starts following a strange voice. He begins to catch glimpses of a
small person that makes it even harder for him to resist the urge to
follow. He is lost in woods he is not supposed to have gone into to
begin with and Tulip can't do anything about it.

Back home, everyone is in an uproar as search parties are formed.
Paladin goes with the group who head towards the woods.

The story has twists and turns. moments that make you hold your breath
and moments that make you laugh. There is danger mixed with beauty and
lessons to be learned by two special Tooks. Cathleen has blended
poems, and myths about the realm of faerie into Tolkien's Middle-earth
with great skill. There is an amazing amount of research in this story
that gives it wonderful depth.

Most Excellently Well Done, Cathleen!

Title: A Promise · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Childhood · ID: 149
Reviewer: Pearl Took · 2008-11-03 17:52:57
Spoilers!
A beautiful, heartbreaking, yet hopeful story dealing with the death
of a loved pet. Golden has captured the sorrow so many of us know at
the loss of a dear pet, a pet that is more a dear friend. The hope
here is that we will meet our furry friends again someday where we
will never more have to part.

Pippin loses his dog, Jule when she does not recover from a difficult
birthing. The next night he ends up sneaking out to sleep on her grave
and he has a vision of her alive and healthy in a beautiful place.
There, she asks him to care for her puppy as he has loved and cared
for her. The next morning, his mother places the now out of danger
puppy and Pippin promises to care for her as he told her mother he would.

A truly moving story.

Title: Promise and Sorrow · Author: Virtuella · Times: Late Third Age
· ID: 607
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-03 22:05:35
Spoilers!
What a stunner "Promise and Sorrow" is. Virtuella goes where Tolkien
feared to tread: the affect of the Ring War's end on the lives of
every day humans. (Of course, Tolkien does show us the affect of the
War's aftermath on hobbits in "The Scouring of the Shire.") This story
is guaranteed to move you in a realistic, non angsty fashion, and it
is but a few pages long.

Here Virtuella weaves into a cohesive whole six points of view from
men and women in different physical locations of Middle Earth They are
young and old, soldiers, farmers, healers, humble folk, and city folk
of reasonable means. I particularly applaud Virtuella's inclusion of a
farmer's wife from Rhun as one of her characters. All suffer loss, but
in many cases the heartbreak is tempered with a glimpse of optimism,
delivering the promise that the story's title eludes to. Even the
Rhunish farmer who has lost her husband remarks on how clean and blue
the sky looks, as it has never been in her lifetime. The closing
vignette lends a sense of peace as an old healer contemplates her new
life in Ithilien.

"Promise and Sorrow" is a very worthy read and recommended to all

Msg# 9528

MEFA Reviews for Tuesday, November 4, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 04, 2008 - 19:34:35 Topic ID# 9528
Title: Trinity · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Modern Times · ID: 51
Reviewer: Moreth · 2008-11-04 10:18:26
Spoilers!
Hmmm - I find it hard to write a review for this story because it hits
home on so many levels!

Everything from the description of the desert storm to the clothes the
characters wear is excellently written. The touches of humour are
superb: ["The hair stays. We're rather vain about it, I'm afraid,"
said Fionn.] and the dialogue about refractive proteins makes me grin
every time I read it!

However, the themes of invention and responsibility are what make this
story really stand out. Pandemonium has used an unconventional
interpretation of Middle-Earth to consider some of the moral dilemmas
posed by technology. The pride in intellectual achievement, the joy of
creating something novel and the regret of all three characters is
convincingly portrayed. There is a nice touch of ambiguity regarding
the 'dream' that closes the piece in a very satisfying manner.

Thought-provoking and entertaining, this really is a 'cross-over'
story like no other! I thoroughly recommend a look...




Title: Old Friends · Author: Marta · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 651
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-04 10:30:58
A very nice drabble with a touch of nostalgia to it. Olórin found
himself in a melancholic mood and recalled his time spent with his
friends, the friends that he dearly missed, in Middle Earth.

I particularly loved the last line. Moving and well done!

Title: Tree of Knowledge · Author: Nancy Brooke · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 172
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-04 10:55:23
This is another gem of a drabble by Nancy -- another excellent example
of her marvellous skills as a drabble writer. A hundred-word piece
that shows not only Denethor's disturbed thoughts -- his
Palantir-infused state of mind as he ponders his son's fate, but also
presents his rebellious, firm and yet poetic voice. Splendidly
written, powerful and chilling!

Title: Sing My Worth Immortal · Author: Perelleth · Races:
Cross-Cultural · ID: 168
Reviewer: Moreth · 2008-11-04 11:03:33
A cast of (slightly tipsy) elves, a dwarf, Glorfindel's idea of
['cultural exchange'] and of course 'the drink of heroes'... and the
story of how it was discovered.

(And I'm sure Celeborn really should know better then to mention a
lady's age!)

It really is all delightfully silly! Nicely done, and my thanks to the
random story generator for pointing me to it.

Title: Kementari · Author: Marta · Times: First Age and Prior · ID: 99
Reviewer: Moreth · 2008-11-04 11:31:46
Spoilers!
How evocative and sad! There is feeling of a grief so deep that
everything around seems stagnant and meaningless. Yavanna's inability
to create is heartbreaking... as is her melancholy view of the future.

This really is beautifully crafted. Very well done!

Title: Somewhere I Have Never Traveled · Author: Fiondil · Times:
Fourth Age and Beyond · ID: 578
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-04 21:39:38
How beautifully written! What I particularly like is what Eowyn has to
say: That Arwen's choice isn't so spectacularly special, just because
she is immortal, and that the choices made by humans are just as valid.

Somehow I would have thought that the afterlife would be a bit more
... otherworldly. It seems a bit too physical. Still, a very good story.

Title: Orc Talk! · Author: kitt_otter · Genres: Humor: Elven Lands ·
ID: 703
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-04 21:50:44
I haven't a clue what the word means, unless it's supposed to be troll
turd? A very amusing story and written with wit and elegance. I don't
noramlly care three straws for Legolas, but I liked this.

Title: Legacy · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 500
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-04 22:00:10
This is a touching piece in well-chosen, polished words. In a very
short story you have given the impression of width and depth of time
and space, of past and future related in this one person. I like it
very much indeed.

Title: The Game of Kings · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Humor · ID: 28
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-04 22:04:48
What a clever little ficlet this is, and every word fits just so! A
game of kings indeed. Well done.

Title: Wedding Nerves · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor · ID: 48
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-04 22:10:48
Oh, this was a very amusing story, in a light-hearted, witty sort of
way, skillfully written. I particularly chuckled about Elladan saying
that Aragorn washed up quite well. Well done.

Title: Not Quite Any Other Day · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 631
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-04 22:33:04
Oooh, this is an absolutely charming story! As usual, your prose is
just spot on. The wedding of a sibling can be tough indeed - I
remember my brother wasn't too happy on my wedding day, what with me
moving to another country and all that. Did you know, BTW, that the
greatest witch in all of Discworld is one Esmerelda "Esme" Weatherwax?
I just realize I will have to make this a bit longer to score more
points - I LOVED the bit when the water came to his groin, very funny,
and at the same time that whole scene was very, very romantic.
Brilliant! The last sentence is both amusing and touching.

Title: The Myth of the One Ring's Power · Author: Dreamflower ·
Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 532
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-04 23:12:06
Spoilers!
Wow, Barbara, this was one facinating essay! I'm glad I came across
it. What a very astute examination of the exact nature of the ring. I
was particularly interested in the concept of the ring's "blind spot".
You are right, it could only overwhelm people who were already much in
the same "mould" as Sauron. Likewise, it is very conceivable that its
lures failed because they were so over the top. Especially in Sam's
case that is very evident.

I would like to add to this a more formal thought: The talk of the
absolutely irresisteble power of the ring is a hyperbole that is
necessary to perpetuate the plot. The epic story of LOTR could not
have been based on a ring that was merely said to be *rather* powerful
and dangerous - just like in a fairy tale you would never talk of a
princess being merely "quite a nice looking lass". On the other hand,
the ring *had* to be flawed and limited, because otherwise it *would*
have overwhelemed everybody and then there would have been no story.
The tension betwen the perception of the ring as being all-powerful
and the reality of it not quite getting a hold of people is the
catalyst by which the story is developed. Mind you, I would never have
thought of it in this way, had I not read your clever essay!

Title: Tower of the Moon · Author: Nath · Times: Multi-Age · ID: 577
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-05 00:23:10
Spoilers!
This short tale is a reflection on the city of Minas Ithil, once the
delight of Isildur's eye. The city was eventually captured by Sauron's
forces and corrupted into a place of horror. First, Nath gives us
Isildur's perspective as he views the new construction. Then we are
given Aragorn's perspective, three thousand years later, after Minas
Ithil has become, in modern terms, a "toxic waste site." This is an
unusual and thought provoking story.

Msg# 9529

MEFA Reviews for Wednesday, November 5, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 05, 2008 - 21:02:40 Topic ID# 9529
Title: Scholarship · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 43
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-05 01:37:08
Spoilers!
This is an interesting glimpse into Faramir's parental life, and
public life as one can only imagine that it is the thoughtfulness with
which he meets this delicate situation that would make him a good
leader and politician.

Title: Heavens' Embroidered Cloths · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 292
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-05 01:48:00
Spoilers!
This is a lovely series, but more than anything what stood out from it
for me was that the memory Eowyn returned to Faramir was one primarily
of his father, not his mother, and that from that came a happy vision
of a future family united.

Title: Supporting Acts · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 436
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-05 01:52:24
An interesting look at the bit players in the big drama with an eye
toward how many small details can combine to create enormous change,
for ill and for good.

Title: The Roses of Imloth Melui · Author: Aervir · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 435
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-05 01:59:26
Spoilers!
I am always interested in seeing minor characters brought to the fore,
and this is a welcome portrait of an often overlooked character. I
especially liked the earlier drabbles, which hinted at Ioreth's
reasons for becoming a healer.

Title: Reparation · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men · ID: 296
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-05 02:03:09
Spoilers!
An intrighing vignette which focuses on the complex relationships of
three of Isabeau's original characters. Isabeau has a knack for
creating some of the most interesting and credible Middle-earth
originals; and none is more charismatic, in his dour way, than
Imrahil's armsmaster and sworn brother, Andrahar. Here, Andrahar's
only battle is an internal one; in which he considers a rash action.
It's the kind of compelling drama that I've come to expect from this
very talented writer.


Title: Songs of Innocence and Experience · Author: Tanaqui · Races:
Men: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 440
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-05 02:10:14
Spoilers!
I almost find this trio of drabbles misleading; in the first two
Faramir is intentionally manipulated to serve many, while in the third
he clearly sees the lie intended only to harm the liar.

Title: Messengers from the West · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 98
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-05 02:14:07
This is a cute little vignette.

Title: Dispelling the Fog · Author: fantasyfan · Races: Other Beings ·
ID: 642
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-05 02:50:49
Spoilers!
Interesting exploration of the true identity of one of the most
mysterious denizens of Middle-earth. Good characterisation of Frodo, too.

Title: Seas of Fate · Author: Thundera Tiger · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Elves and Men · ID: 487
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-05 03:34:26
Spoilers!
An elegantly written, quite interesting character piece focussing on
two characters rarely written together - Imrahil and Legolas. Thundera
Tiger focusses on the significance that the sea holds for the
Numenorean prince and the atypical wood-elf, and explores the
influence the sea has on each of them.

Title: Thawing Lily · Author: Soubrettina · Genres: Humor: Gondor · ID: 30
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-05 06:51:22
Spoilers!
Soubrettina's version of the courtship of Eowyn and Faramir takes a
tempting "what if" twist on their relationship and gives it an
alternately humorous, alternately disturbing spin. One of my stories
dares to have F and E consummate their marriage before the marriage,
so I was curious to see how someone else tackles this plot line.

"Thawing Lily" defies fanon in a riotous consummation scene, (not
terribly explicit, if you care about this). The succeeding chapters
turn the humor on its head by serving up bouts of stream-of-conscious
angst on Eowyn's part. What started out as a sly romp becomes a window
onto the disturbed mind of a woman who believes herself seduced and
abandoned, though indeed she's only trying to adandon joy for herself.

This is a very unusual story, worth checking out for its unique
perspective.

Title: Moved to Pity · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 366
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-05 10:05:02
A very beautiful and poignant drabble that explores Luthien's choice
from the perspective of the Valar. Excellent writing!

Title: Return · Author: Elleth · Genres: Alternate Universe: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 399
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-05 10:17:32
A very powerful set of two drabbles, each told from a different PoV,
that presents a truly interesting, and moving to the point of tears if
I may add, take on the fate of one of the Feanorian twins. Very
emotive writing!

Title: Midwinter Thoughts · Author: Rhapsody · Races: Elves: Noldor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 570
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-05 10:32:04
An elegant and insightful piece that shows a more emotional,
melancholic even, side of Maedhros as he pondered the purpose of his
life and his feelings. Beautiful, symbolic imagery, and an excellently
drawn portrayal. Bravo!

Title: Cat's Paws · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains · ID: 58
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-05 14:44:45
Spoilers!
[Cat's Paws] is an immensely intriguing story set at the time where
Sauron tried to woo the Noldorin elven smiths for his cause. After
reading [the Apprentice] this story shows how even the mighty and
intelligent Celebrimbor is being lured into this deception, however
Doc B manages to do it in such a manner that as a reader you fully
understand how this came to be. It is too easy to say that the
Fëanorian pride and lust for power caused Celebrimbor's downfall. No,
that is not the tack Doc B chose with this story, she simply shows the
thirst for knowledge and the camaraderie between two scientists and
how both interact where one has discovered something the other is
curious about. The symbolism (and therefore a superb chosen story
title) used to convey this is just excellent, cunning as a cat can be
to lure its prey, Sauron patiently awaits until Celebrimbor steps into
the trap he has sat by using the thirst to understand Sauron's skills
more. It's fascinating to read how this elf struggles with both
fascination and the feeling of so being perturbed, giving this fallen
Maiar the benefit of the doubt in the end. Aren't cat lovers just as
easily swayed when their sweet Tom goes out hunting? The caws of a pat
can be soft and vicious and the nature of a cat isn't always sweet, or
vicious. This story is a fascinating tale of seduction and
characterisation, with a feeling where I think: `and so it begins,
Eregion's downfall'.

Title: The Revenge of Curufin's Horse · Author: Moreth · Genres: Humor
· ID: 139
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-05 15:00:43
Spoilers!
I remember this story reading for the first time and desperately had
to search for some tissues to clean up my desk and monitor. Moreth has
a delightful sense of humour and stays true to form with these two
Fëanorians. I mean she really pictures Celegorm's priority: not a
raving rant, nay first tend to a filthy horse who has been mistreated.
Also is planning and scheming nature – picturing Curufin as the one as
impatient and a bruised ego is just fab! His love for animals and the
understanding of their language is put to such good use here. That
part alone had me grinning madly and nodding. It is often too easy to
have him around like a raving elf and to see him laughing so hard and
in tears regarding Mannish bad poetry once the mare fills him in:
simply hilarious! Curufin's reaction to those two is just worth being
a witness off (and Moreth makes you feel as you stand next to him).As
easy as these Fëanorians can be roused to revenge and action, just as
much can they are in stitches about attempts at poetry, no wonder
Thingol made Beren work for it. This is brilliantly written with a
great description of scene and atmosphere, Moreth puts her sense of
humour and writing skills to great use here. I am looking forward (and
I know she has more like this) to more of these great satirical – and
yet not – pieces.

Title: Seeking the Sun · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men · ID: 488
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-05 17:48:11
Spoilers!
On the morning after our US Presidential election, when surely some
pockets of prejudice nurse their hurts even while most of the nation
rejoices I find this a particarly moving portrait, but not only
because of the coincidence of timing. The author does a first-rate job
bringing the main character's disappoinment, hate, and loss to life,
yielding actions - though difficult - with which the reader can only
sympathise.

Title: Broken Star · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 54
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-05 19:42:22
Spoilers!
[Broken Star] is an immensely well written ficlet that stirs up many
emotions and equally as many thoughts. Knowing what is to come for
Celebrimbor, this short and private insight gives me the chills. In
Doc B's verse, she set those two up as colleagues and friends and many
of her works illustrate that. That is why the intimacy between those
two work so well, the experiences that ties both or a somewhat shared
past where both have killed – even those close to them. It even brings
up ethical questions to the table in the sense that can a villain
redeem himself? Can he or will another villain always manage to
connect to such a trait that makes them a [brother-of-my-heart]?
Sauron does feel at some level still something for his victim, the
stunning opening paragraph shows such love in his heart. In a way it
feels twisted that he has such tender emotions and at the same time… I
would have felt a bit awkward if the writer didn't bring it in,
knowing her works. This tenderness feels corrupted since at the end he
just as easily reaches for the poke to torture his victim, to get the
job done. This leaves me to wonder about executioners and their chosen
line of profession, how much they will have to set aside of their
humanity to get the job done. So many thoughts and ponderings, all
evoked by a stunning written double drabble. Great job!

Title: The Apprentice · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains · ID: 52
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-05 21:36:37
Spoilers!
The Second Age is a period sadly underwritten, especially considering
all the events of cosmic consequence that take place then. This story
and its sequel more than start making up for this lack.
The author constructs a whole society of guilds and cities where Elves
and Men interact in a totally natural and realistic way and she does
it out a few canonical indications. The main characters, both the
canonical and the original, are amazingly vivid. Samaril, the original
character shares all the distictive traits of a full Noldor: skilled,
intelligent, passionate about his work and totally blind to its
ulterior implications. And, of course, Sauron: so far from the [Lord
of the Rings] ultimate villain. Here he is shown as a being immensely
complicated who has to deal with his multiple aspects and he does not
have an easy time doing it. He is Evil with capital E but he is so
much more and it does make sense that Celebrimbor and all the other
Elves of Eregion should fall into his trap. The background is a rich
canvas where even apparently minor characters add to the wealth of the
whole picture: for example, Samaril's parents who survived the horrors
of the First Age from Helcaraxe to Gondolin and bear the scars of all
they lived through.
The beautiful pictures that illustrate each chapter are another
element that add to the overall effect of this great story.

Title: No Mercy · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: General Drabbles ·
ID: 443
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-05 21:37:01
Spoilers!
Great description of the Dagor Bragollach where Morgoth's armies are
not the only enemy or even the most dangerous. The speed of the
movement of the flames is wonderfully conveyed as is the despair and
helplessness of the Elves, Men and beasts trapped by the fire.

Title: And Then There Was Cake, or Begetting Day Horrors · Author:
Klose · Races: Elves: Family · ID: 540
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-05 21:37:25
Spoilers!
This is a thoroughly enjoyable and really very funny description of
what a birthday party must have been like in the golden days of
Valinor. It is full of delightful details that enrich the overall
scene: I choose - among many others - the presents Maitimo feels his
cousins would have liked to receive [ridiculous objects depicting
certain parts of the female anatomy] instead of the carefully chosen
books and jewelry he presents them with.
All the characters play their expected role: from Makalaure singing
bawdy songs to Aredhel and Tyelkormo getting a bit too close, to the
twins spilling the punch bowl. And of course, the drunken brawl
between Feanaro and Nolofinwe.
I can't help thinking that this story strikes a chord with mostly
everybody because not too many of us can claim not to have an
outrageous relative around at birthday parties.

Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-05 21:37:45
The author has provided one of the most original, most melancholic
answers to what happened to Arwen after Aragorn died. She brings into
the story a very unexpected character but probably the only one at
that day and age who could really understand her predicament. It adds
to the story's power how Maglor and Arwen, though set ages apart,
interact so credibly and seamlessly.
Both characters are powerfully portrayed: on the one hand Arwen who
only then seems to realize what her life and death will be like
[Nothing in my life was ever that easy] and Maglor who is a true Son
of Feanor, no madness, no fading but full of pity and understanding.
He takes care of the practicalities of life in the wild and sounds
very much in control of the situation -quite reasonably so if one is
to consider that he survived for seven thousand years - and he seems
to have become reconciled to the fact that he is still an outcast for
most of the other elves despite all the time that has passed.
And then, he comes to the terrible, totally unexpected -at least for
me- decision at the end.
Another outstanding aspect of this story is the marvelous language
used to describe this beautiful world that is disappearing, becoming
something different after the departure of the Elves, where Arwen
can't find a place and where Maglor will struggle on.

Title: Trinity · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Modern Times · ID: 51
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-05 21:38:13
Spoilers!
I've always thought that elves-in-modern-times stories at their best
are a kind of theoretical exercise (within the bigger theoretical
exercise that is Middle-earth) that serves to illuminate both Primary
and Secondary universes. Well, this put-together of the Silmarils and
the One Ring and the atomic bomb goes far beyond that as a powerful
reflection on ethics, power and scientific responsibility. The
original idea, strong characterization, wonderful details (the
shackles, the eyes, the hair), great use of quotations from very
powerful texts all make this story a real must.

Title: A Moment in the Morning in Bree · Author: Budgielover · Races:
Cross-Cultural · ID: 731
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-06 02:32:46
Spoilers!
Oh, I loved this. Talk about strange customs. Poor Aragorn, being
watched that closely while shaving has to be disconcerting. I had to
laugh at some of the comparisons his shaving drew. It never occurred
to me to compare Aragorn's appearance with Frodo's. I loved Pippin's
questions. His friends might seem him too forward, but I bet they
wanted to know the answers too.

Title: Dead Steward's Gift · Author: stefaniab · Genres: Mystery · ID: 572
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-06 02:34:05
Spoilers!
This entertaining story takes you on a twisting and turning ride.
Faramir makes some discoveries, I think, he would have preferred not
to make. I like the characterization of Faramir as a capable man, sure
of himself, and willing to brave his memories and all kinds of ghosts.
But Cirrion, the cat, steals the show in some chapters. I loved the
epilogue from Cirrion's pov.

Title: Gently Held · Author: viv · Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 6
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-06 02:34:36
Arwen's answer is not the typical answer to the question of why she
loves Aragorn. It's not the obvious, but something most people don't
think about. I love the poetic language of this little ficlet. I think
it fit the character of Arwen as elvish Queen as I envision her.

Title: Five Things that Never Happened to Serinde of Dol Amroth ·
Author: SurgicalSteel · Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy ·
ID: 222
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-06 02:35:23
Whew, am I glad that these are scenes that never happened to Serinde.
The first four scenes are a bit depressing. I never liked her
stepfather, but this here is gruesome. I liked the last scene the
best, so typically Serinde. When she wants to convince someone, she
doesn't care who is watching. I can believe that that demonstration
put all rumors to rest.

Title: One Equal Temper of Heroic Hearts · Author: Gwynnyd · Genres:
Romance: Gondor · ID: 334
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-06 02:36:10
Well matched, indeed. That is a lovely discussion between Aragorn and
Arwen. I had to giggle at Arwen's comment about this being [not an
academic discussion]. Poor Aragorn, he worked so hard on hiding the
evidence, and it was all in vain. Luckily, Arwen is smart and caught
on to Aragorn's doubt and insecurities fast. You could feel the trust
and familiarity between them during their discussion. I loved the
mentioning of Faramir in here. It had to be hard on Aragorn to see all
his friends die before him.

Msg# 9530

MEFA Reviews for Thursday, November 6, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 06, 2008 - 20:05:18 Topic ID# 9530
Title: The Birthday Blessing · Author: Larner · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 687
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-06 05:31:30
Spoilers!
A lovely trio of vignettes to remind us of the connection between the
Tree of the Kings, the mallorn tree that Sam nurtured in the Shire,
and the sacred trees and land of Valinor. Tolkien's love of trees is
well served here; and the image of Frodo and the elf-children
welcoming a flowering of the Tree of Tol Eressea is delightful.

Title: I Stand No Longer Alone · Author: Larner · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 62
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-06 05:42:44
A rather original look at Aragorn's claiming the throne of Gondor. In
lesser hands, the POV might seem a bit odd, but Larner hits just the
right notes, and language, to make the narrator and narration seem
plausible in this time of hope renewed.

Title: In Passing · Author: Altariel · Races: Men · ID: 104
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-06 08:24:55
What I loved most about this short story was how meticulously and
vividly the scene was set - in describing the surroundings as well as
the characters and their moods - with fine brushstrokes that were as
unobtrusive as they were clear.

The interactions between the characters were very natural; I
especially liked the mixture of obvious affection between the two on
one side, and the restraint of showing it on the other - it felt very
real to me and just how I would imagine from Faramir, especially in
the mood as described.

It is such a pleasure to track the many creative ways in which
Altariel weaves her trademark chess metaphors into so many of her
stories, always fresh and meaningful for each individual story and
perfectly fitted to the symbolism as well as the actual point of the
plot she wants to convey. Here, it was lovely to see an additional
layer as Faramir himself uses the chess pieces as symbols to tell a story.

Title: Reparation · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men · ID: 296
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-06 08:26:38
Wonderful characterisations: the characters are fully-realised, their
interaction realistic and convincing, and the dialogue vivid and
fitted individually to each character.

I like how this story draws from a variety of other stories in
Isabeau's canon and gives cohesion and new insight to the
over-reaching arc, as well as stands on its own, building its own plot
arc and resolution and character/plot development.

I have to say I found this story very important because it allowed for
Andrahar's actions in DAY to be seen in a wider context, with
self-awareness and the strength to acknowledge his mistakes to himself
and others, and make ["reparation"] - not only to Hethlin tp whom he
had done an injustice, but also to those to whom he is to be a role
model and a teacher, especially Brandmir.

The mixture of light-hearted moments and serious reflection and
conversation was exactly right. I liked the philosophical discussion
about Andrahar's actions and its implications and how it should be
remedied, and how both Andrahar and Brandmir learned from talking it
through; in particular in how open Andrahar was - and showed himself
to be to a shy Brandmir - to justified criticism.

Title: Autumn · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 489
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-06 08:33:42
A heart-warming story, radiating comfort and content. I especially
liked the contrast between describing beauty of the wild, and the
beauty of being inside in peace and calm - it made it clear that
Aragorn despite having a family and home to call his own now is still
able to appreciate both these things for what they mean to him.

Title: And Then There Was Cake, or Begetting Day Horrors · Author:
Klose · Races: Elves: Family · ID: 540
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-06 09:25:09
A truly hilarious vignette featuring Maitimo, who is about to
celebrate his begetting day, and yet, as it may happen in such a
faimly -- the celebration somehow falls out of control. Ah, gotta love
those relatives ;-) and their crazy ideas! Wonderful, absolutely
amusing read!

Title: Recognition · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor Drabbles · ID: 481
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-06 09:41:25
This is a very interesting glimpse at Eowyn, during the time of her
recovery in the Houses of Healing, from Ioreth's viewpoint. It offers
a deep insight into the mind of a very observant, wise woman who sees
way more than other people. Great job!

Title: The Myth of the One Ring's Power · Author: Dreamflower ·
Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 532
Reviewer: Moreth · 2008-11-06 14:52:31
This is an excellently researched and well written critique of The
Ring as 'an irresistible shiny'.

Aside from the carefully presented argument (well backed up by
references!), I especially like the way in which Dreamflower links The
Ring's abilities to those of its maker, particularly with the
observation that both The Ring and it's master have a 'blind-spot'
that limits their prediction of other's behaviour.

Dreamflower leaves the reader with a Ring which, while it may not
possess absolute and irresistable power, is nevertheless (like it's
maker) obsessed by absolute power. It may be less potent then its
myth, but it is seen to be darker and more malicious for that...

An excellent analysis! I thoroughly enjoyed it.




Title: Wind and Fire · Author: elfscribe · Times: First Age and Prior
· ID: 539
Reviewer: Moreth · 2008-11-06 17:55:49
Spoilers!
I must applaud Elfscribe's rendition of Fëanor and the reason behind
the creation of Silmarils.

Not often does someone write a Fëanor who is not either simply an
arrogant idiot, or glowing hero. Elfscribe's Fëanor is hurt and
desperate (Oh yeah, and arrogant ;P). In this story his desperation to
recover the jewels has a very sound basis.

The sex scene (let's be blunt, the story contains a sex scene!) is
interestingly written. The uncertainty of a Vala in an incarnate form
is explored, but what I am most impressed by is the way that Manwë's
emotional response is rendered through music. Now that is very
appropriate.

I personally have no issues with 'ArchaicSpeek' provided it is
grammatically correct - and here Elfscribe delivers! Very well done
indeed.

Although I'm not certain about the canonical value of Melkor helping
to define the Silmarils, who's going to let that stand in the way of a
good story?

Title: Between Childhood and Coming of Age · Author: Dreamflower ·
Races: Hobbits: Friendship · ID: 141
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-06 18:17:47
As always, Dreamflower's hobbit characterizations are spot on, while
her details of Hobbit life expand Tolkien's vision without disrupting it.

Title: Rude Awakening · Author: Lindelea · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 692
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-06 18:21:23
Spoilers!
It is sobering indeed to contemplate the difficulties this happy pair
might have had returning to ordinary life.

Well done.

Title: Some Seasons · Author: sophinisba solis · Races: Hobbits:
Post-Ring War · ID: 199
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-06 18:24:55
A lovely, simple story with heartfelt and profound underpinnings. Well
done.

Title: The Ribbon · Author: Gentle Hobbit · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 336
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-06 19:05:12
Spoilers!
This is a nice vision of a healed Frodo. There are so many things
Tolkien dealt with and so many he didn't ...

Title: The Ring That Sauron Forged · Author: Larner · Genres: Poetry:
Hobbits · ID: 645
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-06 19:09:28
Hehehe, that was rather amusing!

Title: Farewell · Author: agape4gondor · Genres: Drama: Final Partings
· ID: 127
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-06 19:09:48
Spoilers!
It's nice to see this moment examined. I have always thought that
Boromir must felt the quest for Rivendell vital considering all the
concerns he left behind.

Title: Bibliophile · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Romance: Drabbles ·
ID: 370
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-06 19:14:04
Ah, yes. That must be worse than being called Viola and having people
giving you violets... Very sweet.

Title: Elanor of Westmarch: The Return · Author: Baranduin · Races:
Hobbits: Family · ID: 78
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-06 19:33:26
Spoilers!
I very much enjoyed this story. It is beautifully written with every
word just so. The sentiments are gentle and believable and the hint of
humour makes the story all the more touching. There were some very
sweet moments, like the idea that the tower had it's own life and
wanted Elanor to look west.

The appearance of Sam and Frodo is so skillfully handled that it seems
completely natural and that the reader isn't bothered with undue
questions. They come, because that's just the right thing to happen here.

I was reminded of my husband's grandad Charlie, who even in his
eighties would escape his wife and go off into the hills for a little
walk. I guess to keep a bit of independence is very precious to older
people. Thank you for this delightful portrayal of old age and
memories and above all of family love.

Title: Thicker Than Water · Author: Noliel · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 541
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-06 22:40:03
Spoilers!
This is an emotionally intense story that concentrates on a span of
time no greater than a few minutes, but Noliel's use of flashback from
moments across the course of Celebrimbor's life--particularly moments
spent with his father, Curufin--add weight to what is already a sad
moment. Far from pointlessly angsty, "Thicker Than Water" is
heartrending and a well-crafted story showing the human emotions that
even Tolkien's most maligned characters continue to feel for each
other. Curufin is often neglected in Silmfic, but Noliel brings him to
life here in relatively few words, showing his human side without
flinching from the darker aspects of his character that earned him his
reputation. Of course, in the eyes of his son--no matter the evil he
has done--he is never nonredeemable.

Title: Philosophia to Philomythus and Misomythus · Author:
pandemonium_213 · Genres: Poetry · ID: 50
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-06 22:47:03
Spoilers!
Only Pandemonium could conduct a scientific argument with Tolkien in
verse, and this poem is a commendable work showing how the maligned
scientists of Tolkien's stories--Feanor, Celebrimbor, Aule, and (of
course!) Sauron--likely saw magic in the world around them. At the
same time, I think that those of Pandemonium's readers who disagree
with Gandalf's assessment of breaking white to make a rainbow will
find themselves nodding along heartily about how she sees
Middle-earth--at least, this reader did! And extra props for using an
extra-canonical work often neglected by Tolkien fans and authors alike
that nonetheless reveals much about how he viewed his art.

Title: Kementari · Author: Marta · Times: First Age and Prior · ID: 99
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-06 22:53:29
Spoilers!
"Kementari" is a thought-provoking look at how Yavanna saw the
Darkening of Valinor. A point Marta makes that I had never considered,
regarding the lives of Yavanna's trees and their preservation by the Ents:

[Yet somehow, deep in her bones, Yavanna knows that the tree-herders
cannot protect their charges.

How could they? For the tree-herders are but created things, for all
their strength, and Laurelin and Telperion fell while all the Valar
stood not so far away.]

And her assessment of Yavanna's envy of the other Valar for their
followers while she remains bereft is at once surprising but also the
sort of honest approach to the Valar that sometimes lacks in stories
about them.

Title: Alqualondë · Author: Moreth · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 220
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-06 23:00:48
Spoilers!
"Alqualonde" is, without a doubt, one of my favorite ficlets of the
past year. The kinslaying at Alqualonde is one of those topics that
nearly every Silmarillion writer writes about, and the drabble is a
popular form, but neither is easy to master, and Moreth does a truly
commendable job with both in this piece. Showing the kinslaying,
briefly, from the PoV of both a Teler and a Noldo, she uses brilliant
word choice in place of lengthy passages that could easily be applied
to this topic. The choppy sentence fragments of the first drabble
convey the speaker's confusion and the chaos in which he suddenly
finds himself. And, though I have read this piece numerous times and
know that it is coming, the last line still feels like a punch to the
gut every time.

The second drabble makes good use of repetition to represent the
methodical nature of the kinslaying from the Noldorin PoV, but, again,
in the final sentence, Moreth hits hard as her speaker contemplates
his deeds in totality.

Title: Name Calling: Group Identity and the Other among First Age
Elves · Author: Angelica · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 322
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-06 23:17:59
Spoilers!
"Quendi and Eldar," the source that this essay discusses, is one of
the more challenging of Tolkien's works. As Angelica herself states in
the essay, [The essay "Quendi and Eldar" seems to be on a first
reading mainly concerned with linguistic matters: a discussion of
different roots in Elvish languages and how these roots evolved into
different denominations for Elves and other beings]. However, hidden
within this very long linguistic discourse are numerous insights about
the cultures and histories of the different Elven clans. Angelica has
gone through the effort of finding and summarizing this information
for people interested in learning and writing about Tolkien's works
with a greater understanding of how Elves interacted with each other
and other races, beyond what we know from "fanon."

That, for me, is my favorite part about this essay. Numerous authors
have created believable Elven cultures without delving too much into
the canon that Angelica discusses, yet most writers' work is
remarkably agreeable to what Tolkien himself wrote. Angelica ties
Elven culture into Tzvetan Todorov's work on the concept of "Self" and
"Other" in the Spanish conquest, demonstrating what Tolkien himself
often affirmed: that fantasy often acts best as a mirror for observing
the realities of the world in which we live.

For anyone with an interest in Elven culture but intimidated by
in-depth linguistic discussion, I recommend Angelica's essay as a
primer on Tolkien's ideas about how his Elves and other races interacted.

Title: Midwinter Thoughts · Author: Rhapsody · Races: Elves: Noldor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 570
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-06 23:30:56
Spoilers!
The gentle, almost whimsical tone of this piece fits well with
Maedhros's musings on love. The use of the traditional
flower--substituted for mistletoe at the story's end (fitting for its
association with the winter season and also a slightly darker
symbol--mistletoe is poisonous!--appropriate for Maedhros)--adds a
nice touch to the story and highlights the different seasons that
Rhapsody threads through the story. Finally, despite its musing tone
and seemingly light subject matter, Rhapsody nonetheless manages to
touch briefly on the weightier topics that would have been on
Maedhros's mind, no matter his amorous thoughts: his mutilation
([Maitimo is something I am no more]), the constant battle the Noldor
are waging, and his ever-present and colorful cast of brothers that at
once enrich and complicate his life.

Title: Five Fires · Author: Elleth · Races: Elves: House of Finwe ·
ID: 736
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-06 23:39:29
Elleth's writing is always poetic with a slightly mysterious edge to
it and "Five Fires" is no exception. Following the lives of Amrod and
Amras from childhood till death, she touches on seemingly random
moments using the motifs of fire and water to tie them together and
show an emerging psychology for Ambarussa that eclipses what many
other writers cannot manage with many more words. Her imagery is
perceptive and keen, the sort of writing I want to savor for much
longer than the story I'm given. As always, I recommend Elleth's
writing highly for its haunting feel and her skill as an author, which
few in the Tolkien fandom can match.

Title: Another Prometheus · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 85
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-06 23:42:25
Spoilers!
"Another Prometheus" sums up what I and many other writers see in the
character of Feanor, which often gets lost in the darker deeds of his
later days. The drabble's assertion that he deserves praise as one who
sought to better the society in which he lived is one with which I
agree ... though I'm not sure that

Msg# 9531

ADMIN – Banners Posted by Tanaqui November 07, 2008 - 3:16:50 Topic ID# 9531
Hey guys,

Here is your weekly admin post. This week, I'm going to talk about the
different banners you can use as a participant in the MEFAs and where to
get them.

First of all, I'd like to thank all the volunteers who helped bring you
the wonderful selection of MEFA banners and buttons we have available
this year. Banners were created by Baranduin, Cactuskim, Elea24, Elena
Tiriel, Marta, Nau_tika and Viv. Their work was coordinated by Fiondil,
who also uploaded banners to the MEFA banners site, assisted by
Beruthiel's Cat. A big thank you to all of them for allowing us to have
such a wonderful selection of banners to choose from.

Now, on to the banners! There are three kinds:

---Nominee Banners can be used by any nominated author and can be
displayed on any story nominated in this year's awards. You're welcome
to use as many different banners as you have stories nominated  we hope
that you can find a banner that matches your story from the selection
we've provided: the widest ever this year.

---Reviewer Banners can be downloaded and can be displayed by any
reviewer who set a Review Target (aka "MEFA Junkie" target) and reached
it. Again, we have a wide range of Review Banners, so we hope you can
find one you like. The list of reviewers who have achieved "MEFA Junkie"
status by reaching their target number of reviews can be seen at
http://www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/index.php?page=FAQjunkie#jun_7

---Story Winner Banners can be used by authors whose stories win an
award (first, second or third place or honorable mention) in this year's
MEFA awards and can be displayed on the winning story. Once the results
of this year's awards have been announced on 3 December, winning authors
will be able to get the Story Winner Banner of their choice customized
with the name of the award they have won. (We'll provide more details
about this after 3 December.)

(Oh, there's also a fourth kind of banner: for MEFA Volunteers. If
you're one of this year's Volunteers and you haven't yet got a Volunteer
banner and would like one, please email me at tanaqui at blueyonder dot
co dot uk and I'll help you sort out getting one.)

All of this year's banners can be seen at the MEFA banner site at
http://www.mefawards.net/fanart/ .

To download a Nominee or Reviewer banner:

1. Go to http://www.mefawards.net/fanart/ and login.

If you don't still have a copy of the login details for he banner site
that were emailed to all MEFA nominees earlier this year, please email
me at tanaqui at blueyonder dot co dot uk and I'll email you the
password privately.

2. Click on the link for 2008 Nominees or 2008 Reviewers.
3. Find the banner you would like to use and click on the image.
4. Click the download button.

This will download the image to your computer. You can then use it like
any other image.

I think that covers just about everything that needs to be said about
banners for now. Remember that there's just over three weeks of
reviewing time left in this year's awards, so why not reward a good
story with a vote and a review today?

Happy Reviewing!

Tanaqui
(MEFA Tech Support)

PS: Elena Tiriel has reminded me that she created a number of banners
after this year's deadline which haven't been loaded onto the MEFA
banner site but which can be seen at
http://www.photobucket.com/elenatiriel. She invites any nominees and
"MEFA Junkies" to download and use these, and she will be happy to
customise them for winners once the results of the Awards are announced.

Msg# 9532

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 7, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 07, 2008 - 19:47:51 Topic ID# 9532
Title: A Sleep Over · Author: Phyncke · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 160
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 03:11:44
Spoilers!
A very impressive story which I began reading with a smile and
concluded with a shudder! Foresight must be a difficult gift to have
and it must be even worst to be told your future is dark.
A very well written story which i enjoyed despite not really being
into "Simarillion" stories.

Title: Hidden Watcher · Author: kitt_otter · Genres: Drama · ID: 702
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 03:14:17
The writer captures the horror of Moria well here.Not a place I would
want to visit!

Title: The Best Sword Ever · Author: Linaewen · Times: Mid Third Age ·
ID: 290
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 03:21:35
Spoilers!
I loved this story as it uses the idea that Boromir might vaguely have
remembered Aragorn without making the reader gasp in disbelief at the
implausibility of such vivid memories as some stories on this theme do.
I loved the idea of Thorongil having time for young Boromir and
Denethor's reaction was spot on.

Aragorn's reaction to the adult Boromir was very moving and the faint
glimmer of memory realistic given Boromir's very young age when they
last met.

A moving,poignant and well written story.

Title: Nine Companions · Author: Aranel Took · Genres: Humor: Drabbles
· ID: 259
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 03:30:02
A delightfully amusing drabble.

Title: Flame of Life · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 114
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 03:35:35
Spoilers!
This lovely ficlet contains a great deal to think about and is as true
for us today as in Tolkien's Middle-earth.

The Flame made me think of Shiva's dance of fire in Hinduism as it can
both create and destroy.

I think one could read this many times and still find something new.

Title: Lost and Found · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 23
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 03:43:17
Spoilers!
This was just lovely,a most enjoyable story !I love to imagine what
Gandalf and Faramir's early friendship was like.How fitting that
Faramir should help find the needed scroll.

Title: Celebrity · Author: Bodkin · Races: Men: Minas Tirith · ID: 635
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 03:47:45
Spoilers!
I just loved this very enjoyable story.You made me feel as if I were
there.I love the way you write Aragorn and I am certain he must have
missed his freedom to go and have a mug of ale on impulse with an old
friend.The reader is left with a sense that Aragorn is almost the
prisoner of his guards and at times feels nostalgic for his Strider
days.A beautifully written story.

Title: Not One of Us · Author: StarLight9 · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Elves and Men · ID: 542
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 04:00:08
Spoilers!
I often wonder if young Ester was looked down upon by some Elves and
this story answers my question.I loved the warm and close relationship
between Aragorn and his son.

Title: The Stranger · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 560
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 04:05:49
A lovely and very atmospheric story in which a young boy on the beach
meets a mysterious stranger. I loved the boy's compassion for the
stranger.I don't usually like stories that mix Tolkien's world with
our own,but this one could convert me to the genre!A beautifully
written story which haunted me long after I had read it..

Title: Fidelis · Author: Pentangle · Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort · ID: 612
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 04:16:00
Spoilers!
This deeply moving story had me on the edge of my seat when I read
it.The gifted writer brings up many deep and often topical themes. Is
the risk of losing someone too high a price to pay for loving them,or
is the fact of having loved consolation enough?
Does someone unable to bear the pain of living have the right to die?
These questions and others are thoughtfully explored here and both
sides of the argument carefully balanced.
I loved a chance to reacquaint myself with the crusty "Badger", an
example of the kind of healer who means well,but sometimes overlooks
the patient's emotional and spiritual needs.
The bond between the doomed Elves was deeply moving and much as I love
Aragorn, I liked this chance to see him as less than perfect.
I'm not a fan usually of Aragorn and Legolas stories,but this proved
the exception to the rule. I just loved it and thank Pentangle for
such a good read.

Title: The Wanderer · Author: Lackwit · Genres: Adventure: Incomplete
· ID: 627
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-07 04:22:59
Spoilers!
This WIP has a very interesting beginning.I recognise elements of
Homer's great epic story here cleverly transferred to M-e. I wonder
why Aragorn is not protecting Eowyn if that is the case? You have
caught my attention and I hope you will finish this fascinating story.

Title: Wild Swan · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: Gondor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 328
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-07 06:03:49
Spoilers!
In this drabble set, Tanaqui presents succinct glimpses into Imrahil's
life like memories in a photo album. We are treated to everyday
occurances, such as Imrahil enjoying the company of his young nephews,
to brief epsidoes during life-changing moments, such as Imrahil's
reflection on his wife before he leads his men off to battle on the
Pelennor Fields. A delightful feast, especially if you are a Gondor fan.

Title: Old Friends · Author: Marta · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 651
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-07 06:21:00
Spoilers!
Marta beautifully captures Gandalf's life post Grey Havens in this
drabble. How fitting that old Olorin would develop a sense of ennui as
every day begins and ends undifferentiated from the next until...So
much said in just 100 words.

Title: Out, Damn'd Spot! Out, I Say! · Author: Alassante · Races:
Elves: Noldor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 260
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-07 09:19:43
I think it is impossible to call any of the Feanorians innocent as far
as their deeds are concerned, but one should not forget that the
kinslayings, and especially the first one, must have had a gigantic
and traumatic impact on any of them, regardless of their potential
willingness to admit that. Here, in this excellently written tripple
drabble Alassante shows how deep the psychical wounds could go and
what effect -- disastrous and unforgettable -- the blood and the death
of the Teleri had on Celebrimbor. Splendid writing!

Title: Only Water in Your Veins · Author: Michelle · Races: Men · ID: 154
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-07 15:02:52
Very evocative descriptions, precise and clear without getting too
much into gory details.

Deft use of perspective and plot arc, as the readers learn what has
happened together with Aragorn. The descriptions of his treck through
desert, the heat and thirst and weariness, the longing for shade and
water, the growing exhaustion and detachment from reality, are
especially good, and paint a very detailed and multi-dimensional
picture of his state of mind. The tension builds steadily, without it
seeming forced or used for mere effect.

The visions or hallucinations (and I liked that this was left
ambiguous) were introduced and handled very adeptly - it was as if the
readers could accept them as readily and unquestioningly as Aragorn.

I found the encounter with the Haradrim wonderful; the way Michelle
showed their culture and principles, and their love of the life they
lead in the desert.

Title: Of Dreams... · Author: Avon · Races: Men: General Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 7
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-07 15:30:05
Lush, lyrical prose, providing descriptions which give the drabble a
very rich, densely-imagined backdrop. Aragorn's dreams become almost
reality, so that the readers can smell the green, the freshness of the
water, feel the wind, hear the roar of the waterfalls.

I thought the premise of the drabble fit very well with Aragorn's
character, especially of course with movie!Aragorn. It shows a
self-effacement and humility, coupled with the awareness that he has
shoulder heavy responsibility to attain his desires so they will be
sustainable and lasting.

The contrast between his peaceful and gentle longings, and his
willingness to accept strife and power as is his responsibility and
destiny is played up very well.

Title: Hearts of Stone · Author: Elen Kortirion · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 12
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-07 15:30:20
Spoilers!
The premise of the drabble series is a wonderful idea, and
well-executed. I love the idea of Aragorn fashioning mementos for
Arwen of all the many places he travels through, so to give her
insight into his travails and show that she is always with him in his
heart.

I also liked that Aragorn has various reasons for collecting the
stones, ranging from curiosity about their properties and uses to
simple aesthetic pleasure.

The language is elegant, poetic in places, and has a lyrical candence
that brings the readers right into the story.

The series shows in a very nifty way the extent and magnitude of
Aragorn's many travels, criss-crossing Middle-earth from the furthest
north to the deepest south, from west to east, a perfect illustration
of the reason he is described as the ["greatest traveller ... of this
age of the world"]. I especially liked the notion of Aragorn's
["belovéd Arda"].

Title: Coming Home to Crickhollow · Author: calanthe11 · Genres:
Romance · ID: 445
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-07 16:19:32
Spoilers!
This is a beautiful story, which has a very gentle feel to it. It is
written from Merry's pov, who tries to discover who this new and
mature Pippin is. They have to find the old friendship under all the
changes the year away has brought, which is not easy. They are back in
the Shire, but they have changed so much that the familiar feels
suddenly strange. I like the way the friendship between Merry and
Pippin is depicted.

Title: Arwen in the Afternoon · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres:
Romance: Elven Lands · ID: 244
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-07 16:23:45
Spoilers!
Halbarad, growing up with the strict morales of the Dunedain, is a bit
uncomfortable with the free love approach in form of festivals of the
elves of Rivendell. Although, he took advantage of Aragorn's
upbringing in Rivendell which allowed them a secret love affair long
ago. He is now married, and on a visit to the secret valley he
discovers Aragorn's betrothal to Arwen.

Halbarad's conflicting emotions, loyalty to his wife and at the same
time a yearning for Aragorn are beautifully described in a meeting
with Aragorn where all kinds of inappropriate thoughts run through his
mind interspersed with the dialogue. I love naughty!Arwen together
with a friend taking advantage of Aragorn and Halbarad in the
enchanted environs of the valley. Poor Halbarad doesn't stand a chance.

Title: Good King Elessar · Author: Dreamflower · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Friendship · ID: 2
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-07 16:32:47
Spoilers!
This is a charming little Yule story which gave me a fuzzy warm
feeling. Strider and Frodo-lad on a mission to bring gifts to a lonely
man in the woods. I loved the moments when Frodo had the feeling his
king looked like Pippin or one of his siblings just before they do
some mischief.

Title: Primum Non Nocere (First, Do No Harm) · Author: febobe ·
Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort · ID: 628
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-07 17:59:38
Spoilers!
I had trouble accessing this story but I kept trying and I'm glad I
did. This is a captivating piece, founded on a very simple but
profound observation of Tolkien's works - that Eowyn and Frodo would
have a great deal in common. It was lovely how the author drew out
these resonant similarities, and drew a new portrait (for me anyway)
of Eowyn which was perhaps all the more true for being fresh. Well done.

Each individual voice of the three main characters was also perfectly
caught, a real hallmark of the writer's ability.

Title: Estel I Was Called · Author: Marta · Genres: Drama: Featuring
Aragorn · ID: 351
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-07 18:06:01
Spoilers!
I am always impressed by Marta's ability to raise a question - what
would it be like for Aragorn to return to the angle - and answer it
with more wondering arising like steam from the heat of her very rich
characters. This story is a prime example.

Title: Star-songs of the Eorlingas · Author: Tanaqui · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 291
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-07 18:56:28
Spoilers!
Typically, I find it very difficult to write more than a 100 word
review for drabble. However, this drabble set (more than 100 words, of
course) has inspired me to maximum enthusiasm.

"Star Songs" is exquisite. Here, Eowyn describes the cosmology of the
heavens from the perspective of the children of Eorl. Each star and
constellation is given its own, stunningly written drabble, with the
occasional drabble of Eowyn and Faramir to anchor the set. Truth be
told, "Star-songs" is such a cohesive whole that it reads like a short
story.

What I like best is how Tanaqui uses each star myth as a window on
Rohirric culture. Each drabble reveals the heroes, enemies, and the
huge importance of horses to the Eorlingas. Though this culture is
quite young in comparison to Faramir's Gondorian and Numenorean
background, Faramir finds similarities in Eowyn's stories to the
mythology that he knows (and Tolkien wrote about, mostly in the
published Silmarillion).

Tanaqui is a great drabblist, one whom I often wish would expand some
of her short fic. She does that with the elegant and powerful
"Star-songs," certainly a must read for everyone, and especially for
those who count themselves fans of the Rohirrim and Tolkien's human
cultures in general.

Title: I Ain't Got Nobody · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 568
Reviewer: elfscribe · 2008-11-07 20:55:14
Spoilers!
This was hilarious! I loved the idea of the accident-prone Glorfindel
making repeated trips to Namo's handy-dandy fea-infusing machine.
[Lights flashed, buzzers sounded, the door hissed open, and
Glorfindel, in a fog of dry ice, walked out in his brand new body.] I
love the snarky comments. ["I don't know," Glorfindel said, shifting
from foot to foot and hiking up his hips. "It's a little tight in the
crotch."] The sense of exasperation on both Namo and Glorfindel's
part. ["This isn't fun for me either," Glorfindel said crossly.] And
Ignoblebard's amusing use of language: ["Not on your newly minted
behind."]
Very enjoyable. I'm still grinning.




Title: A Midsummer Day's Dream · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 422
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-07 21:20:51
The atmosphere is set up so very well in this drabble that I feel the
same peace and contentment ease over me that the main character
lyrically expresses. The prose is lovely, descriptive and magical, not
only transporting me in place but easily collecting all my emotions in
hand, too. The transition from beginning to ending is about as
perfectly done as I could imagine, from dreamy drowse to waking dream
to the next great adventure for a truly incredible prince. I'm left
with that peculiar mix of grief and a soaring heart that seems to
accompany the recognition of a life well-lived.

I loved the tracing of the accomplishments of the past leading into
the present fruits of that labor, and again into the beloved ones
already gone ahead. Magnificent language all around, and beautiful use
of the twist with the title! The ending particularly appealed to me,
with that last tenuous connection slowly being severed...

It's hard to believe this is in the fixed-length ficlet category,
because once again Raksha's work leaves me with the impression that
there was neither stretching nor compacting of words to meet a set
number: every expression and phrase is fitting, nothing is abrupt or
drawn-out - in short, perfect.

Msg# 9533

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 8, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 07, 2008 - 19:50:58 Topic ID# 9533
Title: Heavens' Embroidered Cloths · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 292
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-07 21:21:58
Spoilers!
I really am in awe of this drabble series (and its partner). Tanaqui
set out to construct a set of astronomically-inspired legends
incorporating Middle-earth history, and each drabble hangs as
perfectly with the others as those tapestries must have in Eowyn and
Faramir's hall. The pure creativity in coming up with so many
different explanations for the different star formations, both in
Tolkien's universe and our own, is matched impeccably by Tanaqui's
awesome drabbling ability and perfectly-managed language.

The storytelling drabbles are bookended by touching interactions
between Faramir and Eowyn (and Eowyn's moving determination to provide
a wonderful Mettare for her new husband). But what most strongly
appeals to me are the brief remembered moments between young Faramir
and his now-lost family. Finduilas and Boromir are delightful, but
Denethor truly shines here: A devoted and loving father, untrammeled
yet by loss and the burdens of fighting the long defeat against
Sauron. These glimpses are short, but deep, and paint a picture far
more complete than you'd think possible via the limited wordcount.

An excellent addition to the invented lore of Tolkien's world - well
done, Tanaqui!

Title: Night Terrors · Author: Gwynnyd · Genres: Drama: Gondor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 433
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-07 21:22:44
Spoilers!
"Fearful Faramir", indeed!

Gwynnyd rather effortlessly transported me right back to the weeks
after my firstborn arrived: that same sudden fear (they always seem so
fragile!), the trembling check (he's breathing!), the relief followed
by the sense of being more than a little silly to get worked up over
nothing. Such a normal new-parent reaction, and I really enjoyed the
connection I felt to Faramir in this piece.

I loved his "if that nurse did so-and-so" and "if she's sleeping"
litany on his way to check on his son - absolutely realistic, even for
so fair and just a man as Faramir. The writing captures his emotions
and actions very well through truly wonderful descriptions, bringing
me right along to the delightful and entertaining ending where he ends
up waking the very babe he was trying to protect. Nicely done!

Title: The Blessing of the Waters · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Romance: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 61
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-08 00:04:14
Sniff, what a beautiful and sad ficlet. Raksha sends us for a brief
time into a well-known gap, that of Elrond and his wife Celebrian.
Raksha's choice of tone and language is poetic and sad, as is
appropriate for the Master of Rivendell as he shares with us memories
of Celebrian. A tear formed in the corner of my eye as I concluded
this one.

Title: What Goes Up · Author: Dana · Times: Late Third Age: Gondor
Drabbles · ID: 683
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 01:18:32
That last line gave me a great big smile! A very nice look at that
scene from the movie trilogy, and an equally entertaining glimpse into
Pippin's thoughts at the time.

Title: The Chieftain of the Dunedain · Author: Avon · Races: Men:
Pre-Ring War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 623
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 01:24:19
Spoilers!
Elegantly and entertainingly written, this drabble paints a delightful
portrait of Aragorn as a young man at his ease at the campfire with
his companions. But its chief charm is the notion that Halbarad was an
older man, one who had dandled baby Estel at his knee - a novel idea,
since I for one always think of them as being the same age - yet in
the realms of fanon this thought works very well too.

Title: Renewal · Author: Elena Tiriel · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 208
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 01:34:31
Spoilers!
A really thought provoking example of animism that gives voice to the
great sword of Telcontar. The prose is lyrical and eloquent, and the
well chosen phrases leap off the page like the best poetry, to form
fascinating images that stay in the mind.

Title: The Captain's New Clothes · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 421
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 01:48:09
Spoilers!
A delightful story to explain the awfulness of the clothing in that
picture. For something that is so horrendously au, and not in a good
way! Raksha brings it back into canon in the nicest way possible, with
slight indignity for the wearer, and great good humour.

Msg# 9534

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 8, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 08, 2008 - 20:52:28 Topic ID# 9534
Title: Wave-Singer · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 33
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 01:53:44
Spoilers!
Aaah, I think I remember this from a previous Hallowe'en - and I loved
the concept then that the last of the Feanorians still walked beside
the sea singing of all he had lost. Your last line is particularly
plaintive and wonderfully expressive in so very few words.

Title: Handy With A Sword · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 437
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 02:03:49
Spoilers!
I loved the lead up to that verse, with which I was not familiar, but
yes, it is the perfect ballad to equate with Faramir. It certainly
made me smile when I read it!

Title: Spiced Wine On A Snowy Day · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races:
Elves: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 558
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 02:26:13
Spoilers!
This is a very thoughtful and well considered picture of friendship -
apart from putting potpourri in wine, that I can't imagine *g* Apart
from my reaction being much the same as Glorfindal's. The descriptions
convey a great sense of peace and restfulness, but my chief reason for
commenting is the final line - a sentance that brings the whole text
alive with meaning, and puts the conversation into a poignant context.

Title: Pippin (Paladin) Had a Little Lamb · Author: Cathleen · Genres:
Humor · ID: 629
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-08 02:28:46
Spoilers!
Cathleen has created a lovely world for little Pippin and his family,
and the chief OC is Pippin's knitted piggy, Tulip. But in this story
we learn of another Person of the Fabric Persuasion, as Sammy-Lamby
comes to join the family.

I think the most delightful part of this is how clearly the saying
["like father, like son"] applies to Paladin and Pippin, and how
Eglantine loves to indulge both her lads!

Title: Galdor: An Elf By Any Other Name.... · Author: Marta · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 475
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-08 02:29:04
I love the way Marta shows the process she used in coming up with her
conclusions about Galdor's back-story. I think that extrapolating from
canon is the best way to devise a strong "fanon" assumption. She uses
the very few hints JRRT gives us to extrapolate a plausible, if not
necessarily probable, story-internal explanation for who and what
Galdor was! A very good job, and a classic use of scholarship. It's a
very good way for a fanfic writer to approach a minor canon character
that they wish to use.

Title: Candles · Author: Gentle Hobbit · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring War
· ID: 460
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-08 02:29:26
A warm story of caring and giving between Frodo and Sam, I love the
imagery of light, and how very important it must have been to both of
them after their terrible encounters with darkness. Tender and
slightly melancholy and touching.

Title: Bibliophile · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Romance: Drabbles ·
ID: 370
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-08 02:29:44
Spoilers!
I enjoy this little scene on a couple of levels--the hints of the
story Eowyn is reading and its connection to Faramir's mother is one
level, and the other is Faramir distracting her from her reading--a
turnabout from what would normally be expected, as we are told
*Faramir* is the scholar. That makes it even more amusing. And
husbands will do that.

Title: Things as they were in all the days of my life · Author:
Tanaqui · Races: Men: Pre-Ring War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 393
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 02:33:27
I very much like the contrasts you've woven into this drabble series,
showing aspects of Denethor's character previously undiscovered by
many authors.

Title: Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast? · Author: viv · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 180
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 02:40:47
Luuurvalley! Beautifully focussing on the absurd, the author writes
both with pen in hand and tongue firmly in cheek! A very droll and
amusing take on that famous seen of derring-do, here given a wonderful
twist one might even say was a case of 'derring-don't'! Great fun,
seemingly so simple, but a little parody like this needs real skill to
pull it off successfully - kudos!

Title: Broken Star · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 54
Reviewer: Elen Kortirion · 2008-11-08 03:00:11
This story is achingly painful to read, but gives glimpses of a past
relationship, formed from friendship, that makes the present
circumstances even more gut-wrenchingly awful. The author creates the
mood with spare, stripped down prose that conveys evrything the reader
needs to know - even if they are only vaguely familiar with the canon
story refered to by the text. I for one enjoy the discipline of the
drabble form and cherish it for making an author really think about
every word they put on the page, or the screen, rather than take the
sometimes easier course of letting mind and vocabulary run riot - when
what is so often needed is a large red pencil.
Strictly speaking - I'm only going into that arguement in order to
increase the word count and therefore score for this story. My own
inclination is to be short and to the point, so please forgive me
rambling in an effort to give the story the score I think it merits.

Title: Second Best · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 384
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-08 06:30:29
A very clever drabble which reveals, through a nifty twist at the end,
an ironic and frankly tragic reality in the House of Húrin.

Tanaqui crafts what could have been a monotone list of admirable
qualities bordering on bragging, into a very sympathetic appeal for
recognition, justice and love.

The ambiguity in identifying the protagonist was, to me, actually more
effective on my second read, when I was more conscious of the "punch"
of the drabble and could appreciate in just how many ways the
descriptions *did* fit for both potential characters, because it
brought it to a very succinct and telling impact.

What I also found interesting was that almost to the end of the
drabble, it was not completely clear from if the PoV was that of an
observer or of that of the protagonist himself - meaning that it was
left an open question for the readers to decide how much bias they had
to "adjust" for in judging the claims made.

Title: Before You Go · Author: Nancy Brooke · Races: Men: Minas Tirith
· ID: 506
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-08 07:00:11
Elegant prose, and very clear descriptions of the surroundings that I
thought reflected Boromir's personality very well.

I have to admit that Denethor's observations of Boromir crept me out a
bit because they seemed over-the-top and almost like adoration - so I
found this a very effective way to show that Denethor's state of mind
may at that time already be not quite clear anymore.

But it was very moving to watch how this relationship between father
and son was shown, with obvious love but also an awkwardness that was
painful to witness, as well as the grudging crumbs of thought Denethor
spares for Faramir. What I found especially fascinating was just how
vulnerable Denethor seems and how powerful a hold Boromir holds over
him. A thought-provoking take of a man who normaly is seen as cold and
hard and unbending - once strong emotions are involved, the impact on
him seems all the harder.

Title: Aftermaths and Consequences · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Fourth
Age and Beyond · ID: 268
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-08 07:01:23
Spoilers!
The aftermath of a war can, in many cases, bring worthwhile
opportunities to those who willing to leave behind the conventions of
the past. Gwynnyd takes that scenario and runs with it in this
excellently textured story of people of different backgrounds uniting
in mutual respect and taking a gamble to obtain a better life. I
really liked the two OC's and would like to know more about their
lives. And I liked the reference to the actions of the King and
Steward that are encouraging new ideas and new social mobility.

Title: Feelings of Superiority · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 362
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-08 07:12:30
Spoilers!
Six drabbles illustrating the irony and folly of arrogance in the
characters' feelings of superiority. Gwynnyd skillfully evokes
different places and times in the Arda-verse, from Taniquetil to the
shores of Middle-earth in the Second Age, and the camps of the
horse-trader lords of Rhovanion.

Title: Miquan Melave · Author: Marta · Genres: Romance · ID: 319
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-08 16:29:07
Spoilers!
A short, but profoundly powerful story, touching upon grief, the
difference between love and lust, and cultural differences. Marta's
Boromir and Theodred are among my favorite "slash" couples in that
their relationship is fully drawn and not merely for the sake of the
physical release. In this story, however, Theodred has his doubts
about that. Having ridden all the way to Dol Amroth to comfort Boromir
in a time of mourning, he has questions about their developing
relationship and desires reassurance from Boromir that it is not
simply one of physical release.

Riders of Rohan are permitted the sort of release the two young heirs
indulge in as a matter of course. Gondor is not so understanding,
though there are outlets for such things in the shadows, as it were.
Boromir does not fear parental retribution or scorn in this story, but
he does seem to be genuinely wondering about where they are going, and
in his desire to reassure Theodred finds himself verbally expressing
his feelings on the matter for the first time.

The ensuing discussion between the two men ranges through a number of
subjects besides the obvious one, but by the time they are done it is
obvious that what they have between them is not merely lust. Beautiful
characterizations and lots of sensory detail make this a wonderful read.

Title: Wayward Sons · Author: Jael · Races: Elves · ID: 408
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-08 16:55:01
Spoilers!
One of the greatest pleasures of this year's MEFAs for me was getting
to read the rest of Jael's beautiful stories about Thranduil and his
family. Like I have done with Imrahil and Dol Amroth, Jael has devoted
her attention to a character who has but a minimal canon presence, and
given him a family and friends, including some very well drawn OCs. In
the process, she has given Thranduil a much more vivid existence than
the Professor ever did.

This story is sort of the crux to her Thranduil stories, for it
depicts his moment of utmost despair. Rivendell and Lorien are long
gone, the Elves departed, except for the holdouts who have come to him
in the forest, the last stronghold of Elvenkind. Despite his efforts
to hold everything together, Thranduil wakes one morning to find that
he is fading. His reaction to this is one of the most interesting
things about the story. Fading is the ultimate end of being for Elves
and he regards it as a human might a diagnosis of incurable cancer.
Horrified, he is contemplating his ultimate doom when the forest
brings him a message of hope.

The other thing I like about Jael's stories is that the Valar, upon at
least one occasion have a bit of mercy and compassion to them. The
results of their decision arrive at the forest and these new arrivals
give Thranduil new strength and life, for being a true king, he is at
his best when he has someone to protect.

A lovely, lovely story. Highly recommended.

Title: Look Not With Longing · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Fourth Age
and Beyond · ID: 479
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-08 17:02:50
Spoilers!
One of the greatest members of Gondor's Greatest Generation reflects
upon what has been won and lost in this beautiful story. Faramir, ever
thoughtful, can appreciate the peace that has been won for his
children while acknowledging that desperate times are the forge upon
which great men are made. With both Sauron and the Elves gone, the
World of Men is a lesser, paler place, and he feels that lack while
acknowledging that it is best that things have turned out as they
have. A lovely, lyrical story. There were several beautiful passages I
started to quote in this review, until I realized that I'd pretty much
be putting the whole thing into square brackets! Just go read it!

Title: Dark Dreams · Author: Avon · Races: Men: Steward's Family · ID: 282
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 17:22:49
Spoilers!
The dream of Numenor's drowning provides fertile ground for
explorations of the Steward's family. Avon picks up on the tension
between Faramir and Denethor later in life and interpolates it back
into the past, suggesting a certain elven influence over his two boys
as rubbing Denethor the wrong way. Boromir already has assumed the
role of surrogate father, at least where matters of care and comfort
are concerned in Faramir's life, and Imrahil finds himself wondering
why it must be so. That tension makes for a great atmosphere and draws
the reader in quickly and decisively.

But the family tension is not the heart of the story: Imrahil's own
prescience comes into play on the back of Faramir's dream, casting
doubt on his promise to two frightened boys that the doom of Numenor
will never happen again. This opening out onto what will be some of
the most memorable and tragic events of the Ring War is a fantastic
close that leaves you with a sense of anxiety and foreboding, despite
(or perhaps because) we know precisely what will happen.

Well done!

Title: A Sleep Over · Author: Phyncke · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 160
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-08 17:23:06
Spoilers!
This tale is both humorous and ominous. Youthful Galadriel "sleeps
over" Uncle Fingolfin's house and, in playing a predict the future
game, reveals to her insistent cousin Aredhel the terrible future that
awaits her. This story has a very contemporary feel. Fingolfin's home
seems more 21st century than FA 50. Galadriel and Aredhel amusingly
behave like modern tweens, Fingolfin a peeved parent. But you believe
Phyncke's story, especially because Galadriel unknowingly is telling
Aredhel the truth.

Title: Summer Heat · Author: chaotic_binky · Times: Modern Times · ID: 363
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-08 17:32:37
Spoilers!
This is certainly one of the more unique premises I've seen in a
Tolkien story! The flashbacks provide a very welcome glimpse of the
characters' lives in Middle-earth while the modern-day chapters are
fast-paced, suspenseful, and, at times, wickedly funny.

Chaotic Binky manages to nail the tone of a crime thriller spot on. I
loved the greasy diner scene, as well as lines like, ["It was still
raining and the drops of water mixed with the blood as if to wash away
his sins"] for capturing this genre so well. At the same time, the
characters' Elvishness shines through--the love of nature and the
sensitivity to life and death--that keeps this story from being an
unexpected plotline filled in with the names of Tolkien characters.

Erestor is an intriguing character that--even more than wanting to
know the outcome to the who-dunnit? storyline--I was in suspense
about, wondering how he would turn out, whether Glorfindel's
re-emerging love for him would transform Erestor or turn him to evil,
as it had in the past. This was definitely a fun and entertaining
story to read!

Title: Only Water in Your Veins · Author: Michelle · Races: Men · ID: 154
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 17:49:08
Spoilers!
Aragorn and Harad are an unbeatable combination - politics make for
tension, personal encounter for a chance to overcome the political.

The in media res beginning is effectively written - one feels for and
with Aragorn from the start, as he goes through the painful process of
waking up, and then moves on to the even more painful process of
surviving the desert's trials. Michelle depicts slow death by thirst,
heat, and dehydration very well, and the ambiguous hallucinations and
dreams refer back very well both to Aragorn as foresighted, but also
to Arwen who would [watch over him in thought] while he was away on
his journeys.

The arrival of Rajal gives us a glimpse into the hearts and minds of
the Haradrim, and their love for their harsh land. He functions as a
savior on two levels: rescuing Aragorn from the desert, but also
providing a human face and concern that are needed in the face of the
impersonal 'malice' of the desert.

Title: Reparation · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men · ID: 296
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 17:59:27
Spoilers!
The difficulty with unforeseen plot developments and new characters is
the trouble it makes for older stories that didn't include them, even
though they occupy the same timeline. How to integrate (or whether to
integrate) the old and the new is always a challenge.

Isabeau handles it well, however, using Brand to show another side to
the story of [Dol Amroth Yule], in which Andrahar and Hethlin suffer
probably one of their worst (if not the worst) failures of their early
student-teacher relationship, and then in a whiplash reversal, find
that same, rocky relationship bearing fruit when Heth saves Dol
Amroth's royal family from an assassin using Andrahar's training.

There is already the beginning of a shift in the Heth-Andra
relationship in that story, but [Reparation] enables Isabeau to use
Brand to handle another side to amending that relationship. Brand's
sensitivity to unjust, even abusive family relationships puts him wise
to an unhealthy and unworthy side of Andrahar's motivations in
treating Heth as he has. It's a necessary revelation if a just
resolution and a real chance to move forward is to come through and
it's good to see that Andrahar needs people in his life to keep an
even moral keel.

Great fun, Isabeau!



Title: Tangled Webs · Author: Ribby · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 100
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 18:07:39
Spoilers!
The use of lace or of weaving to symbolize human relationships is not
new, but it is used to great effect here. That Aragorn understands,
and that he is not afraid to hold onto and to depend on that broken
thread in his life is a great testimony to his character.

Thanks, Ribby!

Title: Second Best · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 384
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 18:10:23
Spoilers!
Nice reversal of expectations, and a terrific paralleling of
Denethor's relationship with his father and his own relationship with
Faramir in later years. What a pity that Denethor wasn't gifted with
the kind of insight that Faramir was, so as to learn pity and
generosity rather than to recapitulate that relationship. Well done!

Title: Pulling the Wool · Author: Elen Kortirion · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 95
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 18:15:41
Spoilers!
An interesting set of drabbles around blinding and deception. Classic
comedy in that first drabble - well done, Boromir, avoiding the
pitfall that is Pippin's innocent eyes.

The turn to far more somber moments makes a sharp contrast, as it
seems Boromir goes all too gently down the way to confidence in his
own ability to discern and to 'enjoy', perhaps, being blinded.

The ending fits nicely, therefore, as a sort of final judgment on his
own judgment: Boromir dies eyes wide open to the truth, desire for it
once more untainted.

Msg# 9535

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 8, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 08, 2008 - 20:53:42 Topic ID# 9535
Title: Celebrity · Author: Bodkin · Races: Men: Minas Tirith · ID: 635
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 18:28:17
Spoilers!
I love how Bodkin has managed to stitch together Aragorn's Rangering
past and his present lofty position as King of the Reunited Realms
together through a pair of chance encounters. It's true that the valet
and the maid probably have a very different view of the man they serve
than most others who live at more of a distance from him. Given
Aragorn's past, someone who, as a young lad on the road, shared a
wagon, the road, and stories with Aragorn and an injured Halbarad
would undoubtedly also have a very different view of the king of
Gondor - enough to know that you can always bait this king with curiosity!

I love the fact that Aragorn doesn't back down from the challenge, and
watching him run through all the possible ways of narrowing down when
in Middle-earth (and where) he might have met the man confronting him
was very entertaining. And while thumbing one's nose at pretension
with some well-applied elvish as cover is one way of taking a distance
from circumstance, it can be cynical; it can also be self-deceptive -
that he responds to Pelion as he does, however, shows that the Ranger
who remembers life on the road remains and is valued still in true.
There is a real difference between Aragorn and the image of the king
that so many have.

Nicely done, Bodkin!

Title: Before You Go · Author: Nancy Brooke · Races: Men: Minas Tirith
· ID: 506
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 18:47:57
Spoilers!
Elegant and pointed, yet also filled with the anxiety of a father
hoisted on his own petard. I love the way that Denethor in defeat
nevertheless, underneath the apparently genteel nonchalance of this
conversation, is basically forcing Boromir to taste his victory as a
kind of loss by refusing to give a blessing to this venture, even if
he accepts that it must go forth. Win the argument, lose the
father-councilor: win independence, taste its bitter loneliness. Love,
undoubtedly, is the motivation, but also pain and fear, and likely
also the action of a man who has made a habit of victory where
argument is concerned.

The last three lines are perfect: there's always the temptation, if
one writes Denethor in a combative mood, to try to pull a very
traditional, clear expression of affection out of Denethor in the end,
as proof of his affections; it never works well. That his affection
for Boromir should be expressed in the last twist of the 'argument',
in a final 'distancing' that doesn't push Boromir back so much as time
itself, followed by, I imagine, a quick exit before Boromir can
respond, is just terrific. Great job, Nancy!

Title: In Passing · Author: Altariel · Races: Men · ID: 104
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 19:01:26
Spoilers!
Altariel's Faramir is always splendid - wise, witty, passionate when
needed, and shrewd out of habit and heritage. He also spontaneously
alliterates when the story calls for it, as does the author herself.
The language is evocative, but also crisp - Altariel has the gift of
precision.

The idea of passing in its several meanings plays itself out in this
story: in passing - a chance encounter of great-grandfather and
great-grandson, and the history of chance encounters (the White Queen
who sweeps in from nowhere to change everything); the passing of time
in an irreversible direction, and the passing of stories and histories
in various forms; the passing on and bequeathing of wishes and dreams.
The passing of gifts unlooked for. Faramir and Beren negotiate all of
these passages and passings beautifully, in an interesting
demonstration that history, though inescapable, can give birth to
happy chances and newness just because of the relation to the past. I
loved the genealogy, and the fact that Faramir chooses to write back
to life his own father, and his grandfather, back to Turin in a long
line of wishes and hopes bequeathed to future (now present) generations.

Beautiful as always, Altariel - anyone who loves Gondor and especially
Faramir will enjoy this brief tale.

Title: Things as they were in all the days of my life · Author:
Tanaqui · Races: Men: Pre-Ring War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 393
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 19:22:44
Spoilers!
I think I love best Hurin's view of Denethor, and the steady descent
into Denethor's more mischievous youth. These cast a new light on him
and give him a wit and a liveliness that could rival Thorongil's.
Interesting to see that this sort of fire, when met with Thorongil's
perfectly [sanguine] temperament, is frustrated. That fits with a
certain kind of mischievous temperament, that likes to push people for
a reaction, and can't fathom or bear getting none.

Entertaining, witty, tragic in places - thanks, Tanaqui!

Title: A Fitting Occupation · Author: Radbooks · Races: Men: Pre-Ring
War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 601
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-08 20:47:21
A charming story, with very likeable characters and a good set-up. I
thought that Radbooks sketched a very credible picture of Bard and his
family, extrapolating from the few widely-scattered hints we have in
canon to show them as an unconvential royal family.

The story flows smoothly from drabble to drabble, making a cohesive
whole. I liked the alternating PoVs.

Title: There and Back · Author: Dana · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 89
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 21:55:50
Spoilers!
Nice paired drabble, and using a pair of friends who don't get as much
attention as they deserve. Pippin and Beregond aren't paralleled, here
- rather, Beregond's view of Pippin's hardiness on the way back from
the Black Gate contrasts interestingly with Pippin's worried
perspective on the way to the Gate. One comes out of the pair of
drabbles wondering whose view is more in tune with reality at any
given moment, but glad of both.

As always, Dana gives her characters a wonderful immediacy - the prose
is streamlined and the present tense puts you right up close to the
characters so that we can feel their emotions, yet they remain
tactfully understated.

Thanks, Dana!

Title: A Little Misunderstanding · Author: Radbooks · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Elves and Men · ID: 275
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 22:14:43
Spoilers!
Anything with Halbarad in it is usually enough to get my attention.
Writing the character at this age makes for an interesting change when
it comes to dealing with Elladan and Elrohir: the close relationship
between Aragorn and Halbarad is already in place, though of course, it
is a child's relationship, viewed through a child's eyes. And when one
little boy suddenly disappears with some Elves, Halbarad's reaction to
those same Elves is all too believable.

It's a sweet story, between grief and relief - well done!

Title: A Meeting in the Tower Hills · Author: Imhiriel · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 374
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 22:18:43
Spoilers!
There's something delicious in the idea that the first real
breakthrough in communication between the Numenoreans and the Men of
Middle-earth should be halting renditions of spooky stories that,
instead of terrifying the listeners, make them laugh this time with
wonder instead!



Title: Parting Gifts · Author: Fiondil · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Post-Ring War · ID: 452
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 22:30:49
Spoilers!
[Parting Gifts] brings elven-mortal friendships right to their most
poignant point: the death of one, while the other lives on. Gimli's
matter-of-factness and grace in the face of death, and his sense of
humor set him clearly apart from Legolas, who for once is at a loss -
Gimli's parting gift to him is clearly needed.

Balancing grief with humor, pain with joy is difficult, but Fiondil
manages the feat. The afterlife scenes are amusing, but also
reassuring for readers that friendships do not end in death. Not in
Middle-earth, at least.



Title: Seas of Fate · Author: Thundera Tiger · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Elves and Men · ID: 487
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 22:40:34
Spoilers!
Thundera Tiger has always had her eye on elven sea-longing, and it has
played and continues to play a role in her development of Legolas's
character during the Fourth Age. Usually, however, she writes him with
Gimli or Aragorn or one of the Fellowship, any of whom have good
reason to try to steer him away from the sea. Imrahil is just
disinterested enough, and just akin enough for a mortal Man, to be
able to recognize necessity when he sees it and to respond when it
asks a favor of him, and trust that Legolas can learn to [ride the
waves] of his life.

In a way, that's really the heart of the story for me: the sea-fate
analogy provides the problem, but the solution in some sense is trust
and discernment. That Legolas turns to Imrahil says a lot about his
friendships elsewhere, and that Imrahil can do what perhaps those
other friends cannot, says much of him as well, and his ability to
respond to needs both like and unlike his own.

Fans of Elves and Men, and especially of Legolas and Imrahil, should
enjoy this.

Title: Fit for a King · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 217
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 22:49:35
Spoilers!
Oh dear! Aragorn, meet Indiana Jones: [You are named after the dog?!]
Granted, it's not quite the same, but the fact that Shadowfax's
last-sired son should have decided on this particular name over all
others...?

Short, sweet, and packs a good chortle at Aragorn's expense!

Title: Old Friends · Author: Marta · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 651
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 22:54:40
Spoilers!
Whenever Gimli arrives in Valinor, it's always an event - canonically
and fanonically. Marta gives us a view that takes up that event as a
sort of rejuvenation: that sprint at the end is so very telling, and
it says more than perhaps anything else could have that the long years
of labor in Middle-earth, subject to death and the whim of time, have
had an effect on Gandalf.

Thanks, Marta!

Title: Forfeit · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 401
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 23:05:18
Spoilers!
I can't resist something that screams [Crito] this loudly. We see so
few children in Middle-earth - really, only one, and that one is
hardly in a position any child should be in. He would, of course, be
the one child whose father had to go and fall afoul of the law in such
a way as to earn the death penalty.

Beregond's position is absolutely unenviable: caught between the law
and what he believes is right, he cannot make a choice that will not
hugely impact his son. In some sense, he is between Bergil and
Faramir, and he has to choose Faramir.

Here we see him with another choice: and while on the one hand, it may
seem as though Beregond is acting to preserve his honor, there's also
a sense, thanks to that last line, that he is also thinking of Bergil
when he makes his decision. Is it the case that Bergil's opinion is
one of those rarest of things: a good opinion worth preserving, rather
than one of the many that can be set aside?

Those who like side-views into characters' heads, and who find
themselves wishing that Tolkien had written more about Beregond and
Bergil will want to give this drabble a reading.

Title: What Goes Up · Author: Dana · Times: Late Third Age: Gondor
Drabbles · ID: 683
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 23:11:29
I love the juxtaposition of lofty aspirations (literally) and high
questions about the direction of life and fate, and the feeling of
distance, with the very simple solution. Great comic timing in just
one hundred words, and even funnier when one has the image of Pippin's
double-take from the film firmly in mind.

Title: Horse Sense · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres: Humor:
Elven Lands · ID: 22
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 23:19:23
Spoilers!
An unusual 'cross-cultural' interaction: it appears that ponies at
least are within the scope of Gimli's affections and trust! Bill's
reactions to his new companions are amusing and horsey, and his
eye-roll is perfectly timed to get a laugh from the reader.

Well done!

Title: The Game of Kings · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Humor · ID: 28
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 23:25:05
Spoilers!
Branwyn's depiction of the intense chess matches at the Pony opens a
whole world - one that even Barliman Butterbur isn't sure he quite
understands.

I love the way the Ranger chess games bring all Barliman's guests
together, despite different rules for the game and different names for
the pieces. Each of these variations reveals something about the
different cultures, all of them brought together in an isolated
townstead over a game held in common.

The off-and-on again matches, taken up again just as abruptly as they
are set aside by their vagabond players, take on a nicely ironic twist
when it comes to the Rangers' name for chess: [the game of kings],
which yields the priceless last line.

Ranger fans and those who like seeing an underused character get the
observer POV should definitely give this one a read!

Title: Loudwater · Author: Adaneth · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 63
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-08 23:35:38
Imhiriel's request for unusual perspectives certainly brought some
fantastic drabbles to light! Adaneth writes the long winding journey
of a river from its own perspective, which is stretched out from the
first drift to the last bend around the Fords.

I love the mention of Bruinen's Master, and of the river's sensing the
concern of Ulmo, which [clots and clogs my current] in a lovely fit of
stuttering alliteration that perfectly fits the idea being conveyed.

Adaneth in her other fics has always shown herself to be a master at
capturing the landscape and infusing it with atmosphere: here, she
does it in just a hundred words that put us in the perspective of
Bruinen itself. Thanks for a great drabble!

Msg# 9536

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 9, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 09, 2008 - 19:36:58 Topic ID# 9536
Title: The Fire of Hope · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men:
Pre-Ring War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 625
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-09 18:32:24
Spoilers!
Lovely take on Aragorn as a young Ranger, freshly in love. You can
feel his longing for Arwen, in some ways still innocent but also with
hints of sexual passion. I very much like it that his desire for Arwen
is bound up within a greater context, that of a desire for peace and
home and family, and the expectation and acceptance that he can only
reach these goals by shouldering his duty, with perseverance and
responsibility and determination.

I like it that Aragorn isn't in the least discouraged, neither by the
daunting tasks ahead nor by the fact that Arwen ["had looked upon him
as if he were a clever child when he spoke his admiration"],
particularly as his faith somehow doesn't feel like braggadoccio, but
in faith in himself and in fate.

The descriptions of the surroundings are brief but clear, and the
contrasts between his damp, cheerless, camp, the bustling, innocuous
warmth of the Prancing Pony and its denizens in Aragorn's memories,
and his dreams for the future, play well against each other and with
each other.

Title: Lessons from the Mountain · Author: MithLuin · Races: Elves:
Incomplete · ID: 221
Reviewer: Fiondil · 2008-11-09 18:37:54
The Halls of Mandos... for some a place of rest and refreshment of the
spirit before being re-embodied, for others... for others it is a
prison from which they will never leave while Arda remains. That is
what it is for Maedhros. Yet, the story is less about his imprisonment
and more about his eventual healing as he comes to terms with his
choices during his life and learns the terrible (in the theological
sense of the word) truth about the Oath and its consequences.

With a deft hand, MithLuin creates an intriguing glimpse of a side of
Mandos one rarely sees in other tales of the elven afterlife, one that
is darker and grimmer, yet this is apropos to the entire theme of the
story. Still, the interaction of Maedhros with his brothers as well as
with Namo, Vaire and their Maiar are not devoid of humor either. The
characters are both believable and sympathetic in spite of the fact
that these are kinslayers who committed atrocities against their
fellow elves all for an Oath that should never have been uttered. Namo
and Vaire are also portrayed as three dimensional characters with
depths to them that are only hinted at, making them even more
intriguing as they interact with Maedhros and the other elves under
their care. MithLuin literally keeps you on the edge of your seat
wondering what will happen to Maedhros and the others next and I for
one am looking forward to reading the rest of the story some day.

Title: Tales of the Eldandili · Author: Alassiel · Genres: Drama:
Incomplete · ID: 502
Reviewer: Fiondil · 2008-11-09 18:57:31
Faery... we've all heard of it... read about it... dreamt it... and
how many of us would consider ourselves blessed to find our way to it?
Well, not everyone, as we learn from this wonderful tale about the
coming together after long ages of separation of the Firstborn and the
Secondborn of Iluvatar as they seek to combat the powers of darkness
that continue to plague Middle-earth even into our own times. Alassiel
has begun (and hopefully will continue) a wonderful series of
interwoven stories about humans who discover that they are Eldandili,
elf-friends, and are recruited to help bring the knowledge of the
Valar to an unsuspecting world in preparation for the end-time war
that all know is coming. For all who love tales about the interaction
between humans and their elder kin, this is a worthy series to read.

Title: Vodka · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 714
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 19:06:09
Spoilers!
"Vodka" considers not Maedhros's recovery after Thangorodrim but
Maglor's, as the principal bearer of blame for his house's failure to
attempt rescue. An insightful story that pits Maedhros's practicality
against Maglor's emotions, it connects Maedhros's captivity and his
brothers' (lack of) response with another major Noldorin event in that
age: the Noldolante. This is the first that I've seen these two events
so strongly connected--and beautifully done at that! A skillfully
written and insightful story, it is well worth the read.

Title: The Skills That Keep You Alive · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 434
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-09 20:02:00
Spoilers!
I remember getting this prompt for the Alphabet Challenge and drawing
a complete blank. "J" was one of the harder prompts, I think, but
Gwynnyd fortunately found inspiration in it.

Glorfindel's demonstration of juggling with sharp pointy objects as a
way of teaching an impatient young boy a lesson is classic, although
also mixed with some pretty gruesome ideas. Aragorn's youthful
rebellion, and his willingness to use his [helplessness] to play to
the prejudices of age and (probably) being Elvish is just right for a
child his age.

Clearly, the lesson given long ago sinks in, and we get treated to the
opening of a bit of sideshow camp acting one usually doesn't think of
in the same context as the name 'Aragorn.' Great fun, inspired use of
"Fëanor's jewels"!

Title: Lost and Found · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 23
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-09 20:10:30
Spoilers!
Branwyn takes what would be a sweetly amusing study of the
relationship of two characters and turns a few allusions that give it
a much more weighty significance in light of the larger story.

A very young Faramir and Gandalf make for great interaction: Faramir's
precociousness and Gandalf's ability to see the worth in whatever
confronts him and be grateful to them for their surprises and lessons
are both at the forefront of the story. I loved this exchange:

[The boy pointed down the aisle. "We must go through Poetry and
Ballistics to get to the lower archive."

"That sounds like a highly dangerous course, but I have great faith in
my guide," the wizard said as he hurried after him.]

Great humor, that is jarred slightly by the uneasy presence of
Denethor, another scholar but one whose interest, though unguessed by
the characters at this time, is far more sinister than a boy's, as
well the reader knows. I liked the paralleling of Denethor and Faramir
that Branwyn creates, making both of them frustrated scholars forced
to fight a war rather than do the more humane work that their talents
best suit them to.

Great fun, Gondor fans and Gandalf fans will certainly enjoy this!


Title: House of Ransom · Author: Robinka · Races: Elves: Drabbles ·
ID: 657
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 20:23:06
Oh, Turin ... I can imagine poor Beleg's frustration! As always,
Robinka gets Beleg spot-on in this drabble.

Title: The War of Wrath · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Elves: Drabbles ·
ID: 120
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 20:26:20
Spoilers!
Tanaqui, I am impressed: not only fitting such a scene into 100 words
but doing so in metered, rhymed poetry! Amidst all of this, you also
fit in some lovely imagery (["His shield a field of mirrored gold, /
His sword a stabbing point ablaze"]) in a form that feels very true to
the Vanyar.

Title: I Ain't Got Nobody · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 568
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 20:34:44
Spoilers!
This is a tremendously funny story in which Glorfindel continues
meeting ridiculous ends, only to require re-embodiment *again* by
Namo. But the premise alone is not what makes this story such a hoot
but the addition of certain charming details, such as ["Námo tossed
the tea towel under him just before his butt hit the naugahyde"] or
Namo's near asphyxiation on a strand of dental floss after being
surprised yet again by dead!Glorfindel. And the nonchalant tone
throughout the whole piece adds to its effectiveness ... as well as
serving as a nice contrast to the usual introspective and ponderous
tone of stories about Mandos and re-embodiment (many of which this
reviewer has authored). This story is one that makes me laugh again
and again, no matter how many times I read it and has definitely
earned its place as one of my favorite Silmarillion humor pieces.

Title: I Married for Love · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Genres: Poetry ·
ID: 661
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 20:40:58
Spoilers!
This is a lovely and poignant poem that looks at Indis's marriage to
Finwe from her point of view. As the title says, she married for love,
but as the poem progresses, the tone grows sadder and the reader sees
how she comes to regard that love as largely unrequited; the
repetition shows how Indis's love for husband doesn't change, even as
her understanding of his love for her does. Stanzas like, ["I married
for love / And I cried in silence and hurt and shame / When her son
lifted / His sword against a brother and the father / Left with the
one who wronged"], show a perspective not often seen in Silmfic, where
many writers tend to favor the Feanorians and Indis receives either
disregard or animosity. This poem is not only well crafted but strikes
that emotional chord that good poetry does; it is highly recommended!

Title: The Lowest Circle · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Elves: Drabbles ·
ID: 449
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 20:44:16
Spoilers!
Far from the usual physical torments of stories concerned with the
makings of Orcs, this drabble looks at the psychological shifts,
especially as they relate to darkness and light. This is a very nicely
done and insightful--and chilling!--look at one of Tolkien's more
horrific ideas.

Title: The Pillar Perished Is · Author: Imhiriel · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 356
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 20:53:49
Spoilers!
In this story, Imhiriel takes the interpretation that Feanor was
primarily motivated in his actions by his love for Finwe--not for the
Silmarils--and builds a moving story around this idea, as Feanor sails
for Middle-earth. Her use of repetition and introspection show very
well the internal anguish Feanor feels, and the sporadic use of lines
from a poem by Sir Thomas Wyatt only intensify what is already a
heart-breaking story.

Title: Pride and Despair: A Defense of Ecthelion's Son · Author: Marta
· Genres: Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 624
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-09 20:58:16
You get the Geek Medal of Obsessiveness for this one, Marta!

Marta's Denethor is to me enigmatic - I remember some early postings
on Denethor that she'd made at HA, and disagreeing with them (but then
there was Homework, and I never got a chance to respond), but I've
never tried to sit down with her work, put all the fics with Denethor
in them on my screen, and figure out how she perceives him, how she
reads what Tolkien gives us. And now, I am spared the task, because
she's given us her analysis of Denethor and that gives me a fairly
comprehensive view of how she reads him, and what she thinks are the
strengths and weaknesses of her own reading. Honesty and insight -
what more can you ask for in an essay?

Overall, I find that Marta's reading of Denethor is plausible, if not
totally convincing to me on every point. But the care and the number
of connections and extrapolations she's able to make based on a close
reading of what Tolkien gave us, is impressive and thoughtful. The
family dynamics imputed to him in the [Early Years] section, and how
they might have played into his reaction to Thorongil are excellent
and give me a reason to think it might be worth it to play with the
option of Denethor as not an only child (my default readings of him).
She goes straight into the thicket of misery that is the infamous ["Do
you wish, then, that our places had been exchanged?"] exchange and I
can see her point, especially when she pulls from the annotated drafts
Tolkien left us. I'm still not totally convinced there's not room to
play more on that ["our"] in the above line, but she makes a good case
for drawing back from the horrible notion that Denethor might wish
Faramir dead.

So in the end, this is a good, well-planned, reasonably argued essay.
I don't agree with all of it - there are portions where I'd want to
nitpick some words and see what comes out of them - but it is
insightful and can only help us to get a better idea of who Denethor
was and what our own relationships with him are. Thank you, Marta! A+!

Title: Celevon a Mallen · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 279
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:01:08
Spoilers!
Across the totality of Galadriel and Celeborn's relationship in
Middle-earth, Tanaqui gives glimpses of important moments in their
lives. More important than her wisdom in selecting these moments is
the skill with which she brings them alive and makes each drabble a
lovely, moving depiction of one of Middle-earth's greatest loves.

Title: Baker's Dozen · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 372
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:07:53
A very clever series--I am a sucker for stories that don't flinch at
looking at how life on Arda *really* was. Some of these drabbles are
funny, others thought-provoking, but well worth the read!

Title: No Mercy · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: General Drabbles ·
ID: 443
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:10:23
Spoilers!
Working with just 100 words, Tanaqui does an admirable job of bringing
this scene to life, contrasting the green fields with the fires
wrought by the Enemy. Nicely done!

Title: Love at First Sight · Author: Gwynnyd · Races: Elves: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 432
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:13:17
Spoilers!
Although a sweet ficlet (and spot-on with regards to Feanor's
fascination with the light, I think!), this tribble carries with it
darker undertones of what is yet to come to the House of Finwe. The
last line, though, keeps me firmly in this moment of joy.

Title: Miquan Melave · Author: Marta · Genres: Romance · ID: 319
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-09 21:28:09
Spoilers!
I hadn't had a chance to read this fic until MEFAs - let me
congratulate you for managing to get 'fuck' into the first line of a
story... and in true geek style, fucking with us by forcing us to get
to the actual fucking through its symbolizing of a cultural-linguistic
difference that stirs intellectual curiosity at least as much as
passion in Boromir. Bonus kudos for having the Rohirric verb signify a
connotation the English word tends to lack.

That connotative layering of [fukken] is what gets us into the
ambiguous space of a relationship that Gondor thinks should not exist
- or if it exists, it has to exist without the significance that it
proudly has in Rohan. Sex is ambiguous - is it lust or is it something
more? Boromir seems quite torn between wanting to believe Théodred and
a fascinating retelling of the Mithrellas-Imrazor story, and being
crushed by a culture and a war that reflects back to him no sign of
his own desire, which is rendered opaque on the one hand and on the
other, inadequate to the emotional need of the day, at least as far as
Boromir can [see]. What he feels, however, what he seems nevertheless
to be committed meaningfully to at the end of the day, may be quite
different, as the last line nicely suggests.

Thanks for an interesting read, Marta!

Title: Burdens · Author: Meril · Genres: Drama: General Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 219
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:33:28
Spoilers!
There is a rather famous piece of original fiction called "The Things
They Carried" that reminds me of Allie's "Burdens." Both stories are
equally successful in showing everything from the characters' pasts to
their hopes and expectations communicated via the items the characters
carry. Allie has done a great job of selecting items that show these
multiple meanings and convey the weight of deeds behind and the hopes
of the future before the Noldor; in fact, she does better with this in
this series than many stories do in more explicit narratives. Also,
Allie doesn't just show the Noldorin perspective but hints at the
Telerin point-of-view as well, giving this series an appreciable
depth. "A Necklace" will always be my favorite: It has that punch that
make ficlets really work for me as a reader. A wonderful series, this
comes most highly recommended!

Title: The Sky Is Over · Author: Robinka · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 83
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:36:27
Spoilers!
I love the concept of this drabble: showing Finrod's reaction to the
doom-filled words he has himself spoken regarding his future and what
will remain for his heirs. His surprise at the solidity of his fate is
sad to contemplate but very believable. And the last line is simply
gorgeous!

Title: Taking Roots · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Romance: Drabbles ·
ID: 367
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:38:52
Spoilers!
This drabble is so full of hope ... and it reminds me of my husband's
and my first forays in planting! Galadriel's unease feels entirely
right to me and Celeborn's reassurance is just lovely.

Title: There shall be Mirth at our Meeting · Author: Imhiriel ·
Genres: Humor: Drabbles · ID: 377
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-09 21:40:20
I am quite in agreement with Bronwen - what's not to like? And either
he's cunning or he's got a good sense of humor - definitely likable!

Good fun, Imhiriel - thanks for getting that lovely smile and laugh to
a well-deserved center stage.

Title: Old Friends · Author: Marta · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 651
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:42:08
Spoilers!
There is such warmth in this drabble: On the shores of the sea, the
sight of old friends nonetheless revitalizes one who is both old and
contemplating his purposes. The drabble is written with Marta's usual
skill and eloquent style. Well done!

Title: Wave-Singer · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 33
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:45:48
This is a simply wonderful drabble that shows what a skilled writer
can do with just a limited form. Branwyn immediately creates a sense
of character and place using just the dialogue of her narrator. The
structure of the piece allows for implied dialogue that lets her use
the drabble to its fullest form. But what works the best for me is
that final line: I love drabbles that carry a punch in their final
moments, and this one does just that incredibly well. I am glad to
have discovered this and give it my highest recommendation!

Title: Five things that never happened to Nerdanel · Author: Meril ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 389
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:49:48
Spoilers!
Allie frequently writes incredibly insightful pieces by using rather
experimental forms, and in showing five things that *did not* happen
to Nerdanel, she shows much about the character and the events that
did. Her passion for Feanor, her strength, her loyalty to what she
believed was right--her fate?--are all underscored by Allie's exercise
in what might have been ... and wasn't. Very nicely done!

Msg# 9537

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 9, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 09, 2008 - 19:40:18 Topic ID# 9537
Title: Moved to Pity · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 366
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-09 21:52:07
Spoilers!
This is a moment in The Silmarillion that is hard to put into words,
and I give Imhiriel kudos for doing such a wonderful job of it! I
furthermore enjoy how Vaire perceives that even the death of Luthien
will bring much good into the world, despite its tragedy.

Title: Sharing Good News · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Humor: Drabbles
· ID: 216
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-09 23:55:37
Spoilers!
Unexpectedly joyful; this drabble gave me as big a grin as Aragorn's.
A delightful study in contrasts - the miserable weather with Aragorn's
happiness, Aragorn's urge to disclose his news with Bilbo's concern
for secrecy. If it didn't really happen this way in the real
Middle-earth, it should have...

Title: Return of the King · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Men: General
Drabbles · ID: 355
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-09 23:59:04
Spoilers!
A wonderful snapshot of an outcast king's making a very difficult
decision - Tolkien set out so many outlines of great stories in his
Appendices; it's great to see Eldacar's life explored in this way.

Title: Old Friends · Author: Marta · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 651
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-10 00:30:45
Spoilers!
A well-framed snapshot of how the arrival of Gimli and Legolas in
Valinor stirs up things in the utmost West - I love the way
Gandalf-a.k.a.-Olorin is excited to see his old friends.

Title: Letters From Faramir · Author: agape4gondor · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Boromir or Faramir · ID: 425
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-10 00:47:17
Spoilers!
A tender ode to the brotherly love of Faramir and Boromir, through the
letters that Faramir writes his brother, both before and after he
learns of Boromir's death. Interesting commentary by Pippin as well.
An exercise in catharsis that Boromir fans should appreciate.

Msg# 9538

MEFA Reviews for Monday, November 10, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 10, 2008 - 20:08:30 Topic ID# 9538
Title: Many Branches · Author: Baranduin · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Frodo and Faramir · ID: 420
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:44:23
Spoilers!
This story has a wonderful levity to it, a perfect fulfillment of
Faramir's promise that he and Frodo would talk more after the war. I
love the author's portrayal of peace, where Faramir's
(all-too-believable!) struggle grasping the hobbit family trees is the
biggest problem either hobbit or man has for a moment. The more somber
ending, though, brought the story back home and I remembered all too
well that, for Frodo at least (and I expect for Faramir as well),
there is a real sense of "[you can never go home again]." I do think
that Fourth Age Ithilien will be perfect for Faramir to find a real
lasting peace, and this is a lovely promise of deeper peace still to come.

In short: a very enjoyable glimpse of two of my favorite characters.
Nice work, Baranduin.

Title: Tolkien's Parish: The Canonical Middle-earth · Author: Steuard
Jensen · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 91
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:44:45
I was really impressed with the methodical and nuanced way that this
essay answered that age-old question in Tolkien fanfic, what exactly
counts as a (or the) canonical source. This is indeed a difficult
issue and you approached it in a way that considered both the general
creative process and the specifics of the situation at JRRT's death,
yet you did not dictate your own view to the author. The next time
someone tries to say some canonical fact doesn't apply to them, I
think I will point them to your work as it is a fine way to structure
a person's thoughts on this issue.

Title: Seeing Stars · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 360
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:45:09
This is a delightful glance into Faramir's thoughts on this occasion;
I found them most convincing, even if (or perhaps because) he isn't
quite as control of himself. A lovely picture of peace.

Title: An Ordinary Woman · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 32
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:45:46
Spoilers!
This was an intriguing gapfiller, answering just how Beren found his
way past Melian's enchantments, but of course does a lot more than
that. I particularly liked the way Luthien was presented as not quite
as Sue-ish as a lot of fandom members complain, and how that
ordinariness was transformed into something meaningful for the talk.
Nice work, Dawn!

Title: Horse Sense · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres: Humor:
Elven Lands · ID: 22
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:46:15
A nice interlude with Bill the Pony. I love the fact that Bill is
given a choice, a will as it were, and that he has likes and dislikes
just like any other characters.

I also have to say, this ficlet shows that the authors knows her
horses! I'm no expert, by a far stretch, but this piece felt "right",
like someone who knew to watch out for a horse's kick and also the
things that would soothe them. I quite liked that.

Title: Relief · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Men: General Drabbles · ID: 446
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:47:20
Spoilers!
One of the commenters over at Tanaqui's LJ observed that Boromir is
probably the only one who's nice and cool after this scene, and I
quite agreed. This drabble is wonderfully evocative even without
reading AmandaK's longer story that it is a coda to; Tanaqui really
sets the scene in a laid back way that makes this all very fun. Highly
recommended for fans of all those hawt Gondorians.

Title: Broken Star · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 54
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:48:29
Spoilers!
I read this double drabble in the midst of the author's longer work,
"The Apprentice," when I felt I needed a break from the longer
narrative. (My brain likes to bounce around.) Read in the context of
that piece this ficlet is all the more heart-rending, though I think
that it could certainly be read alone. We know canonically that
Celebrimbor and Sauron worked to craft the three, and I can very
easily see a sense of betrayal from Celebrimbor when he learns the
truth about the Istyar's truest identity.

I find myself wondering a "what-if": What if Celebrimbor had
surrendered the identity of the rings, or had agreed to destroy the
Three if Sauron had destroyed the One, or in some way had maintained
some sense of brotherhood and trust with Sauron? Would Numenor have
fallen? Would war have followed? Perhaps --I sense that those things
were in a way unavoidable after Sauron refused to sail West at the end
of the First Age-- but I also sense that *how* they came about could
have been radically different.

In any event, Pande, nice job capturing this moment and the unique
relationship between these two characters.

Title: Eagle of the Star · Author: alex_quine · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Aragorn · ID: 152
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:49:08
Spoilers!
There is much to recommend this story, so that I hardly know where to
start. The strong description of the Haradric guard's relieving
himself, the almost messianic quality of Ecthelion, the political
machinations in the years before the Corsair raid... nicely done all
around, I enjoyed it thoroughly.

Title: A Race, To Be Like Me · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Elves:
Drabbles · ID: 375
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:50:16
A very nice spin on the Oath! Even if one disagrees with the
interpretation (because Feanor is nothing if not controversial) and
chooses to see Feanor as twisted at his core, his thoughts here
*still* make sense. I quite liked this glimpse into his thoughts.

Title: Now the Green Blade Riseth · Author: annmarwalk · Genres:
Drama: Ring War Drabbles · ID: 37
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 01:50:56
Spoilers!
I tend to be a bit weary of fics written in the first person because
it is so hard to do well; never more so than when that point of view
is the Gaffer, because it is a thin line to walk between making him
sound like a hick and gentrifying him. Annmarwalk walks that line with
grace here, and the use of the mallorn seed as the element around
which to center this drabble was inspired. It seems so like how I view
the Gaffer, that he would be at first dismissive but eventually won
over. I really enjoyed this drabble.

Title: Consolation · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men:
Steward's Family · ID: 341
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-10 02:14:49
I found this a very convincing gap-filler, which fleshes out a
possible reality of this only briefly-mentioned canon event with a
credible backdrop and descriptions. The dialogue is brisk and
realistic, and the plot arc is constructed well, weaving major and
minor plot points smoothly together.

A surprisingly comforting story considering the circumstances. The
mood of the camp and of Faramir in particular is conveyed very well,
as well as the firm bond between him and his men (and woman *g*). And
Boromir shows himself not only as a good brother, but also as a very
skilled Captain-General concerned for the morale of the people under
his command. I also liked the references to the intracicies in the
relationships between the House of Húrin and the house of Dol Amroth.

I have to say I also enjoyed this story because it showed us the
relationship between Hethlin and Faramir at such an early, still
tentative stage.

Title: Dark Dreams · Author: Avon · Races: Men: Steward's Family · ID: 282
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-10 02:14:59
The characterisations are excellent and very engaging; the emotions
conveyed are clear and moving. It was particularly easy to identify
with Imrahil as the PoV-character, to feel the two boys' emotions tug
on the heart-strings and to feel grieved and indignant like him on
their behalf at the way they shy away from people they should trust
the most.

Introspection, dialogue and descriptions are well-balanced. Faramir's
vision of the chaos of drowning Númenor is very effective - especially
because of the juxtaposition of his childish innocence and
matter-of-factness and the horrible and chilly scenes he describes. I
also like the way Avon managed to craft the tale so that it is
appropriate for Imrahil to tell the children.

Title: Scholarship · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 43
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 02:28:22
Spoilers!
I love the idea of books about sexuality - not pornography, but more
semi-scholarly looks - in Gondor's archives and how this would have
played out with our favorite characters. I always enjoyed Branwyn's
Eldahil stories, and "Scholarship" is in a similar vein, but
different, because Faramir is now the parent.This was an amusing and
realistic read, not too accommodating of our modern sensibilities but
at the same time not in the least prudish. Nice work, Raksha!

Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 02:36:11
Spoilers!
This story has a lovely melancholy feel to it, as Arwen and Maglor
meet on the road to Cerin Amroth at the end of the former's life. It
all ffelt extremely fitting not only to Arwen's place in her history,
but also to Maglor's. The ending came as a bit of a surprise but in
the end felt perfectly appropriate. A lovely piece of mood writing
that really did this moment justice.

Title: I Ain't Got Nobody · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 568
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 02:39:08
*snork* Oh, now THAT was funny! I can see Namo getting irritated at
this, and Glorfindel's excuses were very sharp. Not that I didn't
expect it coming from an author as sharp as Ignoble Bard, but still,
this story gave me a much-needed laugh.

Title: Hammer · Author: Aranel Took · Races: Dwarves: Drabbles · ID: 468
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 02:43:35
Spoilers!
Oh, this was cute! As a lover of puns and limericks, obviously the
word play was fun, but I loved even more the way that the dwarves were
portrayed. Particularly the original character of Gloin's lady-love;
she has a quality about her that is more forward than one would expect
of a Gondorian or elf or even a hobbit, yet there is still a
playfulness to her, a coyness that acknowledges the risque-ness of
their meeting without making it an entirely shameful thing. A very
enjoyable moment, and very dwarven through and through.

Oh, and as a P.S. - gotta love her beard. *g* That was pure gold.

Title: For What I Wait · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 125
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 02:48:37
Spoilers!
Reading this story, I can feel Feanor's anguish at the full depth of
what he has done. He is great - perhaps great and terrible, but great
nonetheless - and I cannot imagine that he would not feel the full
weight of his "sins" once his madness had passed. In an odd way this
isn't unlike my conception of hell (exposure without end to the full
weight of our actions, without hope of redemption), and that makes the
angst all the more potent.

I think for an artist like Feanor, to have to watch his artist-son
lose the ability to sing would be exquisite torture; all the moreso
when you consider that it was his refusal to give up the end of his
art (his silmarils) that led to Maglor's loss of the ability to
produce his art. This is angst at its highest, and any fan of the
Feanorians won't want to miss it.

Title: Fine Art for Future Generations · Author: stefaniab · Genres:
Humor: Gondor · ID: 561
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 02:52:25
Spoilers!
*giggles* Of _course_ young boys would like this painting, though I'm
not quite sure who else would. Arwen is truly wise here. And nice job,
stefaniab, on looking at this "art" within Middle-earth's context.

Title: The Ghost in the Garden · Author: Dawn Felagund · Races: Elves
· ID: 272
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 02:55:06
Spoilers!
This is really a fabulous story, enjoyable on many levels. One thing
that really makes it shine is its characterization, especially of
Celeborn. He is passionate in his way, certainly sensual (and talk
about luscious writing....), but he is also practical and
matter-of-fact. And through him Dawn has developed a really nice look
at Sindarin society. I especially liked the way that the Sindarin
elves were described as having a court society, and that Celeborn was
kept in the proper place someone as young as he would be expected to
fill. He might be the king's kinsman, but he is not the star of
Doriath. It all felt very natural.

That feeling of things progressing naturally also extends to the
story's sensuality. Celeborn and Galadriel are engaged, not yet
married, and that's important. In this story Dawn has Thingol forbid
the two characters to marry for several years, and so Celeborn's and
Galadriel's sexuality is informed by obedience to their king. All of
which creates a lovely sense of love not defined by eroticism that is
not only very enjoyable to a reader, but also allows her to make some
very interesting statements about the characters. It's not UST
precisely, but something along those lines, and Dawn uses it very
affectively.

Without spoiling the ending, there is a lovely parallel between the
two parts of the story, one focusing on physical intimacy and the
other on emotional intimacy. Both Celeborn and Galadriel are very well
presented, as young elves with their flaws and strengths and
struggles. I highly recommend it.

Title: Possessing the greatest powers · Author: Tanaqui · Times:
Multi-Age: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 387
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 03:12:58
Spoilers!
These are all lovely, and anyone who likes elf-centric drabbles would
most certainly enjoy them; of the last three I think I enjoyed
Galadriel's the most because there is such a depth of meaning in how
Tanaqui uses the idea of Iluvatar's music being in the water; yet it
was certainly hard to choose just one, and I liked all of them in
their own separate way.

Standing in stark contrast is the first drabble, about Celebrimbor's
forging of the three rings. This one was wonderfully exhilarating with
the adrenaline of discovery, and the cost of said invention. I was
reminded of the Tolkien letter in the introduction to my Silmarillion
that talks about creation and sub-creation versus the corrupting
craftsmanship of Melkor. It seemed a fitting final beat of the curse
of the Noldor, and I think that Tolkien himself would have approved
(of the theme, not necessarily of the action).

Very nicely done, all of them.

Title: Wizards' Pupils · Author: Altariel · Races: Men: Minas Tirith ·
ID: 108
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 03:20:33
Spoilers!
We know from the Lord of the Rings appendices that in the days of
Denethor Gandalf was less welcome in Minas Tirith than was Saruman;
and we also know that Faramir was described as the wizard's pupil -
specifically, Gandalf's pupil. All of this raises the interesting
question of what Faramir would have thought of Saruman, and how he
would have reacted to such a character, had they met in the years
before the war.

I did quibble a little over whether Denethohr would be quite as
accepting of obviously "dark arts" (to borrow a Harry Potter term)
than he is portrayed here, so long before the war. I'm still not sure;
yet that isn't the crucial point. What *is* crucial --and perfectly
clear to my mind-- is that Faramir would whole-heartedly reject such
techniques. We know from his statement to Frodo that he would not
[ensnare an orc with a lie], that he isn't an ends-justify-the-means
kind of guy. Such conviction doesn't just pop up in extreme
situations, and it was nice to see a commitment to that principle in
his young life as well. I can also see how this might seem naive to
his father, providing a very nice explanation for some of their later
dynamic.

This question of how far we may go to combat evil threatening our
survival is an oh-so-pertinent one for our own times as well as
seeming native to Middle-earth. (The current debate in the U.S. over
"enhanced interrogation techniques" comes to mind, though it need not
be restricted to that issue or country...) It's always nice to see a
fanfic author use Tolkien's world as a springboard into contemporary
or universal issues because it is often easier to consider such issues
in a fantasy environment; and Altariel does it with her usual aplomb.
A must-read for anyone who likes thought-provoking fanfic, especially
of the Faramir-centric variety.

Title: The Last Words · Author: Rhapsody · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 409
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 03:27:33
There seems to be a theme in Tolkien that the created things derived
its power from the creator; the idea that the silmaril could be
something truly independent of Feanor is a novel one, at least so far
as I've read. I found this to be a most probing examination of
Nerdanel's relationship with Feanor, and will definitely have me
thinking for a bit.

Title: Five Hair Care Tips for Rohirrim · Author: EdorasLass · Genres:
Humor · ID: 71
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 03:31:42
Spoilers!
There is something about this "five things" list that makes me laugh
like a COMPLETE lune, every time I read it. It simply shouldn't be
this hilarious, but just as simply, it *is*.

Anyone who has seen "The Two Towers" knows that Rohirric hairstyles
are, ah, somewhat lacking. Never mind that Tolkien tells us that
["their hair, flaxen-pale, flowed under their light helms, and
streamed in long braids behind them"]; if that's not a prescription
for sexy and well-groomed hair I don't know what is. Here EdorasLass
gives some much-needed grooming tip, filled with asides that feel like
inside jokes but I think will translate well to a larger audience.

Quite aside from answering the movieverse issue, we get EdorasLass's
typical crack!ish sense of humor in places you'd never expect to find
it. Honestly, sparkly-clips? With decapitated orcs, Dunlendings, and
wargs mixed in with bunny rabbits and mead steins? That should just be
off-the-wall, but like so much in this piece, it simply works. The
concept of Lothiriel and Eowyn "fixing" Eomer's hair as was suggested
in the comments will have me smiling for a while yet.

What totally amazes me about this piece, after so many reads, is your
ability to steer off-course and yet end up back on target. A good
example of this is the [" He's not gettin' all that action just on
account of his charming smile, you know."] passage. You blaze a trail
through some delightfully slashy humor (at least in my mind, because
you're not at all explicit and leave it all to your readers' dirty
little minds), but then end up exactly where you need to be going.
It's like watching the Colbert Report or something, srsly.

I think I'm going to go read it again. If anyone is in need of a good
laugh, I highly recommend it.

Title: The Dooming of Small Hands · Author: Thundera Tiger · Times:
Late Third Age · ID: 639
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 03:36:16
Spoilers!
As with so many of Thundera Tiger's stories, I think what makes "The
Dooming of Small Hands" is the light but simultaneously deep approach
she brings to her characterizations. This story features a
conversation between Gandalf and Elrond in the hours before Frodo
wakes up in Rivendell, and she brings this unique approach to both of
these characters. Gandalf especially is refreshingly conflicted and
imperfect, in a way that is all too fitting given how some of his
choices turn out in Lord of the Rings, but isn't something I see that
often in fanfic. He really knows all the races of Middle-earth, and
one can see him as the personification of the good steward.

Elrond, too, shines here. In a way he is the wise old elf, both great
and weary, yet one can see the influences of his particular history. I
was particularly moved by his foresight that Frodo would not return.
His experience with Celebrian and to a lesser extent Elrohir and
Elladan would have shown him the true price of the walking wounded,
and it speaks highly of him that he'd want to spare someone he'd only
known briefly that same torment.

"Dooming" also makes sense of something that had always puzzled me: I
never could buy someone as wise as Elrond being swayed by a single
conversation (no matter how long) that the Ring ought to be destroyed.
This story fills that gap nicely, and also provides a very natural
moment that lets both characters shine. Nice work!

Title: Eagle of the Star · Author: Neoinean · Genres: Adventure:
Incomplete · ID: 327
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 03:41:10
Spoilers!
A nicely plausible--and original--look at why Aragorn might have
chosen as he did to go south to become Thorongil. That he might have
taken comments by his foster father amiss and so was convinced to go
south, and that his first true adventure was to assist in the birth of
a child presented sideways is an unusual but likely means of
introducing him to the Rohirrim.

Very interesting look at a young and slightly naive Aragorn filled
with good characterizations.

Msg# 9539

MEFA Reviews for Monday, November 10, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 10, 2008 - 20:09:52 Topic ID# 9539
Title: Look Not With Longing · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Fourth Age
and Beyond · ID: 479
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 03:41:45
Spoilers!
I can see Faramir and others like him having these thoughts all too
easily. It's very true that we often do not fathom the full cost of
our dreams and wishes until it's too late, and this is just as true of
Faramir's dream of Ithilien as a garden, as it was of Denethor's for
["things as they were in all the days of my life"]. Dwimordene does a
very nice job of writing this character with depth and subtlety, a
real treat for all Faramir fans - I recommend it.

Title: Writer's Bloke · Author: stefaniab · Genres: Humor: Drabbles ·
ID: 431
Reviewer: Marta · 2008-11-10 03:49:55
*giggles* Ai, this was cute. Every writer has faced similar moments in
their mind, and stefaniab brings this writer's block to life. Very
deftly told, it made me smile.

Title: The Houseless · Author: Jael · Genres: Horror · ID: 178
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-10 10:05:18
A very atmospheric and wonderfully written one shot, perfectly set in
the universe of Middle Earth, touching and mysterious. I especially
like the characterization of Legolas. Well done!

Title: Moon of the Sea · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Second and
Early Third Age · ID: 213
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-10 10:41:25
Ah, Elendil's wife gets a voice of her own, thanks to Pandemonium!

It is always nice to see a story about an under-represented or even
neglected character, and this set of drabbles and vignettes present a
series of glimpses at the life of Isildur's and Anarion's mother,
spanning from her childhood. And this is an brilliant set, in which in
relatively short chapters Pandemonium introduces the readers to a
fully developed, strong and compelling character -- Isilme is no
longer is an unnamed woman that, of course, exists in canon, but there
is little to nothing told about her. Pandemonium's heroine comes to
life in a way that makes me think, "Oh yes! Perfect. This is truly the
queen of Numenor. This is Elendil's wife!"

This set also is a excellently drawn combination of Tolkien's universe
and European mythology, with a touch of mystery and magic. The
language is elegant and beautiful, the imagery -- rich and faboulous.
This is a story that invites the readers to embark upon a fascinating
voyage. Splendidly written, Pandemonium! Thank you!

Title: As the Tide by the Moon · Author: EdorasLass · Genres:
Alternate Universe · ID: 9
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 10:45:19
Spoilers!
Last year it was particularly Dwimordene's writing that moved me; this
year I find it is that of Edoraslass. I rarely read extensively on the
boards where these post, after all, although I post on at least one
where both do. Nor do I regularly read stories of Gondor and Rohan,
although I write stories of Gondor myself.

But this slightly AU story in which Theodred survives and has fathered
a child is superbly done, from the aching longing of the chambermaid
who was smitten by Grima Wormtongue--at least until she meets him and
comes to know him better--to her growth as a mother and one who has
agreed to the solution offered her. Characterizations are superbly
done, as are the intrigues of those who must deal with Grima within
Meduseld, not to mention his own machinations both toward those among
whom he lives and toward his fallen master.

Definitely a story to read and ponder, and so true to the cultures
amongst whom Eledher moves. Highly recommended.

Title: Chance Encounter · Author: przed · Races: Men: Steward's Family
· ID: 5
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 10:56:08
An interesting encounter between the Steward's son and the Steward's
rival. Nicely written.

Title: Possessing the greatest powers · Author: Tanaqui · Times:
Multi-Age: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 387
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 11:03:05
Spoilers!
As always, Tanaqui's drabbles manage to capture complex themes so
beautifully, particularly here as we look on the Three Rings of the
Elves and how their bearers found themselves relieved when their power
failed.

The scant words of these four drabbles are still powerful and
evocative, and we feel the shock as each bearer feels the demise of
the One, and the loss of what had added to their own power for so very
long.

Marvelous.

Title: The Night's Eye · Author: Vana Tuivana · Races: Men · ID: 343
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 11:12:27
Spoilers!
The tale of why those women of hidden Dunedain warriors lit the
Night's Eye candle and its effects within the home of Halbarad,
kinsman to Aragorn, is delicately and beautifully told. Imagery is
beautiful, and the end achingly poignant. A lovely tale.

Title: Wizards' Pupils · Author: Altariel · Races: Men: Minas Tirith ·
ID: 108
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-10 16:34:33
Spoilers!
This is an interesting story with many lovely details - very rich and
raises many questions. A gift that keeps on giving, so to speak. I
liked the multi-generational element, and that while Saruman's
strength is in his voice, Gandalf's is in silence. It is also quite a
provocative idea that in encouraging Denethor's use of the Palantir,
Saruman might have been furthering Sauron's ultimate plan even so
early. This story leaves the reader with a lot to think about, and I
can imagine no higher compliment.

Title: Name Calling: Group Identity and the Other among First Age
Elves · Author: Angelica · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 322
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 16:51:17
Prejudice is alive and well among the Elves, as is evidenced by the
names each uses for his own clan compared to those used for others.

An instructive discussion, if a bit dry. It does take what Tolkien
himself spread out throughout his works and personal notes and brings
it into a relatively brief essay that can be useful for purposes of
reference.

Title: Sun · Author: Claudia · Races: Cross-Cultural: Frodo and
Faramir · ID: 223
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-10 16:59:45
Spoilers!
I think this story comes as close as possible to imagining what it
would be like to see small, ordinary things as momentous for those of
us who have not experienced catastrophic loss.

Title: Boromir and Teddy · Author: Ithil-valon · Genres: Drama: Final
Partings · ID: 113
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 17:02:34
A most gentle memorial for the pair of warriors who had represented
the future leadership of Gondor and Rohan, neither of whom came to the
seat intended for him and who died at much the same time. We do not
know for certain that Theodred and Boromir were as close as many
prefer to think, much less that they were indeed shield-brothers; but
they would undoubtedly have known one and respected one another.

But the image of Faramir and Eomer kneeling together by Theodred's
burial mound, remembering the two of them together, is satisfying.

Nice use of imagery to convey mood.

Title: Arvedui v. Pelendur · Author: Roh Wyn · Genres: Non-Fiction ·
ID: 277
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 17:27:54
Spoilers!
A fascinating examination of the leading factors used by Pelendur to
reject the claim of Arvedui for the throne of Gondor while accepting
that of Earnil in his stead following the death of Ondoher and his two
sons. It manages to invalidate Arvedui's claim pretty successfully,
while as a result of the fact Earnil and Earnur's dynasty was so
limited in scope it indicates precisely how Faramir is nevertheless
able to legitimize Aragorn's own claim to the Winged Crown (while
there is no question as to his legal right to the Sceptre of Arnor).
Although it continues to be likely that had Pelendur not refused
Arvedui and Firiel's claim (I like to think they would have sought to
be co-rulers, myself) it would have avoided a good deal of trouble in
the long run as well as avoiding a millenium of regency by the
Stewards in Gondor and probably have aided Arnor to survive by
offering the northern realm martial assistance in a far more timely
manner. And I love the comment that obviously Arvedui is no lawyer, or
perhaps he might have worded his claim far differently.

This is a subject that has been of interest to me in my own writing,
and it is nice to have spelled out as succinctly as Roh-wyn has
managed to do. Definitely something to think about! Thank you, my
dear, for this summary, as I have definitely bookmarked it for future
reference.

Title: Seeing Stars · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 360
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-10 17:37:23
Spoilers!
This is a lovely story, dealt out with Raksha's usual equanimity -
sweet, but not overy so; humourous, but not teasing; joyful, and
thoughtful. Like Faramir, the writer here does a good balancing act,
never letting the details overwhelm, rush or crawl. It's a small story
with a large scope, catching a fleeting moment resonating with past
and future. Well done.

Title: Jewels of Light · Author: Larner · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 394
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-10 17:41:11
This is a charming vision, if a bit overworked. I found the last line
is a great payoff, however.

Title: Promise and Sorrow · Author: Virtuella · Times: Late Third Age
· ID: 607
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-10 18:00:15
Each one of these pieces has so much to it it seems almost unfair to
have to review them all together. But they are of a piece, telling the
same story again and again from disparate angles. They are wonderful
and rich, heart breaking and heart-mending. Quite a feat.

Title: Free To Live · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races: Elves: Mirkwood
Elves · ID: 701
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 18:14:08
Spoilers!
The challenge to illustrate one of the lines from Ecclesiastes'
reminder that to all things there is a purpose has been perfectly
realized by Nieriel Raina in this story. Thranduil at first resented
Galadriel's actions in leveling the fortress of Dol Guldur; but then
realizes it doesn't matter as he finally accepts that this great evil,
which has dominated life in the forest realm he's ruled for the past
how many centuries, has finally been brought down and it's up to him
to lead the healing and rebuilding.

Very emotionally satisfying as well as a marvelous choice of images.

Title: The Ghost in the Garden · Author: Dawn Felagund · Races: Elves
· ID: 272
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 18:39:14
Spoilers!
A most interesting foreshadowing of the eventual separation between
Galadriel and Celeborn, as he, the Sinda, chose to remain within
Middle Earth when she accepted her ability to return to the land of
her birth, her task set here finally met. Is that separation similar
to that chosen by the ghost she met in the garden who for a moment
appeared to have taken her for the love he'd lost to Morgoth's
enslavement, perhaps ruined into becoming an orc?

The descriptions are vivid, and Galadriel's discomfort palpable.

Very compelling story.

Title: An Ordinary Woman · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 32
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-10 19:27:46
Spoilers!
What a delightful look at a Luthien who was nowhere as radiant as
legend insists and how Finrod might have somehow aided both his
stubborn female cousin as well as a lost human youth to meet.

A lovely example of how the romantic ideal of Luthien might have
exceeded reality and have led in the end to the tragedy of the Silmarils.

Title: Promise and Sorrow · Author: Virtuella · Times: Late Third Age
· ID: 607
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-10 19:28:10
Spoilers!
This is a stunningly poignant series of vignettes and I wish that they
were able to be judged seperately as they each deserve recognition.

The first one is wonderfully disjointed, the mother focussing on the
trivial subject of shoes rather than the sad reality of her son's
injuries, something that she is unable to deal with. I thought that
her constant thoughts back to when her son was six years old were
particularly poignant; a time when he was whole and happy and didn't
know about war, and she herself was full of hope for her family's
future. Now she isn't so sure, despite her relief that her son is home
at least.

Another that really touched me was the woman in her sister's wedding
party, trying to hold onto the possibility of hope for her own
happiness, yet doubting it, and though she wants her sister to be
happy, jealous nonetheless and feeling guilty about it. I thought the
complexity of her emotions were very well described and the happy
ending was just perfect. It highlighted that while so many personal
outcomes from the war were less than perfect, for some things did work
out, and hope is not misplaced. Sort of sums up one of the main themes
of Lord of The Rings for me.

The story about the childhood lovers was another that really touched
me and the twist at the end was a powerful and unexpected surprise.
Really brings home the point that it isn't only soldiers that perish
during war, and it's not just women and children that are left
grieving for their menfolk.

I also liked the vignette from the healer's perspective and the
mention of the gift sent by the soldier of Rohan's mother, the
character featured in the first vignette. I have read the story where
this gift is created and love that one as well. I'd love to see
follow-up stories about all of these characters!

To sum it up, I thought that all of the vignettes making up this story
were very well done, including the ones that I haven't singled out
here. I thought that all of the characterisations were excellent and
all were original and written as individuals.

Sad and poignant, yes, but nicely balanced with hope for the future. A
stunning tale and well worth reading!

Title: Leaving Home · Author: annmarwalk · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 39
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-10 19:52:32
Spoilers!
This is a very sweet tale and I really enjoyed it. The author has
captured Merry and Pippin teasing but loving relationship, seen
through Elboron's eyes, very well. I particularly liked Faramir's
relationship with Elboron, the way he taught him through stories
especially.

That trip must have been a fantastic adventure for a six-year-old!

Title: Last Stroke · Author: Elena Tiriel · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Drabbles · ID: 465
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-10 20:18:28
Chilling AU drabble and the imagery is powerful. I liked this
portrayal of Cirdan, grim and mighty, noble and commanding; even
though this is most probably the final ending and a terrible loss of
everything good that might remain in Middle-earth, he still stands
tall and ready to do what must be done.

Title: The Journey · Author: foxrafer (csevans8) · Times: Late Third
Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 604
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-10 20:29:16
I think that Pippin's feelings about how big and frightening the world
outside the Shire truly is, is just exactly how a hobbit would feel.
Most authors don't manage to capture that sense of just how out of
place the hobbits must have felt when they first left the safety of
home but foxrafer certainly does.

Pippin's characterisation is very realistically written in this, both
as an individual and as a hobbit in general, and I enjoyed this
drabble very much.

Title: Old Man Willow · Author: Nath · Races: Other Beings · ID: 314
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-10 20:35:16
Spoilers!
Wonderfully creepy and written in a matter-of-fact way that suits the
character perfectly. Old Man Willow is evil and malicious, but at the
same time bereft of real emotion and Nath captures that very well.

A very original 'what if'!

Title: ...and the sound of a battered heart, beating · Author:
Lindelea · Genres: Drama: Ring War Drabbles · ID: 690
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-10 22:21:28
Spoilers!
In this drabble, Lindelea has cleverly woven a beautiful portrait of
the tensions and issues facing the inhabitants of the Shire following
the War of the Ring, as well as an insight into the grace of spirit
showed by Frodo's during the Scouring. The familiarity of the
relationship between Estella and Frodo and her puzzled questioning are
beautifully written, and the final sentiment provides a satisfying
response to both Estella and the reader. This is an inspirational and
resonant work – very well done!

Msg# 9540

MEFA Reviews for Tuesday, November 11, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 11, 2008 - 22:00:44 Topic ID# 9540
Title: Some Seasons · Author: sophinisba solis · Races: Hobbits:
Post-Ring War · ID: 199
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-10 22:21:29
I love this brief series of vignettes, set in post-Quest Bag End,
where Frodo, Sam and Rose are all set on taking good care of one
another. Each little vignette is connected to the others by the very
hobbity element of food and drink. It's lovely to not only see Rose
and Sam taking care of Frodo, but to see Frodo taking care of them as
well. This is a heartfelt and touching piece, and made me feel warm
all over.

Title: The Portrait · Author: agape4gondor · Races: Men: Pre-Ring War
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 288
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-10 22:21:33
Spoilers!
In this drabble, Agape has created a crisply characterised snapshot of
the Steward's sons, especially Boromir, whose restless energy,
impatience, wit and kindliness shine through. A charming insight into
one of the more functional moments of a somewhat dysfunctional family.
(And my own reaction – perhaps I'm mistaken! - is that that the
titular picture, a gift for their father, is of their mother Finduilas.)


Title: Fit for a King · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 217
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-10 22:21:37
Spoilers!
I love the quiet intimacy of friendship that Imhiriel creates here
between her three protagonists -- Aragorn, Eomer and Faramir -- which
makes Eomer's teasing in the punchline to the drabble seem very
credible. An amusing and well-drawn moment. Bravo!


Title: Pulling the Wool · Author: Elen Kortirion · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 95
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-10 22:21:41
Spoilers!
In these three linked drabbles, Elen Kortirion provides different
interpretations of the titular phrase in a clever interplay that moves
from light-hearted jest to tragic ending. Each individual drabble is
complete and effective in itself, but the final line is made all the
more powerful by what has gone before. Well done!


Title: Sour Milk · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 521
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-10 22:21:45
Spoilers!
This is an absolutely hilarious ficlet clearly written by a true
cat-lover (as I know the author to be). I love the way Linda Hoyland
has extrapolated from the dreadful picture that was the prompt (what
was the artist thinking?!?) to create a laugh-out-loud story. I
especially like the form of action taken by the cats and Aragorn's
initial response, as well as the cameo role given to one of the
author's wise cats. Simply delightful!


Title: Forfeit · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 401
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-10 22:21:49
Spoilers!
I love the nobility with which Branwyn invests Beregond in this
drabble, evidenced not just in the big events of the drabble but
through small gestures such as the care for his gear which she
describes. Beregond's response to the opportunity to escape justice is
convincingly of a piece with his actions in deserting his post to save
Faramir: a man who takes the right course, and accepts the
consequences unflinchingly. And his love for his son and desire to not
shame him further shines through. I note this was penned for a
[Characters You Have Never Written] challenge, and I hope this will
not be the last time Branwyn writes about Beregond. Bravo!


Title: The Roses of Imloth Melui · Author: Aervir · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 435
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-10 22:21:56
Spoilers!
Aervir has cleverly woven the motif of roses through each of the
drabbles in this series of ten. The trick is pulled off admirably,
never feeling forced in any of the individual drabbles as Aervir uses
these snapshots to tell the long and eventful life of Ioreth. Very
nicely done -- bravo!


Title: Epiphany · Author: Larner · Races: Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 293
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-10 22:21:59
Spoilers!
I love the glimpse that Larner has given us here of the great changes
wrought by the Ring War, as seen by Elladan and Elrohir. The sense of
the familiar become unfamiliar, and of the sudden awareness of the
passing of time for those who are immortal is tangibly expressed. Very
nice work!


Title: Dead Steward's Gift · Author: stefaniab · Genres: Mystery · ID: 572
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-10 22:22:55
This AU is an intriguing blend of movie-verse and book-verse,
something that often does not turn out well. However, in this case,
the author has created a fascinating and suspenseful mystery and
explains some of the things that were neglected in the screenplay,
such as Denethor's use of the palantir.

I really like Faramir in this--I think he would make a fine detective,
the way he digs into this particular mystery! And the ending was very
logical.

And I got a chuckle out of the Epilogue in Cirri's POV!

Title: The Flute · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring War ·
ID: 150
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-10 22:23:42
Spoilers!
This is a beautiful little story, in which a special flute enables
Pippin to communicate with Frodo, far across the Sundering Sea. The
whole story has a sweetness to it, which is only enhanced if the
reader listens to it on the link provided by the author. That is the
way I first encountered this story, and the dreamlike soft voice of
Golden, in her gently accented words really will transport the
listener into a special place.

Title: The Elanor Bloom · Author: Claudia · Genres: Drama: Incomplete
· ID: 194
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-10 22:25:50
I really enjoy cross-cultural "getting acquainted" stories. This one,
detailing the journey from Bree to Rivendell, as the hobbits get
acquainted with the mysterious Strider, is very good indeed. I love
the portrayal of Strider's instant feelings of loyalty to Frodo, and
the show of determination and devotion from Frodo's friends. Although
there are only two chapters, I do hope that Claudia will update this
again. It's a very promising beginning.

Title: Where Shadows Lay No More · Author: Cathleen · Times: Fourth
Age and Beyond · ID: 358
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-10 22:26:26
Spoilers!
I love stories in which Boromir watches over his friends from beyond
the circles of Arda. This story is very touching, as the Steward's son
is a ghostly witness to Aragorn's coronation. I love the fact that
each member of the Fellowship is aware to one extent or another of his
presence, and most especially, I love the reactions of Merry and Pippin.

Cathleen did a very good job with this story.

Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-10 22:27:05
I love the idea that storms would announce the various stages of this
particular prophecy's fulfillment--especially the birth of Eowyn!
Beautifully evocative language, and a skillful use of atmosphere!

Title: Not Quite Any Other Day · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 631
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-10 22:28:39
It's always fun to read a story that takes me back to those earlier
names on the Family Trees of Appendix C. Pearl's description of
Esmeralda's pensiveness at her brother's marriage and her subsequent
re-introduction to Saradoc Brandybuck, heir to the Master of Buckland,
is delightful. I love the easy and fond banter of brother and sister,
and her own taunting flirtation with Saradoc. A delightful look at the
beginning of the courtship of Merry's parents.

Title: Saruman of Many Colours · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 439
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-10 22:41:09
Seven well-crafted drabbles explore the evolution of Saruman from the
Istari who thought too highly of himself to the traitor who created
his own doom because of his hubris. A chilling examination of a true
waste of potential.

Title: I Ain't Got Nobody · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 568
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-11 01:54:04
Spoilers!
Elves are so often either exaggeratedly joyous or else exceptionally
solemn. In fanfic, this translates into pranksterism or moroseness
often enough. Ignoble Bard manages to take on that most serious of
matters, death (and reincarnation), and explode all expectations.
Glorfindel could be the victim of pranksters, but it's not as if he's
trying to be funny (or to get himself killed - it just happens).
Namo's magic reincarnation chamber has me imagining Woody Allen's
[Sleeper] and a very warped Dr. McCoy for some reason - it's a
combination I never thought I'd have to imagine, but it works
surprisingly well for this story.

I love Namo's impeccable reasoning against sending Glorfindel back out
to the perils of an ordinary (or extraordinary) day in Middle-earth
(or Valinor) using Glorfindel's own amazing list of ways to
accidentally die. Rationalization achieves a new high, here.

The soul-up-the-nose solution to the problem that death separates a
perfectly beautiful body from a fëa that needs it was wonderfully
irreverent. If anyone needs a good laugh, this story should do the trick!

Title: Bad Idea · Author: StarLight9 · Genres: Humor: Elven Lands ·
ID: 610
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-11 02:16:23
Spoilers!
[Perhaps Elves and Dwarves were not so different after all.] Along
with [bad idea], Starlight9's story twists and turns but always
returns to the refrain: maybe those Elves and Dwarves are far too
similar for their own good!

Legolas's sincere belief that Thranduil and Glóin can not only
reconcile but even become friends has everyone, including one prince,
a king, and an entire settlement of Elves, running scared and looking
for somewhere, anywhere to hide until Armageddon passes over. Gimli,
of course, gets a front row seat, despite his misgivings and the
reader spends much of the time cringing and laughing at what he has to
put up with.

Thranduil and Glóin end up paralleling each other perfectly - alike,
indeed, and as sons, so fathers. Quite amusing!

Title: Rivendell International Airport · Author: Primsong · Genres:
Humor: Elven Lands · ID: 345
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-11 02:38:38
Spoilers!
Dear Lord, I think I've been through Rivendell International - it
sounds like O'Hare!

Other readers have commented on it, but the fact that Primsong plays
this one straight, just inserts the Fellowship into an airport without
having anyone bat an eye, and let airport regulations take their
course, makes for grand entertainment. Everything from the loudspeaker
announcements ([This is a nonsmoking terminal. If smoking is an
integral part of your being, please follow the signs to the smoking
area to await your flight] and the all too appropriate [Flight # 3019
with service to Gondor has been delayed due to inclement weather]) to
adventures with metal-detectors, and the joys of arguing what
constitutes one item of checked baggage contributes to the harried
hilarity of the Fellowship having to make it through check-in.

The background flights and other little refer-backs to Middle-earth,
several of them transformed into commercialized slogans, are
priceless. [Lembas-on-a-stick] is particularly memorable.

All in all, a thoroughly enjoyable juxtaposition of modern day and
Middle-earth that gives a new meaning to the tale of the "epic" flight
home. If you need a laugh, give this a read.



Title: Autumn · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 489
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-11 06:46:43
Spoilers!
Reading this drabble reminded me of how the cowboys and Indians in the
westerns of my youth reacted to the encroaching niceties of
civilization on their former way of life. This precisely written
drabble depicts a swift moment during which Aragorn contemplates how
his life has changed since becoming king and husband. Which life is
better? Linda lets the reader decide.

Title: Stabat Mater · Author: iorhael · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 666
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-11 09:30:58
A very moving drabble. I'm sure Primula wound indeed weep if was able
to see how her son suffered.

Title: Shall We Dance? · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men:
Steward's Family · ID: 93
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-11 14:36:52
Nuanced and insightful characterisations. I like how the inner
reflections of the characters is manifested outwardly (or no)t; how
they are mirrored in little details that often can only be seen by
shrewd observers; to see the contrast between inner/private individual
and public persona. The handling of the cast is done very well,
particularly the transitions between PoV-characters, or generally the
way the focus keeps shifting without making the plot arc lose cohesion.

Isabeau managed to imbue her self-described "fluffy" story with enough
depth that I'm not certain the label actually implies: She skilfully
explored some thought-provoking issues juxtaposed against the maybe
frivolous backdrop of a ball and therefore all the more effective.

As ever, it is lovely to see the close relationship between Imrahil
and his family (including his nephews); Lothíriel was not only lovely
but also insightful, compassionate and wise. But what I loved best was
the take on Denethor, which showed him as stern, yes, and stubborn,
but also as very human, strangely vulnerable in his loneliness; and it
was very moving how Lothíriel managed to make him reach out to her
almost against his will.

Title: Old Man Willow · Author: Nath · Races: Other Beings · ID: 314
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-11 14:55:07
A very unusual but strangely compelling premise. Very good handling of
PoV - the motive of the "protagonist" is conveyed clearly.
Particularly effective was the balance between a certain greed or
obsession with conquering everything, and the utter matter-of-factness
and lack of emotion of the narrative voice.

It was creepy to think about just how reasonable Old Man Willow's
strategies and plans were, and to contemplate the question who might
be more powerful, he as represention of nature, or Sauron, as
representation of something beyond the natural order of things.

The story also is a very good represention of the ambiguity of the
"nature of nature" (pun only half-intended), especially the nature of
forests in Tolkien's work - they can be good or bad or neutral, imbued
with self-awareness or not, actively intervening in the story or only
exude a certain presence etc.

Title: Black Memory · Author: mrkinch · Races: Villains: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 603
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-11 15:11:15
Fascinating premise, executed very well, with excellent use of
language and grammar and density of prose. The build-up to the
unexpected climax of the drabble is very effective.

The point of the drabble is compelling and very insightful. The very
effect of negating all the points enumerated before the last line
naturally evoke them all the stronger, of course, and yet, they serve
equally well as intended in juxtaposing and therefore exposing the
final contrast.

The drabble has a driving rhythm (particularly in the repetition of
["black as..."]) that sucks in the readers immediately, together with
the curiosity in wondering what could be more memorable (and
potentially horrific) than the things Lúthien first begins listing.

Title: The Waker · Author: Nancy Brooke · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 287
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-11 15:25:25
Spoilers!
Uuuuh, that was chilling! And utterly fascinating. An excellent,
excellent drabble which fulfils the difficult challenge perfectly. The
language - sometimes even approximating poetry - is used with utmost
care and precision, doubly important here where the point of the
drabble was about lack of language.

Despite the vagueness and ambiguity in the descriptions, and the
open-endedness of the drabble - which I thought were very important to
preserve the mystery of this character - Nancy Brooke gave it enough
reality and character and awareness for the readers to see it taking
shape in what the words evoke, sometimes in the very sounds of the words.

Words like ["plop"], ["plunk"] and ["slish"] seem here not only as
background fillers and noise, but meaningful factors in evoking and
giving shape to a very unusual, amorphous figure.

Title: The Dark of Night · Author: Ellie · Genres: Horror · ID: 484
Reviewer: Fiondil · 2008-11-11 16:14:51
Something is attacking the elves of Imladris, swooping out of the
midnight sky, leaving them drained of blood and spirit. No one knows
what the creatures are and even the trees can only speak of the `dark
of night' to describe the attackers. To make matters worse, it seems
the attackers are very selective in their victims, a fact that may
spell both doom and salvation for the elves as they battle against an
enemy not seen in two ages. Ellie weaves a masterful plot of darkness
and terror as Elrond seeks answers to combatting the encroaching
menace, unaware that the attacks are motivated by revenge for a deed
done by his own father, Earendil.

For anyone who enjoys reading stories that keep you on the edge of
your seat wondering what will happen next, this is definitely a must-read.

Msg# 9541

MEFA Reviews for Tuesday, November 11, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 11, 2008 - 22:02:43 Topic ID# 9541
Title: Seeking the Sun · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men · ID: 488
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-11 17:38:35
Spoilers!
This story packs a wallop, particularly in the first few paragraphs.
"Seeking the Sun" presents Aragorn's Coronation from the point of view
of a woman left destitute and homeless during the Siege of MInas
Tirith. It's mostly a character piece, as the woman has an
understandable axe to grind with the incoming administration.
Aragorn's reaction is immediate, personal, and well in keeping with
Tolkien canon and Linda's sizeable array of Aragorn stories.

That the king might involve himself in the plight of a single
individual might seem remote from our day. However, in the Middle Ages
in Western Europe, such an incident was hardly extraordinary. This
vignette gives us a glimpse of the type of monarch we want Aragorn to be.


Title: Messengers from the West · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 98
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-11 19:01:18
This is a very fun interlude that left me grinning in delight. It's
wonderful to think that during his long wandering, Aragorn might have
gotten the occasional touch of home. A clever premise, and I could
feel Aragorn's elation.

Title: Apart · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: Gondor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 551
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-11 19:03:24
Very nice: I liked the parallel thoughts in the beginning, the avid
determination that they would each take responsibility for their own
actions and seek redress. It seemed very fitting for their characters.

The idea that these two have areas of their friendship that cannot
(yet) bear full disclosure is realistic, and I thought it
well-explored here. I have long-lasting friendships like that too,
where you love and respect one another, but also realize that there
are certain subjects best left at "agreeing to disagree".

Title: Moonset over Gondor · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 652
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-11 19:04:21
This is a lovely concept that Raksha explores: Faramir reflecting upon
past and present, and (characteristically) thinking of those who
cannot enjoy the freedom and beauty and hope that he can. I liked the
quiet way that his companion is gradually introduced, and the gentle
but certain reassurance that is offered. Faramir's response to this -
realignment from subtle mourning to looking forward to the future -
underscores the deep bond between these two, and felt wholly
appropriate to me.

I thought the author employed a very nice use of more formal language,
too; natural and not stilted, and fitting for the serious subject.

Title: The Roses of Imloth Melui · Author: Aervir · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 435
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-11 19:04:38
This series is a fascinating take on a one-dimensional minor character
in the Houses of Healing. I enjoyed it all the more, I think, because
Aervir takes Ioreth on a circuitous route to her scenes in LotR (which
are not even directly mentioned), and gives her some alternate touches
of characterization than what many might have done.

The result is a three-dimensional portrait of a hard-working woman,
with ups and downs and many struggles, and more than a passing
acquaintance with death even from her childhood - in short, a
realistic and interesting individual. I enjoyed how unobtrusively the
rose theme was worked into each drabble, and how well each flowed to
the next even when large gaps in time occurred.

Title: Vengeance's Folly · Author: Rhapsody · Races: Elves: Noldor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 718
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-11 19:48:07
Spoilers!
An evocative portrait of the sons of Feanor at a low point in their
fortunes. Excellent descriptions and good use of that lovely line by
Tolkien, here spoken by Maglor.

Title: Feelings of Superiority · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 362
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-11 21:49:13
This series shines for showing perspectives not often seen in
Tolkienfic. In particular--being partial to Elves myself--I really
enjoyed those from the Vanyarin and Avarin perspectives. Especially
the former are often mocked by fans for their seeming frivolity when
compared to the Noldor and Teleri; Gwynnyd does well in showing how
they find meaning in their existence.

Title: Silver Blossoms Blown · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races:
Cross-Cultural · ID: 646
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-11 22:07:00
Spoilers!
This short piece does a wonderful job of capturing Varda's voice, her
wonder in her first encounter with the Elves, and has touches of
Valarin mysticism that make it a delight--I would love to see this
expanded to find out more about Varda's sensing of aspect and
foresight. But my favorite thing about this story is how Ignoble Bard
shows Varda's almost giddy enthusiasm. In Monday-morning
quarterbacking the mistakes the Valar made where the Elves were
concerned, it is easy to forget this most basic love that underlay
most of their decisions.

Title: Incarnation · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Drabbles · ID: 242
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-11 22:16:07
Oh dear, this was terribly funny! Gandalfs apprentice shows both a
mastery of humor and the drabble form with this piece ... and it
certainly answered some questions I had always had about incarnation
and its effects on Ainur! Very nicely done and highly recommended!

Title: Creation Myths · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 300
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-11 22:22:22
Spoilers!
The premise of this drabble is itself insightful: a comparison of Ea
and the Silmarils. While my interpretation of Feanor and the Silmarils
is not in complete agreement with Tanaqui's, I really enjoyed the way
that this pair of drabbles underscored the very important role of
creation in Tolkien's works. Nicely done!

Title: An Elf-lord Revealed · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 406
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-11 22:49:56
Spoilers!
Glorfindel is a fascinating character, and this series deftly explores
many aspects of what makes him so. First Age fan that I am, my
favorite was the first, but the myriad ways that someone so "minor" as
Glorfindel (minor enough to be written out of PJ's movies, at least!)
touched so many lives across the history of Middle-earth is skillfully
presented in this series.

Title: Maglor's Song · Author: Robinka · Genres: Poetry: Drama · ID: 398
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-11 22:54:21
Spoilers!
My favorite ideas in Robinka's poem are that Maglor's might is
incapable of what is most desired: to bring peace. I also like the
idea that Maglor's voice can still be heard but only by those who
listen for it and that it pleas to remember his mistakes. Nicely done!

Title: Wild Swan · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: Gondor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 328
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-11 23:01:37
I suppose I can be forgiven for blathering on and breaking into
high-pitched squees when trying to review this particular drabble
series: Tanaqui has managed to smoothly link together over a thousand
words on my favorite LotR character.

Nonetheless, I'll attempt some sort of dignified commentary...

Tanaqui's series flows so naturally and magnificently, too; one would
think that each drabble was created with a set story arc and ending in
mind, instead of scattered over most of a year's time and growing out
of a variety of prompts. Through it all, Imrahil's character remains
true to his core being but is still allowed to develop with maturity,
into the beloved warrior and prince from the books.

The snapshots encompass clear and well-defined moments, every one of
them telling a delightful (or moving, or chilling, or uplifting, etc.)
story complete with excellently chosen "chapter" titles. The
descriptions envelop me, bringing the scenes to shimmering life.
Somehow, the author's careful and precise word choices also leave room
for wonderful bits of dialogue and secondary character development,
all in lovely and appropriate language. The overall title complements
the entire series and fits my image of the Prince of Dol Amroth perfectly.

I admit, I think my favorite is the final installment: the description
of Imrahil breaking into that joyful smile is etched indelibly in my
mind, but I fall in love with it again with every rereading...

*squee!*

Title: Journeys of Vása · Author: Dawn Felagund · Races: Elves:
Incomplete · ID: 140
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-12 00:08:29
Spoilers!
How wonderful it is to look at the first rising of the Sun over Arda
from such divergent points of view, including this last one by a
survivor of Fingolfin. Myth, artificer, self-professed
bureaucrat--each has a different tale to tell, all of them equally
valid in the end.

The quality of the telling, particularly in the original, is
marvelously lyrical and poetic, truly in keeping with the mythical
nature of that particular telling. Alas for Tilion, who saw the object
of his devotion raped by Melkor and who could not protect her--or the
world afterwards--from that evil.

Marvelous series.

Msg# 9542

MEFA Reviews for Wednesday, November 12, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 12, 2008 - 20:39:36 Topic ID# 9542
Title: The Stranger · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 560
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-12 06:30:38
Spoilers!
A melancholy, fittingly haunting account of Maglor's last moments this
side of the Sundering Sea, and his homecoming. The use of the
viewpoint of the mortal child is a master-stroke, with effective
contrast of the boy's youthful innocence and the lost Elf's
unimaginable age and weariness.

Title: Dance of the Deer and Mûmak · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Post-Ring War · ID: 559
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-12 06:53:47
Spoilers!
One of the best Legolas/Gimli friendship stories I have read; with an
original and delightful framework for showing off the differences
between them - how they dance. Dancing is hard to write; but Nieriel
Raina does it very well; enabling me to see the Elves leaping
gracefully and barefoot. Gimli's dance is a revelation; and entirely
credible, as he embodies the power and strength of his people and
himself, graceful in a more earthbound fashion than his Elven hosts,
but no less entrancing.

Title: If I Had One Wish · Author: Ellie · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 658
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-12 10:01:17
Reality confronted with the wish that Indis of the Vanyar reveals in
this short, poignant and well written story. Great writing!

Title: Chance Encounter · Author: Telcontar Rulz · Times: Late Third
Age · ID: 203
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-12 11:02:45
Spoilers!
An interesting crossover in which there is not only a Tenth Walker,
but an eleventh as well!

The initial chapters particularly are well done as we welcome Banial
to the Fellowship and he and Frodo end up captured by orcs on
Caradhras. After a time a good part of it feels a bit rushed, and some
elements seem odd, such as Legolas seeing Sauron in the Palantir after
he's been cast down; but it manages to keep the attention.

Title: Kementari · Author: Marta · Times: First Age and Prior · ID: 99
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-12 17:21:18
Very evocative writing; the melancholy mood is reflected well in the
descriptions and in Yavanna's somewhat languid musings and motions. I
liked the way Yavanna's sadness expressed itself in her creations. The
juxtaposition between her memories of splendour and lushness
contrasted with the present dreary reality was very effective.

The idea that she might have been jealous of the other Valar because
their creations are still alive and they are praised for them struck
me as a fascinating and believable concept.

Title: GOBLINS: The Herald's Summons · Author: Fiondil · Times: First
Age and Prior · ID: 53
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-12 17:21:31
Very good scene-setting; I was intrigued by the mundane details that
bring a day during the War of Wrath really to life in the complexity
that is sometimes hard to imagine from the little that is written in
canon.

I found Arafinwë's thoughts and feelings about his daughter and his
son-in-law amusing, but also understandable and touching.

I liked that the philosophical and moral questions are touched upon
only lightly, which I thought gave them resonance beyond the shortness
of the story.

Title: The Last Stand · Author: Rhapsody · Times: First Age and Prior
· ID: 82
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-12 17:21:42
The battle and its various thrusts, strategies, pauses etc. is evoked
very clearly, the details of various scenes are well-chosen. I like
the balance the narrators show between necessary detachment in the
heat of battle, and the emotions and distracted musings that come
through regardless.

Title: Surprise · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: First Age and Prior ·
ID: 131
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-12 17:21:51
A fascinating gap-filler. Great characterisations, especially in the
PoV-character. Aulë's workshop and the diverse duties and workings of
Mahtan it are presented very clearly.

I liked how the story is infused with the ambiguity Mahtan felt
regarding the joys and duties of fatherhood versus his ambitions
regarding his chosen profession.

The forebodings and visions Mahtan experiences are woven very well
into the narrative; in fact, they come up so seamlessly that it is
slightly unsettling, which I found very effective considering their
content.

Title: The Queen's Gift · Author: Queen Galadriel · Races: Elves:
Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 697
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-12 22:53:40
Spoilers!
In this piece, Queen Galadriel has created a lovely, lyrical triple
drabble in which Arwen contemplates he Ringbearer and his eventual
fate and, master weaver that she is, draws together the threads of
many lives to reach understanding. A well-written and convincing look
at what Arwen might have been thinking as she handed over that white
jewel to Frodo. Well done!


Title: A Meeting in the Tower Hills · Author: Imhiriel · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 374
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-12 22:53:56
Spoilers!
Imhiriel has a real gift for picking little-explored corners of canon
which were sketched only briefly by Tolkien and imbuing them with life
and wit. This drabble provides a highly amusing snapshot of the
reunion of two-long sundered tribes that nevertheless has a ring of
realism in the awkwardness and suspicion that is the basis for the
humour that culminates in a final line raises a chuckle. Nicely done!

Title: Sunset Gates · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races: Dwarves: Drabbles
· ID: 342
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-12 22:54:06
Spoilers!
Ignoble Bard has created a drabble with an amusing and clever twist in
the final line that makes the reader re-read and reconsider what has
been said earlier and chuckle in amusement. Although set in the modern
world, the opening lines have all the lyricism of Tolkien's world,
making the final reveal all the more surprising. Witty and charming –
well done!

Title: Loudwater · Author: Adaneth · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 63
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-12 22:54:15
Spoilers!
Adaneth has given voice to the wordless in this drabble about the
Bruinen. The word picture that has been drawn in this prose poem,
using alliteration, onomatopoeia and poetic metre evokes the river in
all its stages and moods. The author's love of words, and her
undoubted skill with them, dazzles the reader as clearly as sunlight
flashing off the ripples of the Loudwater she describes. Beautifully
done – bravissima!

Title: Autumn · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 489
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-12 22:54:23
Spoilers!
Linda Hoyland has created a charming piece in which Aragorn reflects
on his change in circumstances following the War of the Ring – on what
he misses and what he doesn't, what he has lost and what he has
gained. The contrasts are beautifully expressed in vivid language .
Very nicely done – bravo!

Title: My Precious · Author: SheBit · Genres: Romance: Drabbles · ID: 14
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-12 22:54:31
Spoilers!
This is a chilling, creepy and yet completely psychologically
convincing drabble about lust, obsession and contempt. SheBit
certainly achieves her goal of taking us right inside the head of
Grima Wormtongue and shows us what a dark and nasty place it is. Quite
brilliantly unpleasant and unnerving – well done!


Title: A New Day · Author: Oshun · Genres: Longer Works · ID: 35
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-13 00:21:05
The continuation of the Findekano/Maitimo relationship finds our
heroes picking up the pieces after Maitimo's imprisonment and torture
at the hands of Morgoth. Despite their angry parting and the events
following, Maitimo awakes to find Findekano by his side, their bond as
strong as ever. Though both characters have been changed profoundly by
their experience and are having to adjust to a new world of sun and
moon, a world where Sindarin and Noldor are each learning the ways of
the other, the bond between the two lovers is as strong as ever. Not
that there aren't still obstacles to be overcome, big ones, but that
we know that Maitimo and Findekano will face them together.

Oshun has created one of the great fandom romances with her stories of
these two Silmarillion heroes. She pulls off the difficult task of
framing their relationship within the known events, balancing her
exquisite characterizations with the social and political machinations
that surround the characters. In the course of the story, Maitimo must
come to a decision concerning the leadership role that has been thrust
upon him with his father's death, deal with his emotionally wounded
siblings, and come to grips with his memories of Angband and his own
physical and emotional scars. Through it all, Findekano is there to
encourage, cajole, and prod him as needed, proving that love can
conquer all. Fleshing out Tolkien's portrayal of these two is Oshun's
gift, and compelling those of us who still look askance at the
Silmarillion to embrace these characters and take them into our hearts
is her talent.

Findekano is one of the truly great characters of fanfiction, gallant,
loyal, intelligent, perceptive, and madly in love with his beautiful
cousin. So inspiring is his character that I was moved last year to
write a poem about him. I will not make the author or other reviewers
suffer from my feeble attempts this year but I will say that each of
Oshun's stories pulls me further into the world of Findekano and
Maitimo. From their first kiss to their reunion upon the shores of
Lake Mithrim, from their earliest confessions of love to feeling their
way through the "new day" of an unfamiliar new world, I have enjoyed
seeing how far they have come and will be journeying with them on
their destiny-filled trek into the future.


Title: Trouble at Bag End · Author: Angiet · Races: Hobbits: Childhood
· ID: 728
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-13 00:22:45
What a lovely, sweet, loving story! I love the playing peek a boo, the
care given throughout and the ending! I wonder if Aragorn would
remember this, fifty years later, at the Prancing Pony. :) What a
great gift for them both to share this time together.

Title: The Tower Hills · Author: DrummerWench · Genres: Drama: Final
Partings · ID: 608
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-13 00:30:41
A sweet story of friendship and care given for almost the last time in
Middle-earth and this time Frodo being the care-giver and Sam the one
comforted by his beloved master's touch and presence. There is not
much time for them to be together on Middle-earth, but each new memory
would be a treasure for them both. Thank you for adding another.

Title: Harmony · Author: Elwen · Races: Hobbits · ID: 195
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-13 02:29:40
Spoilers!
An interesting story. I love that Elrond was able to hear Frodo's song
and love that he was able to weave it into the gem Arwen gifted the
troubled Ring-bearer with. I've wondered whether the Vala, Nienna and
Este, in particular would be involved in Frodo's healing and this
brings it out. He would be in need of both. I thought it was
interesting that he was asked if he wished for healing and he said
yes. Interesting also that pride was what he needed to let go in able
to heal and forgiveness of self.

Msg# 9543

ADMIN – Focus on Poetry Posted by Tanaqui November 13, 2008 - 14:55:45 Topic ID# 9543
Hey guys,

Here is your weekly admin post  this week we're focusing on the poems
that have been entered in this year's awards. If one of the things you
love about Tolkien is the poems and songs, then our 22 entries in four
poetry categories are for you. While the number of poems may be small,
the works themselves can, like beautifully-crafted and polished jewels,
have a huge impact. So if you have a poetic bent, this list will help
you find the kind of stories you'd like to review.

For the list of pieces in this announcement I've used the story type
"Poetry". Finding the list of poems is pretty straightforward. To do this

1. Log in to www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/
2. Click the "Stories" link at the top of the page.
3. Click the "Show Filter" link.
4. Click the "Clear All Filters" button if you've used the filter before
this session.
5. Select "Poetry" from the "Story Type" filter (at the top) OR "Genres:
Poetry" from the "Main Category" filter (the third filter down).
6. Click the "Display selected nominations" button.

This will pull up all of the nominated pieces that are poems.

******************************

Here are the poems competing in this year's competition .

Aranel Took
---(469) Shire
---(471) Rebirth
Armariel
---(269) Elrond's Farewell
---(428) The Gardener Speaks
---(429) The Bridge
---(458) Answers
ConnieMarie
---(396) Bearer of the Ring
Dreamflower
---(679) 25 Rethe, S.R. 1422: The Three Travellers Remember
Ford of Bruinen
---(661) I Married for Love
Larner
---(618) By Ship or Grave
---(645) The Ring That Sauron Forged
Lindelea
---(301) Three Songs
pandemonium_213
---(50) Philosophia to Philomythus and Misomythus
Phyncke
---(564) Yrch Song
Primsong
---(597) Weathertop
---(720) Merry on the Pelennor Fields
Princess Artemis
---(416) Temptation
Queen Galadriel
---(402) Call of the Dream
rhyselle
---(501) The Search
Robinka
---(398) Maglor's Song
Savageseraph
---(583) Galadriel Remembers
White Gull
---(632) Boromir at the Bat

To find more information about any of these pieces, just do the following

1. Log in to www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/
2. Click the "Stories" link at the top of the web page.
3. Type the Story ID followed by the "#" sign into the search bar, and
click the "Search" button.

For instance, searching for "597#" will bring up story #597, Weathertop
by Primsong.

Also, although we have just four poetry categories  General, Hobbits,
Drama and Late Third Age  this year the authors of these poems thought
their works could compete in a wider range of categories. These were:

---Genres: Drama
---Genres: Horror
---Genres: Humor
---Genres: Mystery
---Genres: Non-Fiction
---Genres: Romance
---Races: Cross-Cultural
---Races: Elves
---Races: Hobbits
---Races: Men
---Races: Other Beings
---Races: Villains
---Times: First Age and Prior
---Times: Fourth Age and Beyond
---Times: Late Third Age
---Times: Modern Times
---Times: Multi-Age
---Times: Second Age

Happy reading!

Tanaqui
(MEFA Tech Support)

P.S. - If you noticed a mistake in this post, please email about it so I
can check whether a mistake has been made and, if necessary, correct my
announcement. You can reach me privately at
techsupport(.at.)mefawards(.dot.)net. Thanks!

Msg# 9544

MEFA Reviews for Thursday, November 13, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 13, 2008 - 19:52:18 Topic ID# 9544
Title: Supporting Acts · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 436
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-13 05:05:51
Spoilers!
Poor Faramir!It seems that dealing with tradesmen was as frustrating
then as now! Trust our Steward to find a wise solution! An enjoyable
set of drabbles.

Title: Where Shadows Lay No More · Author: Cathleen · Times: Fourth
Age and Beyond · ID: 358
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-13 06:22:05
Spoilers!
a moving story which seems very plausible that Boromir would find a
way to say farewell and see the coronation in which his brother was
honoured and the Hobbits were seen as safe and well. A
Delightful,touching story.

Title: Duty, Honour, Country · Author: Rhapsody · Races: Elves: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 81
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-13 06:25:31
Spoilers!
A moving and interesting take on Maglor's dreadful oath that ruined
all his family. Sometimes dreadful deeds can spring from good motives
which is always frightening even today.Very thought provoking.

Title: Five Hair Care Tips for Rohirrim · Author: EdorasLass · Genres:
Humor · ID: 71
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-13 08:24:58
Spoilers!
Just too, too funny. Do NOT read this while trying to snack or drink;
things will just get messy. Edoras Lass knows how to bring the humor
in the Rohirrim's care of the flaxen tresses that JRRT described so
accurately. I personally reread this gem frequently; and I always lose
it when I get to the paragraph describing the many different types of
sparkly clips - [decapitated orc] and [bunny rabbits] indeed!

Title: Steward's Trumpets · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times:
Late Third Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 400
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-13 08:58:34
Beautifully and very effectively written. The drabble begins with the
picture of ruins and lifelessness, and you almost feel a pall of dust
and silence and sadness descending over Faramir as you read.

And then the melancholy is lifted with the unexpected discovery of
green freshness and defiant life reclaiming its place. The symbolism
of the plants, their shapes and their names are particularly poignant:
they represent both a new beginning while at the same time embracing -
literally - the old memories. And it is as if the last words leave a
lingering echo - as you are reminded of the glory and pride of the
line (in both film and book): ["the clear ringing of silver trumpets"].

I like it that it seems as if Faramir was drawn to the place without
conscious volition, as if he was *meant* to come and see these signs
of renewal. And judging from the first half of the drabble, it seems
he very much needed them, as he seems adrift and strangely bereft,
detached from the renewal that is going on around him.

Title: Forfeit · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 401
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-13 09:04:44
Interesting take on Beregond's long time awaiting judgement. I can
well imagine well-meaning friends being tempted to help him in this
way, and if so, that Beregond would react just in the way he did.

The way the drabble is written at the beginning - with short lines of
brisk, matter-of-fact dialogue which gives nothing away of how
Beregond might feel inwardly, nor how tempted he might actually be
considering some of the understandable arguments - contributes much to
the emotional punch of the last line: While it still contains no inner
insight, it is nevertheless all too revealing of his inner turmoil.

Title: Playing with Fire · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 21
Reviewer: Sivan Shemesh · 2008-11-13 15:50:21
Spoilers!
Good to know that Eldarion wouldn't play with the fire, and i believed
that the tough lesson did him good, even if it hurts him. Though Poor
Aragorn, and yet, i'm glad that he told Arwen about his own lesson.

I love the last line.

Msg# 9545

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 14, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 14, 2008 - 19:52:53 Topic ID# 9545
Jael is the premier writer of Thranduil fanfiction and this
continuance of [The Rose in the Fisted Glove] is one of the best in
this writer’s oeuvre. In this previous story we found Thranduil
preparing for the Battle of the Last Alliance with his trusty valet
Galion offering him comfort on the eve of combat. While Thranduil’s
concerns at that time were more for the new bride he had left behind
than the looming battle, he nevertheless bravely leads his troops into
the fray as their prince but emerges as their king.

With two thirds of his men killed and the kingship thrust upon him in
the most traumatic way possible, through the death of his father
Oropher, Thranduil finds Galion and his men looking to him for answers
he is not certain he has.

[Nightfall] opens at this most significant turning point, with
Thranduil having to suppress his grief for the sake of his people,
while at the same time demonstrating to the Noldor the mettle of the
Wood Elves, who are now held in low esteem by them due to Oropher’s
ill-fated charge.
With two thirds of the Mirkwood troops killed and the morale of his
remaining men severely depleted, Thranduil marshals his wounded spirit
and hatches a plan that will result in either victory or suicide.
Determined, proud, brave, and perhaps a bit mad, Thranduil leads a
small band of Wood Elves behind enemy lines for one final, desperate
gambit.

The beauty of Jael’s writing is that Thranduil becomes a living,
breathing, flawed yet fascinating character who leaps off the screen
the way the best characters do from classic books. With each story we
watch as another chapter of his life unfolds, giving us insight into
the character Tolkien began but did not flesh out as elegantly, or as
satisfyingly, as Jael is able to achieve.


Title: No Regrets · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 490
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 08:03:58
this is a very, very nice ficlet. I do not think Faramir would have
been all that happy being Steward. He probably didn't feel like he
could do it justice. I do not think it would really have been in his
nature. He now has a wonderful wife, and I think he loves being
steward to his king, his good friend, and his brother. That beautiful
field of flowers represents to me the fact that the evil, fearful
times they had experienced with the war of the ring was now completely
past, well hopefully, signifying a beautiful new beginning for them
all. Yes, I think Faramir was very happy where he was at in life,the
friend and steward of the king. There is nothing like a beuatiful
field of flowers to cheer one's moods, heart and it's very relaxing. I
liked this story very very much.

Title: An Elf-lord Revealed · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 406
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-14 09:40:19
What I liked most about the series is that the various drabbles
highlighted Glorfindel's unstinting courage and yet there is never a
hint of recklessness or arrogance in it. Instead there is focus,
wisdom, humility, and compassion. He is not only the warrior, but also
a leader, and an advisor in public and private matters alike.

The interactions with the many different characters that touched his
life are well-written and poignant.

My favourite drabble was ["Comparing Notes"] - I liked the dry humour,
and the picture of Glorfindel observing the golden flowers that are an
emblem of his house.

Title: Tree of Knowledge · Author: Nancy Brooke · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 172
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-14 09:41:20
Spoilers!
Beautiful, elegiac prose; I particularly appreciated the very
effective use of word order to give the drabble a special tone. The
metaphor of the tree which is used so consistently and in such a rich,
creative manner is particularly poignant and meaningful, considering
Gondor's own White Tree. I especially loved the idea of the demanding
environment of the "tree" due to its proximity to Mordor, in contrast,
according to Denethor, to the safe shelter in Rivendell's garden: the
complaint mixed with the pride at overcoming such odds, and the
foreboding that in the end, it will not be enough to stave of failure.

The last line gives rise to speculation about how much exactly
Denethor knew - or has learned by now - about the heirs of Isildur, if
he knows about "Thorongil" in particular, what his motives might be to
still keep his silence etc.

Denethor's character comes through clearly in a very indirect way,
which seems to fit with his difficult, complex personality.

Title: Supporting Acts · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 436
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-14 09:42:07
Very engaging slice-of-life drabble series. The original characters
come fully alive; each individual and three-dimensional.

The technical aspects are conveyed very knowledgeably, and I
particularly liked that they were woven into the narrative subtly,
avoiding an infodump. Good use of the drabble format in judiciously
choosing gaps and trusting the reader's ability to read between the lines.

Title: Home is where the heart is · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres:
Romance: Drabbles · ID: 505
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 10:57:31
Arwen had changed one life for another. Not just becoming mortal to
live her life with the one she loved, but also leaving the comfort and
love she had always had living in Lothlorien. That place was ethereal,
beautiful, serene and had a magical charm to it, as did her home in
Imladlris. There she had had her father and brothers. She had loved
and adored her Elven family, but Aragorn had captured her heart and
her love. He led her to another place of love and beauty, himself.
Exchanging one life for another cannot be easy, but I am sure Aragorn
tried to make it as easy a one as he could. He also was making another
beginning which was huge for him, too. They were each other's rock. To
Arwen, Aragorn was her home. Nothing else really mattered. Have you
ever heard the song The Dance by Garth Brooks? This makes me think of
that. The song was about taking chances in love and life so as not to
regret that possibility of losing that and never getting that chance,
again. The lady in the song had died, but he was basically saying that
it was better to have lived with her and loved her, even if he lost
her, than not to have ever been with his love at all. It's one of my
very favorite country songs. This was a wonderful drabble, Linda
You're the greatest!

Title: Hide the Knives · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Humor: Gondor
· ID: 485
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 12:07:56
Oh, NiRi, I just can\\\'t imagine Arwen being so angry, even in
childbirth , to threaten to get rid of his manhood, shall we say? I
think that would have been so funny to see! Of, course we all have
heard of things like that before, but Arwen? I could just see Aragorn
running from her in terror, and protecting himself. The look on his
face would have been priceless! What have you done to me, it is all
your fault! she probably was screaming. Having all the knives from
their quarters removed, huh? He really was scared!! But he knew she
would calm down eventually, just not when. She knew it wasn\\\'t
anyone\\\'s fault, just a sweet baby that came out of their love. That
was a sweet, touching moment they had with the baby, there. This was
very, very good. I liked it very much! NiRi

Title: The Water's Song · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races: Elves: Family
· ID: 707
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 13:46:11
Hey NiRi, this story is very good. I think it is great. I really hate
the whole idea of sea-longing, though. I makes me very sad and a
little angry. It must have been hard on Elves in general; leaving and
leaving those you love behind. Legolas was so small and innocent when
he first heard the song of the waters. To be able to foresee the
future must have been both a gift and a curse to her. A gift such as
that would always be a blessing simply because it was an Elven gift.
And a curse if the outcome of your foresight is painful and hurtful.
But to know you will lose your son to the sea one day and that you
yourself will die long before that time has got to be exceptionally
hard. It was averry touching that when Thranduil found out about
Legolas' future, he told his never-ending love for him. And the fact
that no matter what he did or went he would always be loved
unconditionally. I think that really helped Legolas down the road
remembering that talk and realizing that he would alway be love by his
father and friends. But I think his love for his friends was a little
stronger than his sea-longing. He fought alongside them during the War
of the Ring and wouldn't leave until his good friend and brother was
gone. He was a very honorable being. It sas interesting that when
first heard the song as a child it was in a small stream and when he
actually felt the longing so strongly, he was near the ocean.
Interesting. This story was really great, NiRi. I like it Pam

Title: A Large Bold Hand · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 10
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 16:17:47
This is really a nice little drabble. So, Ori the Dwarf could write
well in Elvish, and could write the Elvish characters very quickly,
and often did in later life. That is an interesting idea; to have had
Elrohir be his teacher in writing the Elvish language. (Or at least I
am assuming that is what you mean). Obviously it would have taken a
great deal of time to learn it, so he must have been there quite a
while, or often, at least. You would not think a Dwarf would be that
interested in something like that. You might say he was even a bit
romantic talking about the writing as beautiful and flowing, like
rippling water. Ori obivously never did say where he had learned it
from or who taught him. And it also seemed he had an interest in his
people's history. He was a very interesting Dwarf. This was a very
nice Drabble, Jay. I like it! Pam

Title: This crown of stars · Author: Fawsley · Races: Men: General
Drabbles · ID: 586
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-14 23:35:43
Spoilers!
Talk about Aragorn angst, Fawsley captures a lonely Strider,
contemplating his past and future. The language is so arresting I had
to make sure that this wasn't a poem. I recommend this to all who
believe that Strider did have his moments of doubt and pain.

Msg# 9546

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 14, 2008 (Corrected) Posted by annmarwalk November 14, 2008 - 19:56:33 Topic ID# 9546
Title: Nightfall · Author: Jael · Times: Second and Early Third Age ·
ID: 87
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-14 02:01:01
Jael is the premier writer of Thranduil fanfiction and this
continuance of [The Rose in the Fisted Glove] is one of the best in
this writer’s oeuvre. In this previous story we found Thranduil
preparing for the Battle of the Last Alliance with his trusty valet
Galion offering him comfort on the eve of combat. While Thranduil’s
concerns at that time were more for the new bride he had left behind
than the looming battle, he nevertheless bravely leads his troops into
the fray as their prince but emerges as their king.

With two thirds of his men killed and the kingship thrust upon him in
the most traumatic way possible, through the death of his father
Oropher, Thranduil finds Galion and his men looking to him for answers
he is not certain he has.

[Nightfall] opens at this most significant turning point, with
Thranduil having to suppress his grief for the sake of his people,
while at the same time demonstrating to the Noldor the mettle of the
Wood Elves, who are now held in low esteem by them due to Oropher’s
ill-fated charge.
With two thirds of the Mirkwood troops killed and the morale of his
remaining men severely depleted, Thranduil marshals his wounded spirit
and hatches a plan that will result in either victory or suicide.
Determined, proud, brave, and perhaps a bit mad, Thranduil leads a
small band of Wood Elves behind enemy lines for one final, desperate
gambit.

The beauty of Jael’s writing is that Thranduil becomes a living,
breathing, flawed yet fascinating character who leaps off the screen
the way the best characters do from classic books. With each story we
watch as another chapter of his life unfolds, giving us insight into
the character Tolkien began but did not flesh out as elegantly, or as
satisfyingly, as Jael is able to achieve.


Title: No Regrets · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 490
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 08:03:58
this is a very, very nice ficlet. I do not think Faramir would have
been all that happy being Steward. He probably didn't feel like he
could do it justice. I do not think it would really have been in his
nature. He now has a wonderful wife, and I think he loves being
steward to his king, his good friend, and his brother. That beautiful
field of flowers represents to me the fact that the evil, fearful
times they had experienced with the war of the ring was now completely
past, well hopefully, signifying a beautiful new beginning for them
all. Yes, I think Faramir was very happy where he was at in life,the
friend and steward of the king. There is nothing like a beuatiful
field of flowers to cheer one's moods, heart and it's very relaxing. I
liked this story very very much.

Title: An Elf-lord Revealed · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 406
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-14 09:40:19
What I liked most about the series is that the various drabbles
highlighted Glorfindel's unstinting courage and yet there is never a
hint of recklessness or arrogance in it. Instead there is focus,
wisdom, humility, and compassion. He is not only the warrior, but also
a leader, and an advisor in public and private matters alike.

The interactions with the many different characters that touched his
life are well-written and poignant.

My favourite drabble was ["Comparing Notes"] - I liked the dry humour,
and the picture of Glorfindel observing the golden flowers that are an
emblem of his house.

Title: Tree of Knowledge · Author: Nancy Brooke · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 172
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-14 09:41:20
Spoilers!
Beautiful, elegiac prose; I particularly appreciated the very
effective use of word order to give the drabble a special tone. The
metaphor of the tree which is used so consistently and in such a rich,
creative manner is particularly poignant and meaningful, considering
Gondor's own White Tree. I especially loved the idea of the demanding
environment of the "tree" due to its proximity to Mordor, in contrast,
according to Denethor, to the safe shelter in Rivendell's garden: the
complaint mixed with the pride at overcoming such odds, and the
foreboding that in the end, it will not be enough to stave of failure.

The last line gives rise to speculation about how much exactly
Denethor knew - or has learned by now - about the heirs of Isildur, if
he knows about "Thorongil" in particular, what his motives might be to
still keep his silence etc.

Denethor's character comes through clearly in a very indirect way,
which seems to fit with his difficult, complex personality.

Title: Supporting Acts · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 436
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-14 09:42:07
Very engaging slice-of-life drabble series. The original characters
come fully alive; each individual and three-dimensional.

The technical aspects are conveyed very knowledgeably, and I
particularly liked that they were woven into the narrative subtly,
avoiding an infodump. Good use of the drabble format in judiciously
choosing gaps and trusting the reader's ability to read between the lines.

Title: Home is where the heart is · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres:
Romance: Drabbles · ID: 505
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 10:57:31
Arwen had changed one life for another. Not just becoming mortal to
live her life with the one she loved, but also leaving the comfort and
love she had always had living in Lothlorien. That place was ethereal,
beautiful, serene and had a magical charm to it, as did her home in
Imladlris. There she had had her father and brothers. She had loved
and adored her Elven family, but Aragorn had captured her heart and
her love. He led her to another place of love and beauty, himself.
Exchanging one life for another cannot be easy, but I am sure Aragorn
tried to make it as easy a one as he could. He also was making another
beginning which was huge for him, too. They were each other's rock. To
Arwen, Aragorn was her home. Nothing else really mattered. Have you
ever heard the song The Dance by Garth Brooks? This makes me think of
that. The song was about taking chances in love and life so as not to
regret that possibility of losing that and never getting that chance,
again. The lady in the song had died, but he was basically saying that
it was better to have lived with her and loved her, even if he lost
her, than not to have ever been with his love at all. It's one of my
very favorite country songs. This was a wonderful drabble, Linda
You're the greatest!

Title: Hide the Knives · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Humor: Gondor
· ID: 485
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 12:07:56
Oh, NiRi, I just can\\\'t imagine Arwen being so angry, even in
childbirth , to threaten to get rid of his manhood, shall we say? I
think that would have been so funny to see! Of, course we all have
heard of things like that before, but Arwen? I could just see Aragorn
running from her in terror, and protecting himself. The look on his
face would have been priceless! What have you done to me, it is all
your fault! she probably was screaming. Having all the knives from
their quarters removed, huh? He really was scared!! But he knew she
would calm down eventually, just not when. She knew it wasn\\\'t
anyone\\\'s fault, just a sweet baby that came out of their love. That
was a sweet, touching moment they had with the baby, there. This was
very, very good. I liked it very much! NiRi

Title: The Water's Song · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races: Elves: Family
· ID: 707
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 13:46:11
Hey NiRi, this story is very good. I think it is great. I really hate
the whole idea of sea-longing, though. I makes me very sad and a
little angry. It must have been hard on Elves in general; leaving and
leaving those you love behind. Legolas was so small and innocent when
he first heard the song of the waters. To be able to foresee the
future must have been both a gift and a curse to her. A gift such as
that would always be a blessing simply because it was an Elven gift.
And a curse if the outcome of your foresight is painful and hurtful.
But to know you will lose your son to the sea one day and that you
yourself will die long before that time has got to be exceptionally
hard. It was averry touching that when Thranduil found out about
Legolas' future, he told his never-ending love for him. And the fact
that no matter what he did or went he would always be loved
unconditionally. I think that really helped Legolas down the road
remembering that talk and realizing that he would alway be love by his
father and friends. But I think his love for his friends was a little
stronger than his sea-longing. He fought alongside them during the War
of the Ring and wouldn't leave until his good friend and brother was
gone. He was a very honorable being. It sas interesting that when
first heard the song as a child it was in a small stream and when he
actually felt the longing so strongly, he was near the ocean.
Interesting. This story was really great, NiRi. I like it Pam

Title: A Large Bold Hand · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 10
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-14 16:17:47
This is really a nice little drabble. So, Ori the Dwarf could write
well in Elvish, and could write the Elvish characters very quickly,
and often did in later life. That is an interesting idea; to have had
Elrohir be his teacher in writing the Elvish language. (Or at least I
am assuming that is what you mean). Obviously it would have taken a
great deal of time to learn it, so he must have been there quite a
while, or often, at least. You would not think a Dwarf would be that
interested in something like that. You might say he was even a bit
romantic talking about the writing as beautiful and flowing, like
rippling water. Ori obivously never did say where he had learned it
from or who taught him. And it also seemed he had an interest in his
people's history. He was a very interesting Dwarf. This was a very
nice Drabble, Jay. I like it! Pam

Title: This crown of stars · Author: Fawsley · Races: Men: General
Drabbles · ID: 586
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-14 23:35:43
Spoilers!
Talk about Aragorn angst, Fawsley captures a lonely Strider,
contemplating his past and future. The language is so arresting I had
to make sure that this wasn't a poem. I recommend this to all who
believe that Strider did have his moments of doubt and pain.

Msg# 9547

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 15, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 15, 2008 - 21:16:32 Topic ID# 9547
Title: Shall We Dance? · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men:
Steward's Family · ID: 93
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-15 02:58:29
Spoilers!
A confection of a story, blending promise and memory, as Lothiriel is
presented at the Steward's midsummer court; and, in receiving a
special honor from Denethor, bestows a special grace upon him. And the
metaphor of Denethor and Lothiriel as winter and spring was absolutely
lovely.

Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 03:15:22
Spoilers!
A fittingly stormy entrance into the world of a woman who scorns only
a woman's place. I particularly enjoyed the brief glimpse of Rohan and
its royal house, and the other two inclusions, of Glorfindel and the
Witch-King himself were both foreshadowing and fulfillment of a prophecy.

Title: Legacy · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 500
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 03:19:12
Spoilers!
A beautiful tribute to all veterans, as Boromir's nephew reflects upon
his unknown kinsman. It is also a tribute to what his sacrifice
achieved, as Elboron admits that though he too has fought battles, the
most fell foes are gone, due to Boromir's valor and that of the other
warriors of the Ring War.

Title: Last Stroke · Author: Elena Tiriel · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Drabbles · ID: 465
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 03:23:18
Spoilers!
Eomer's stand on the hill on the Pelennor, tossing up his sword when
he saw the standard of Elendil, always seemed to me to be the ultimate
cinematic moment, and I never understood why Peter Jackson didn't use
it. Elena takes that scene and deftly twists it to show another place
and a darker fate. Powerful, despite its brevity.

Title: A Midsummer Day's Dream · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 422
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 03:27:15
Spoilers!
Awwwwww. A fitting end for a prince who sacrificed his own inner peace
to win a peace for everyone, only to find himself again afterwards.
All of Faramir's family, living and dead are present on the beautiful
summer day that is the last day of his life. No sentimentality, but a
very peaceful and hopeful story.

Title: The Prisoner of Time · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 313
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 03:31:47
Spoilers!
A very dark alternative vision. Surely it would have been a good
thing, had Denethor not killed himself? Raksha shows this not to be
the case, depicting a broken man who no longer has a place in the City
he served his entire life, merely suffered in the glorious new age
begun by the enthronement of his old rival Thorongil. Council, family,
king and people have all cast him aside, and he lives in bitterness. A
truly chilling depiction of a Gondor that no longer has a Steward
because Gondor no longer needs a Steward.

Title: Eight Weeks · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 273
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 03:37:15
Spoilers!
Dwimordene has spent a storied career depicting the Steward's
dysfunctional family at its absolute worst moments. So it's kind of
nice to see them all getting along, and to see Faramir and Denethor
actual allies in a mutual campaign to get Boromir to shave his beard.
Needless to say, two men with the intelligence and acumen of the
Steward and his second son are not likely to fail, and their
machinations are depicted with understated humor that is all the more
funny for its subtlety.

Title: Moon Over Water · Author: Avon · Genres: Drama: Final Partings
· ID: 518
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 03:44:13
Spoilers!
An intriguing story, where the usually practical to a fault Boromir
starts a tradition for his dreamer brother, telling him of a night
when Gondor's fallen greatest sail once more upon the Anduin. The
folktale/tradition is a plausible one and the depictions of this
mystical event are well done, seeming as they do to reflect Gondor's
deepening peril. Faramir is faithful in his watch, but his final
vision is a disturbing one. Boromir is true to character in this brief
vignette, his devotion to his younger brother and his innate
pragmatism are well drawn.

Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 03:59:51
Spoilers!
Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful. Arwen's end in the Appendices is one
of my least favorite parts of the trilogy. She is so certain that her
decision is the correct one, yet in the end she wavers in a way I have
always found OOC. Keiliss' story of her end almost reconciles me to
it, or at least makes me understand why she might have felt the way
she did. The presence of Maglor, who was there for the very beginning
of her story back in the depths of time is absolute genius. I love
Maglor the Wanderer stories and in this one he is remarkably
well-adjusted, seemingly enjoying his life among mortals as a
wandering bard, while still being aware of what he has lost.

He is an undemanding, understanding companion in Arwen's last days,
knowing better than anyone what it is to be divorced from all that you
love. She is his distant kin, of course, and in the end, when she is
weary of her existence but unable to die, he grants her the only gift
that he can.

This is gapfilling at its very finest.

Title: The Prisoner of Dol Guldur · Author: Soledad · Genres: Drama:
Final Partings · ID: 102
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 04:10:37
Spoilers!
Tolkien waffles a bit upon the creation of orcs, one theory being that
Morgoth took Elves and tortured and corrupted them. This is a horrific
fate, but an equally horrific one for a being who is one with nature
is to be imprisoned for countless eons in a dark dungeon. After
Galadriel casts down Dol Guldur, the Elves of Lorien and Mirkwood are
appalled to find that there is an Elf in the deepest pits, an Elf
believed dead for many years, Legolas' older brother Enadar.

Soledad has an extensive cast of original Elven characters, all of
whom have well-developed backstories, and they all have their parts to
play in Enadar's rescue and recuperation. As might be imagined, such a
trauma is not to be lightly put behind one-for a long time, the former
prisoner's life is feared for. Soledad's descriptions of Enadar's
medical difficulties are enough to elicit sympathy without being
excessively gory, and her depiction of his recovery is plausible.
Despite the fact that he will never be what he once was, he has
achieved his own hard-won wisdom and serenity by the end of the story,
as he watches the unfolding of the Fourth Age.

Title: Enticements · Author: annmarwalk · Genres: Drama: Featuring
Boromir or Faramir · ID: 266
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-15 04:24:39
People speculate endlessly about what Galadriel offered the various
members of the Fellowship when she entered their minds in Lothlorien.
This is Annmarwalk's take upon the temptation of Boromir. Some folks
even speculate that she actually set him up to succumb to the
blandishments of the Ring. That is not the case here, but certainly
Galadriel offers him the things he most greatly desires-a chance to
save Gondor, his father and brother reconciled, and his beloved
Theodred in Gondor, ready to fight by his side. Strangely enough, this
last proves to be the overplayed hand that enables him to win free of
Galadriel's sorcery, for a Theodred who would abandon his people to
fight and love with Boromir is not the prince Boromir knows and loves.
Galadriel seems almost sinister here, and Boromir's victory seems to
make this a good set-up for a Boromir Lives! AU. I love the
Boromir/Theodred pairing, and particularly enjoy Annmarwalk's ongoing
treatment of it. This is a worthy addition to her stories.

Title: The Shadow · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres: Drama: Ring War
Drabbles · ID: 25
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-15 06:30:57
Hi, Linda. This was a really good drabble. The other members of the
fellowship - The War of the Ring - could eventually get past the
mental and physical anguish of Sauron\\\'s evil, but for Frodo it was
different. The ring caught him up in it\\\'s desire, ruthlessness and
desire. He hated and loved Gollum, and probably felt the same way
about himself, as I\\\'m sure they both felt about the ring. So they
really were akin in this manner. The whole episode was not something
Frodo could get over easily, Perhap he never would. The ring took a
part of him he could never regain. A part of his very soul and being,
his shadow. He and Gollum both shared the power and secrets of that
ring. They both lost a part of themselves on that mountain. Gollum
long before Frodo, though. They wanted it with a passion beyond reason
and both would have kept it if they could. Frodo felt he couldn\\\'t
cross the sea and go to Valinor if he couldn\\\'t be whole again,
without this shadow over his head. Perhaps he felt tainted in a way.
But this journey to Mount Doom would never have been in vain, He saved
Middle Earth. This was really a wonderful tale, Linda. Pam

Title: The Night's Eye · Author: Vana Tuivana · Races: Men · ID: 343
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-15 09:25:04
This is a very good story; I really liked it. It's the kind that you
remember. This actually gave me goosebumps. A story has to be really
good to do that to me. This story says so very much. The idea of the
window-candle is very touching. It was tradition and honorable for the
wives to leave a candle for their men who were far away and to just
let them how terribly much they were missed and loved . It was like a
symbol of love. The woman who started this tradition, Eirien, never
gave up on Belegund, even though she really knew he was gone. So the
candle, I think. to her was a constant reminder that her love for him
would never die. And to always keep his spirit alive.

It was interesting that when the spirit of Halbered returned home and
visited with his son, it was like the candle had finally led him home.
Even if only temporarily to say goodbye to his family, And when the
candle fluttered as he left, it was kind of like he and the candle
were somehow connected and it signalled his finale goodbye. At that
moment, it also proved to his son that he really had been there. This
was a wonderful story, Vana

Title: In the Van · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres: Humor ·
ID: 72
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-15 10:49:42
Hey! This is a really funny story!I I can just see everyone in the
fellowship fighting and bickering in the van. Ok, there are seven of
them, so it could have been a mini-van; they would all have fit, do
you not think? So, they are on their way to the Black Gate, getting
lost even with a map. Well, Aragorn is more of an ear to the ground
sort of guy. Most guys do not seem to like maps, anyway. At least in
my world. They have a television to amuse themselves on the way there.
What fun! And it is not surprising that Gimli is interested in the
World Wrestling Federation, no surprise at all. How about the dead
guy, Boromir? Him too? And they are on on their way to the enemy
fortress with road signs leading the way. I am surprised they are not
permanently lost! That makes me think of a manipulation photograph
that I have seen on another site. It is a picture of a highway with a
sign at the side of the road. It shows Gandalf stating You Shall Not
Pass at a no-passing zone. I thought it was hilarious. So is this
story of yours It is very, very good, Branwyn

Title: Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast? · Author: viv · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 180
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-15 11:55:57
Rowr!! This is really a hilarious story, Viv. Very seductive and
wicked. In Angmar's mind at least, anyway. A kind of hot in an ew!
fellbeast sort of way. Angmar really had the hots for Eowyn here, huh?
It was her little girl determination, yeah right, and death as her
battlecry that really turned him on. Weaknesses? Yes, never try to
seduce or make eyes at a lady with a sword in a battle. Especially
when she is on the other side of the playing field. Men, or in this
case, a Nazgul, just cannot seem to resist the sweet charms of a
little woman. Eowyn? Yeah, right! Well, it was Angmar's undoing in the
end. I love the lines you have at the end of the story. ["Now die!"
his cleverest euphemism for 'take off the tin, sistah, and let's get
rowdy!'] I really love that line, it is cool! It is priceless, like
this story. I love parodies. You did a great job! I love it, Viv! Pam

Title: Gently Held · Author: viv · Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 6
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-15 13:11:34
Oh, this is such a lovely and beautiful story! To me it expresses the
deep love Arwen holds for Aragorn perfectly, Trying to explain exactly
why she love him so. I believe it is in part all of the things she
mentioned; but those things probably just endeared him to her more. I
believe his hands represented to her tne gentleness and patient love
he has for her. He would do anything for her and does. But it all
comes down to their unconditional love for each other. Those hands
could also represent the man Aragorn was and who he is and what he has
gone through. A very warm, gentle and patient person. Rough, gentle,
patient loving hands. Plus also the love-at-first-sight ; being
thrilled by another's touch. She adored him so! A wonderful story,
Viv! Pam

Title: Some Confusion in Accounts · Author: viv · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 276
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-15 14:06:07
This is really, you have a great sense of humor! Galadriel would be
intimidating to anyone, but that look she gave to Susan the Reporter
was scary. Probably almost enough to make you want to run off
screaming. And what a question to ask Galadriel, of all Elves! Ouch!
Susan should be afraid, very afraid. But Galadriel took it stride and
answered at her leisure. Susan\\\'s assessment of her, the Old Goat!,
was funny. It was naughty of Galadriel, but she does have a point. Why
would you want to wait 4000 years for for someone who you love and who
turns you on, and you want right now? That would be torture,
wouldn\\\'t it? I probably wouldn\\\'t want to wait, either. That is a
long, long time. But Galadriel is cool and patient; even with Susan
the Reporter. Galadriel could have been a real witch, but she was not.
She is more like a Glinda! And the description of Mr. Wise lolling
about in all his beauty, or something like that, that was funny. Thi
story was really good and that last line really catches you off guard.
Really great, Viv Pam

Title: NIGHT and FOREST: A Glimpse of Beauty · Author: Fiondil ·
Times: First Age and Prior · ID: 554
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-15 14:21:40
The descriptions of the horrors of Nan Dungortheb and its inhabitants
were evocative and very haunting - in fact, this might be the first
story I've read that really gave me a sense of its menace and what
Beren felt while traversing it.

Very convincing take on Beren, who for me often was a very shadowy
figure when trying to imagine him prior to his fateful meeting with
Luthíen.

What I appreciated most was how Fiondil described how Beren's anxiety
actually grew once he was in (relative) safety, which struck me as
very realistic.

The last line is truly lovely in its understatedness.

Title: Aftermaths and Consequences · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Fourth
Age and Beyond · ID: 268
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-15 14:34:25
Plausible and refreshingly unsentimental story about what two "common
people" might have had to fend with after so much destruction in the
War of the Ring - and which is so easy to forget in the celebration of
victory and all the good things that come with it.

The original characters are very well-drawn, and I like that despite
the almost mercenary nature of their bargain, there are still hints a
more personal bond might lie in the future. And especially that both
protagonists take pains to respect the other's choice and their pride
and dignity.

Title: An Ordinary Woman · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 32
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-15 16:18:00
I can honestly say that this story is my favorite among those written
by Dawn. Every time I read it, a somewhat funny thing occurs to me:
regardless of the fact that I am, and have always been, a devoted fan
of the Sindar of Doriath, I have never liked Lúthien. Not have I
really liked the story of Beren and Lúthien, even though I realize,
and I will be the first to admit, its importance and the fact that it
is one of the most poignant stories in canon.

That's why I really love "An Ordinary Woman" -- an unusual and a bit
controversial take on the beginning of the story of Beren and Luthien,
told by Finrod as he visited Menegroth and realized that the tales and
songs exaggerated, and the princess of Doriath was not exactly what
they depicted -- or rather what they wanted their readers or listeners
to believe in. Finrod is by the way my favorite character of this
piece. This story always has me laugh, and also marvel at how an
excellent and very talented writer, such as Dawn, can re-forge
something that has never been my favorite part of the Tolkien universe
into a most likable story that explains a lot in a most amusing,
thought-provoking, and also believable – if one wants to accept that –
way.

Great, truly great job!

Title: Seeing Stars · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 360
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-15 16:24:06
Engaging dialogue that very much fits the different characters and
their respective "situations". Lovely descriptions which are
interwoven smoothly into the narrative, and wonderful character
interaction.

Telling the story from the perspective of a more-than-slightly
inebriated Faramir was an inspired touch, and very effectively
executed. I've never been quite *this* drunk, but I recall being in
Faramir's shoes where you say to yourself that your head is still
clear, it's just your body saying and doing its own things, and where
all emotions, thoughts and sensations are very much hightened... I
also like how the plot thread weaves and swerves with Faramir's
somewhat loose grip on coherency at the moment.

To witness the normally restrained Faramir being so exuberant and
silly was at once hilarious and touching, all the more so because his
joy went beyond the birth of his son to also encompass the love for
his land and the joy at the New Age, as symbolised by the young White
Tree.

Title: Vodka · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 714
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-15 17:11:18
Spoilers!
This is so brilliantly wicked. It is provocative and biting and makes
writers like me who could have a tendency to fall into a kind of
smarmy hero worship of Maglor and Maedhros take a second look and
examine their conscience. It definitely should be considered a
classic. Everyone should read this who has waxed sentimental about
poor little Maglor, who couldn't hurt a fly, the good brother.

Despite my differences with you on interpretation, I want to give you
the top points for consistency and logic. Maglor's voice is simply
amazing here, as is that of Maedhros. It is just so, wicked and
original and such a departure from the fanfic clichés and standard
interpretation. I love it. It reminded me a lot in tone of Tehta's
masterpiece about Maedhros, ["Gathering the Pieces"], which is not to
say that it is in any way derivative or echoing the logic that led her
to her conclusions. Yours is totally unique. Meanwhile, it contains
enough subtlety and ambiguity to drive me back to read over it several
times.

I must indulge myself by mentioning a few of my favorite lines:

[" You, of all of us, still have that thin thread of honour. The rest
of us shook that off at Losgar."]

Or, or how about summarizing that transcendent bond of love and
friendship between Fingon and Maedhros to this:

["You know the boy only saved you because he fancies himself in love?"]"

Or, reducing the Noldolantë to:

["A pretence of regret."]

Oh. Ouch.

I still can't believe you did this in only 500 and some words.
Congratulations on a great short story.


Title: Don't Explain · Author: gwidhiel · Races: Elves: Incomplete ·
ID: 289
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-15 17:30:47
Spoilers!
"Don't Explain" takes the point-of-view of Indis, which is too often
ignored in Silmfic, to portray a complex realization of the events
that tore apart the House of Finwe after Galadriel's return at the end
of the Third Age. Indeed, few are truly "innocent" in this tale, which
takes a very fair approach to Finwe's marriage to Indis and the events
that come after and also approaches topics such as the Noldorin drive
to settle new lands and Galadriel's contemplation of her at times
contradictory impulses as a member of all three Eldarin peoples. In
particular, I find the friendship between Feanor and Findis and
Indis's conversation with Miriel to be compelling in a story that is,
as a whole, extremely thought-provoking. The gentle and reflective
tone perfectly suits the time period and characters that Gwidhiel
writes. I recommend this story, particularly to readers who enjoy
thoughtful stories about Tolkien's female characters.

Title: A Harmony In Autumn · Author: Oshun · Genres: Romance: Elven
Lands · ID: 49
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-15 18:42:57
Spoilers!
"A Harmony in Autumn" has a lot of what I have come to expect from
Oshun's stories, namely the Eldarin politics underlying the plot of
the story and giving it its shape, the lively dialogue, and the upbeat
outlook that lacks in many Silmfic stories. I particularly enjoyed the
idea of beloved friends at last discovering and acknowledging their
unrequited love for each other. The eroticism in the story is as
always a lovely addition to the story but not its sole reason for
existence: Oshun balances this very well.

The autumn setting--and, particularly, its metaphoric connection to
Noldorin history at this point--really enhances the story quite well.
A lovely, enjoyable read!

Title: The Nightingale · Author: Maeve Riannon · Times: First Age and
Prior · ID: 404
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-15 18:59:40
Maeve certainly has a talent for exploring the characters of Tolkien's
more mysterious women, first with her series about Miriel Serinde and
now with this piece about Melian the Maia. Her portrayal of Melian is
somewhat unexpected yet really worked for me, and she does a really
wonderful job of working Melian's foresight and otherworldliness into
the story in such a way that is chilling and sorrowful.

Msg# 9548

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 15, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 15, 2008 - 21:22:03 Topic ID# 9548
Title: Galdor: An Elf By Any Other Name.... · Author: Marta · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 475
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-15 19:30:37
Once one gets beyond the most obvious "facts" JRRT presents in his
writings, defining canon becomes largely speculative, based on notes
and information scattered between many (and sometimes obscure) sources
that must then be connected in such a way to create a character. I can
attest that this is a daunting task.

Marta's essay on Galdor is a fascinating case study about how an
author can take scattered and seemingly random facts and present a
coherent and canonically justifiable presentation of a character on
whom JRRT did not expound much. More interesting to me even than the
conclusions about Galdor himself is the insight Marta gives into her
thought processes and methodology in generating these conclusions. As
a Silmarillion author writing about characters who are mostly "minor"
compared to the dominating heroes of LotR, it is intriguing to see how
other authors approach problems such as scarce and ambiguous information.

Title: Starcrossed · Author: weepingnaiad · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 493
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-15 20:09:41
Spoilers!
This is one of those stories that I started reading and found myself
unable to stop till the end. Weeping Naiad has a very fluid and easy
style that makes this story quite the joy to read. The story follows
the life of Gil-galad from being sent to Cirdan in the Havens until
his death at the Last Alliance but, most importantly, traces his
blossoming from an awkward child into a capable king who gave his life
for his people, touching on his relationships (romantic and otherwise)
with Elves like Cirdan, Elrond, Fingon, and Galdor and how each shaped
the last king of the Noldor. The story is fast-paced and the
characters presented with insight and tenderness. Very nicely done!

Title: Reflections in the Smoke · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times:
Late Third Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 294
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-15 20:31:23
I never seem to find many stories focussing on Gandalf, who was ever
my favourite character in the tale. You caputure with a gentle and
sensitive touch this moment of change for the wizard. In the trilogy
he appears so strongly bound to Middle-earth that it's easy to forget
he is a Maia, and you've brought that aspect out beautifully, without
distorting him.

Title: Yule at Great Smials · Author: Dreamflower · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 566
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-15 21:05:55
I can only take Pippin-fluff in very small doses, but hey, this one
went down like a spoonful of sugar! Very funny how Pippin always gets
into trouble even at that age.

One has to feel sorry for the couple that are getting married - all
the unpleasant people are off to attend their wedding!

I was very amused at Merry's inspired definition of fireworks! And he
gives Estella his carrots! I bet that's how it all started... ;-)

And the last sentences was causing me a giggle-fit!

I don't quite understand how the weather could be "cold, but mild",
and I have an inkling that you meant to say "Cold, but dry".

Title: Waterloo · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Romance: Gondor · ID: 158
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-15 22:14:53
Spoilers!
Oh, wow. I'm glad I've found this.
Tolkien makes so easy of so many things, probably just because they do
not belong in an epic tale, but the rational reader does wonder.
Indeed, how many healers did they have, and how many wounded? Where
did the victorious Rohirrim sleep and where did they keep their
horses? You take care of all these things and at the same time give a
breathtakingly intense image of the city under siege. And yet, after
all that terror, you finish up with naked Eomer in the princess' bed,
and it neither jars nor irritates - admirable! And then in the second
chapter, what a masterful portrayal of flirtation and awakening love,
finishing with a delightful and mischievous scene of married
affection. Your rendition of Lothiriel is very convincing and you show
us a very vibrant Eomer. I enjoyed this story very, very much indeed!

BTW, I will just imagine that the blonde soldier whose hand Lothiriel
holds is my Deoric. ;-) And I can't really think of anything else to
say, so I just type this pointless sentence so that you can get some
more points from this review. Which actually makes it not pointless.
Oh, well, language is a wonderful thing. Thanks for a great story!

Title: Crumbling Walls · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Races: Elves:
Incomplete · ID: 662
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 00:29:40
Spoilers!
This seems an appropriate story for a night such as the one during
which I read it: with cold mist and rain outside the window, on the
cusp of winter, in the chill and the dark. As I read "Crumbling Walls"
and formulated some points in my mind that I wished to address in my
review, I found that the first word to come to mind to describe this
story--as much of Uli's writing--is "sensual." The story teems with
imagery that appeals to all of the senses, humble observances that
bring the story to life for me:

["The door behind her opened the sound of worn slippers sliding over
the marble floor made her smile."]

"Crumbling Walls" so far addresses the building of Gondolin and the
varying perceptions of it by those who would inhabit and lead it.
Glorfindel is interestingly portrayed as a scholar-turned-warrior,
convinced to devote his talents to the "important" pursuit of leading
an army; Ecthelion's enthusiasm for the new-built city seconds only
Turgon's. Uli defies many of the common characterizations of the
Gondolin lords to create a setting that feels fresh and new, no matter
the number of Gondolin stories I have read.

Pervading this story is a sense of melancholy. Despite the fact that
Gondolin is the pearl of Noldorin civilization in Beleriand, it is
nonetheless of replica of what has been forsaken, and time touches
Gondolin as it would not have Tirion, bringing the realization that
what joy can be found there is doomed to be fleeting.

I look forward to seeing the superbly written series completed.

Title: Flickers · Author: Meril · Times: Multi-Age: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 390
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-16 00:40:27
Spoilers!
In this drabble series, Meril presents us with fascinating snapshots
into the lives of Nerdanel and Feanor, and their blossoming and
withering love and marriage. The courtship drabbles subtly expose what
brings this couple together together and how, even at the start, what
eventually drives them apart is present. From the middle section, I
particularly loved the paired drabbles of ["Gatherers"] and
["Gatherers II"], in which each reflects on the disintegrating
relationship – the items each has left behind are brilliantly chosen
and beautifully described. And of the ending drabbles, where we see
what becomes of Nerdanel in the end, my favourite is her encounter
with Sam in ["Strength To Save"], which provides a new twist and new
insight on both of them. In short, this is a wonderful series, filled
with beautifully shaped treasures whose craftsmanship would surely
meet the approval of the two protagonists. Very well done!


Title: Burdens · Author: Meril · Genres: Drama: General Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 219
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-16 00:40:51
Spoilers!
Meril has drawn together a thought-provoking series of drabbles about
the tangible and intangible items that the Exiles carried with them on
their journey from Valinor. The brief pen-portraits of the original
characters whose thoughts are presented are each deftly, clearly and
effectively drawn, giving us a strong sense of their personalities and
concerns.

I found the most powerful of the drabbles to be the first, in which
the thoughts of her unnamed protagonist show clearly that is is the
unseen that weighs more heavily than the material goods they bear.
Other drabbles explore the loads imposed by the mixed allegiances, the
griefs and the confusion of the departure from Valinor, the kinslaying
at Alqualonde and the betrayal of the burning of the ships at Losgar.
Taken together, they paint a compelling and fascinating picture of the
Noldor. Bravissima!


Title: The Craft of the Elven Smith · Author: Larner · Times:
Multi-Age · ID: 1
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 00:48:43
Spoilers!
This story is so full of hope and promise of healing for so many
harmed by Melkor's acts in Arda Marred. I really liked the connections
Larner made between Nerdanel's crafts and the deeds in the Third Age.
It was fun to see history take shape, all touched by Nerdanel's hand.

Title: Five things that never happened to Nerdanel · Author: Meril ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 389
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-16 00:49:48
Spoilers!
Meril has crafted a clever series of drabbles postulating what might
have happened if events had taken a different turn and how Nerdanel
might have regarded them. Perhaps the most chilling is the one in
which she shares her husband's fare in exile, and the one that
provokes the reader to cry "if only!" is the final one in which the
Noldorin rebellion never happened and they remained in Valinor. A
simply fascinating series – well done!

Title: Blue · Author: red lasbelin · Races: Elves · ID: 563
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 00:56:09
An intriguing look at how Glorfindel ascended from a late-born son and
painter to a warrior and lord of his people, "Blue" gives a special
meaning to his lordship. A touching story ... nicely done!

Title: Lost Love · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 271
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 01:02:54
Spoilers!
Elven-mortal marriages are an understandable fascination in this
fandom, and Tanaqui, in this pair of drabbles, captures the
bittersweetness beautifully. The first one, especially, is lovely with
its classic motif of pursuit in the hunt only to find the "quarry" is
one of the fey; the language here is lovely and evocative. The second
drabble brings home the point that, despite the love that might grow
between them, Elves and Men were very different at this point in their
history. Beautiful and highly recommended!

Title: Cat's Paws · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains · ID: 58
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 01:33:01
Spoilers!
Pandemonium's stories set in Ost-in-Edhil are brilliant, and "Cat's
Paws" is a fitting--and strange!--addition to the series. What
continually strikes me about these stories and again here is the
convincing job that Pandemonium does of showing how many of the
Noldor--and Celebrimbor in particular--craved what Annatar had to
offer them, in particular his friendship and regard. Aulendil is
brilliant here as always, with his mix of condescension and derision
(and occasional scary outburst) tempered by a tenderness that makes
even me as a reader, who knows well how the story ends in canon, want
to believe in his goodness and that he will overcome his fate to be
all that he promises to be.

Pandemonium further uses her knowledge of biochemistry to depict Elven
"magic" as it has never been done before, constructing plausible
science-fiction explanations for what most of us dismiss as mere
magic. This can be delightful, as in the transformation of the
rose--["Citrine streaks began to snake through the red petals"]--or
disturbing, as with the cat's paws. It is always fun to read,
particularly for someone who, in another life, was a biopsychology
student.

And I must say that I love the commentary on the statue!

Title: Denial · Author: Oshun · Races: Elves: House of Finwe · ID: 80
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 01:46:55
Spoilers!
This is a charming story set before passion, betrayal, and the fate of
the Noldor had darkened the puppy love of Maedhros and Fingon. Even in
a single relatively short scene, the dynamics between Maedhros and
Maglor move the story at a lively pace. Maedhros (deliciously
described) and his horror at learning the transparency of his feelings
for his half-cousin calls to mind the high-school nightmare of having
a crush on my future husband and realizing that everyone knew it ...
and then the excitement of first love in hoping it might be realized.

The touches of humor in the story are a delight. In particular, the
last line did make me literally laugh out loud.

Title: Autumn · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 489
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-16 01:50:52
This is a very nice and warm feeling ficlet you have written here,
Linda. Yes, I think Aragorn was a little caught emotionally between
his love of the great outloors and its' pleasantries of freedom to
come and go as he pleased, and the love and warmth he shared with his
family. The autumn could represent his sadness and depression for not
having a place to belong or call home. As you said, he weighed the
advantages of both his previous life and his present one and was
happiest in the long run to just be with his family where he felt
warm, safe, happy and loved. He no longer had to run from who he was
and what he was.. Hiding in the shadows obscurely, with his cunning,
his ragged clothes and a name to hide behind. That also came with his
freedom. Now he had a loving family to be with. What could make him
feel safer and more loved than that? It is a wonderful story, Linda Pam

Title: The Flute · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring War ·
ID: 150
Reviewer: Pearl Took · 2008-11-16 02:01:49
This is a touching story, beautifully written by Golden. There is a
need for the Travellers who had to stay behind in Middle-earth to stay
connected with the Ringbearer after he departs into the West. Gandalf,
ever wise and sensitive to the needs of his small friends has provided
a means for this to happen.

A lovely bit of alternative universe wishful thinking. Thank you
Golden for the charming story!

Msg# 9549

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 16, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 16, 2008 - 21:53:07 Topic ID# 9549
Title: Rekindling · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 255
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-16 04:10:32
Spoilers!
An intriguing look at a possible reunion of Feanor and Nerdanel Ages
after their separation. The passion and renewed love is effectively
counterpointed by the tragic circumstances that have allowed it to
happen. Excellent characterisation of Nerdanel in particular.

Title: Saruman of Many Colours · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 439
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-16 04:22:53
Excellent drabble series! Tanaqui captures Saruman's pride,
intelligence, ruthlessness, petty greed, and the ignominy of his last,
desperate attempt at vengeance.

Title: No Man's Land · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 726
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-16 06:56:16
Spoilers!
Thank Goodness this did not happen!What a chilling prospect for we
would have no Middle-Earth to enjoy.

Title: Dark Dreams · Author: SlightlyTookish · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 550
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-16 06:59:54
Spoilers!
A warm hearted and comforting ficlet in which Pippin takes care of
Merry. I think it plausible that Merry,like Frodo could have suffered
on the anniversary of his wounding.The two Hobbits are lucky to have
one another.

Title: The Nag · Author: celticbard · Races: Men: Steward's Family ·
ID: 347
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-16 07:01:07
A touching story and well written story.I loved the way your portrayed
the brothers and the horses.

Title: Playing with Fire · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 21
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-16 11:00:15
This is a very good story, Linda. It is very true that the only way
that we can learn anything is by experience. The good as well as the
bad. Aragorn knew that very well, and that the only way Eldarion was
ever going to get over his fascination with fire (the fireplace) was
to find out what it was and how it felt to the touch. It was a little
cruel, but a lesson Aragorn knew was a very important one for his son.
I think it tore him up inside watching and letting his son get burned,
while he just stood by and let it happen. He was really frightened for
Eldarion; waiting to pounce on his son the moment it happened to
comfort him. Eldarion learned this lesson because of Aragorn's past
experiences; having experienced first hand what could and does happen
to an innocent young child who is so unaware of the dangers around
him. He actually saw a child die from playing with fire. Something
like that will stay with you. He had to hurt him to protect him. That
really would wrench you heart, would it not? Everyone has to be taught
these lessons for their own safety. Like the old saying, sometimes you
have to be cruel to be kind. That is the way Aragorn himself learned
to experience the potential dangers of fire, and you know that Aragorn
would rather die than let anything happen to his son. Yes, I do
believe that he had also played with fire that night. He was
experiencing the pain for himself through his son, knowing what his
son would be experiencing, and feeling horribly guilty about the
incident; but in his heart knowing he was doing the right thing for
his son. But why not a candle instead? It might not be quite as bad.
But unfortunately it was the fire and embers in the fireplace that he
was the most fascinated with. I expect he'll respect all fire after
that. Getting burned never helped me, though. I was little, I'd say
ow!, then do it again. I never did learn that lesson. I loved fire
then and I still do. I have hundreds of candles, lighters for incense,
I love campfires, fireplaces, the smell of woodsmoke, running my
fingers through flames. I guess that makes me a little fire fanatic,
huh? I love fire. Fortunately Aragorn does not! This is an absolutely
wonderful story, Linda! I loved it!

Title: The Pirate · Author: Sivan Shemesh · Genres: Alternate Universe
· ID: 674
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-16 11:41:37
Sivan, this is really a cute tale. I like the idea of Arwen telling
little Estel stories to their son. Like she says, he is very like his
father. Estel and the twins must have played pirates a lot if Aragorn
remembered it that well and played it with his son. I am sure that
playing with the wooden sword of his father was very special to
Eldarion and meant serious business. How sweet. Elledan and Elrohir
would probably do almost anything to amuse their little brother and
keep him out of trouble. And once again, Eldarion is like his father
and wants to play with the boats. I love little Estel (and Eldarion)
stories, they are so sweet. This is a really nice ficlet, Sivan!

Title: To Give Hope · Author: peredhil lover · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Elves and Men · ID: 456
Reviewer: Michelle · 2008-11-16 13:31:52
The events described in "To Give Hope" are one of those gaps Tolkien
left in his writing that I find most intriguing, but also very
difficult to portray in fanfiction. How would this have worked? How
did Gilraen end up in Rivendell? How, when and why was decided to
change Aragorn`s name? How would this transition happen? Peredhil
Lover gives a version of things, one that I found I could follow.
Gilraen`s plight is portrayed very vividly – she`s suddenly dependable
on these foreign beings she does not know. She tries to be polite, but
at the same time she desperately hopes this ordeal will be over soon
so that she can go home. When Elrond proposes to her she has to stay
in Rivendell throughout Aragorn`s entire childhood, her shock and
horror are very real because she realizes the life she`s led so far is
over and things will never be the same. While Elrond also plays a big
part in this story, it was Elladan who interested me the most –
especially with peredhil lover`s story "Day and Night" in mind.

Title: The Dwarves Treasure · Author: eiranae · Races: Dwarves · ID: 312
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-16 14:59:07
A very interesting premise and a nice cross-cultural concept,
wonderfully thought out and skilfully delivered. Here, an orphaned
elven child is found by dwarves, who take care of her, and in the
process she quickly finds the way into the heart of especially one of
them. Very good characterizations, I love the portrayals of both
Mireth and her dwarven foster father. A touching and very well written
story, Eiranae! Thank you!

Title: The Consuming Darkness · Author: Isil Elensar · Genres: Drama ·
ID: 467
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-16 18:28:42
An interesting and heart-rending take on what might have been
Tar--Miriel's last hours before she met her ultimate end in the waves
that swallowed Numenor. An excellent portrayal of the Queen, and a
very good piece of writing, Isil.

Title: To Be A King · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves · ID: 252
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 18:42:10
Spoilers!
I adore this story for the ideason Elven politics that it provokes.
Keiliss considers what the young High King Gil-galad would have faced
in uniting motley races and cultures under his standard at the end of
the First Age. Like many of his predecessors, he recognizes that unity
is the key to success against Morgoth, but achieving that unity is the
challenge.

In particular, I find fascinating the discussion of how the High
Kingship has changed over the years in Beleriand. Gil-galad recognizes
that it is something of an artifact better suited to life in Valinor,
as well as the fact that Turgon's reign rendered it meaningless. I
think that this is a thoughtful and logical assessment of the canon
such as is rarely seen in Silmfic.

Finally, Keiliss always writes with such a delightful style: never
overwrought yet graceful, very fitting to the works on which she is
commenting. Her style is such that the story does not suffer for the
rather abstract (versus plot-based) nature of its subject matter. Both
the author and the story come with my highest recommendations.

Title: Young Fëanáro Makes A Stone · Author: Oshun · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 77
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 18:52:33
Spoilers!
I am still, at times, amazed at the connectivity between Tolkien's
multiple works. "Young Feanaro Makes a Stone" explores one possible
connection between the infamous Elven smith Feanor and the Elessar of
the Third Age. A playful and fun story, it considers how Feanor
crafted this gemstone in his youth in Valinor as his first project in
gemcraft that we would see reach greater fruition with the invention
of Feanorian lamps and, of course, the Silmarils. Though touched with
foreboding moments--like Feanor's assertion, ["Steady, now, don't let
yourself care overly much for a Vala; you are naught but a petty piece
in their games"]--it remains largely a charming and funny story that
(if I were to take a humor piece too seriously) is an apt illustration
of how the earliest ages nonetheless connect to and influence the
more-familiar events of LotR.

Title: WAR: A Promise Before Dying · Author: Fiondil · Times:
Multi-Age · ID: 55
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 19:06:32
Spoilers!
As I finish reading this story, I can't help but think of the line in
the Ainulindale where Eru reminds Melkor that, no matter what happens,
Eru's intentions will be done. Likewise, at the crux of this story is
a promise left unfinished across the ages and then fulfilled in
perhaps the most roundabout way ... but still fulfilled. It is a
charming story that uses both sadness and humor to show the strength
of the bonds of friendship and loyalty.

Title: The Last Stand · Author: Rhapsody · Times: First Age and Prior
· ID: 82
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-16 19:22:22
It's hard to imagine a story about the Nirnaeth Arnoediad that could
be hopeful and uplifting, but "The Last Stand" is such a story. Amidst
the well-known tragedy of the Fifth Battle, Rhapsody also shows the
bravery and loyalty of all involved: Eldar, Sindar, Edain. I found
myself marveling at the bravery it must have taken for Beleg and
Mablung to march alone to war when they had the convenience of their
King's refusal to stay in safety at home. I come away from this story
with a renewed appreciation of some of the lesser-written First Age
heroes.

Title: As Close As · Author: Dana · Genres: Romance · ID: 88
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-16 20:44:18
This was written by Dana in response to my request during a Yule fic
exchange. She met my criteria exactly; noone else could have done it
better!

She perfectly interwove the feelings of tentativeness and shyness with
attraction and love. The subtle nuances of emotion that Estella is
feeling is very well done. I especially liked her handling of the
situation between Merry and Pippin; I am actually fond of the slash
pairing of Merry/Pippin when it is done properly, and I've liked
Dana's other writings pertaining to this pairing.

I also appreciated how she wove in some references to Frodo, and how
Merry is affected by his absence. Estella is portrayed as very warm
and sensitive to Merry's feelings in this regard.

I thoroughly enjoyed this tale that was written especially for me....
and thank you once again, a year later! :)

Title: Lock Out · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits · ID: 307
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-16 20:55:43
This is a very charming little story, written in response to one of
Marigold's challenges. Her use of the idiom in this story was very
original and clever, I thought. This story made me laugh outloud both
times that I read it!

Title: A Taste of Home · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 138
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-16 21:19:52
Spoilers!
This is a delightul look at the lives of two of our favourite hobbits
during Yule in Gondor in their twilight years. I ADORE stories about
Merry and Pippin when they are older, and this one took the 'cake'. It
had just the right amount of humour in it for a light-hearted tale.

I love how Merry makes Pippin run around looking for fruitcake, when
the cake was ready to be sent to them the whole time! Merry is quite
the prankster. Sort of reminds me of his younger cousin :)

Title: For What I Wait · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 125
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 21:59:32
This is just gorgeous, a heart-wrenching what-if positing that Feanor
survived his sons to endure the loss of each, and Maglor (unlike the
Feanor in the story, I'm just too used to the "new tongue") last of
all, crazed and grief-stricken on that beach. Dawn, is the song your
own original composition? It begs to be set to music. I thought
something especially interesting about this story was that Feanor,
seemingly humbled by sorrow, sidestepped the discussion of regret
(saying simply that he had some regrets, but then not wanting to talk
about it anymore), and didn't appear to accept the blame for what
happened to his sons, which he probably ought to do, all things
considered. That is exactly as I imagine Feanor would be, had he
lived. Also, his extraordinary hubris continues to astonish me: twice
he speaks of having given animus -- all by himself, mind -- to his
sons. Methinks Nerdanel and Eru both might take issue with that, but
it is so in-character for Feanor to think it. Even in grief, he's
completely full of himself. :) Excellent character portrait here, Dawn
Felagund.

Title: A Great Evil Unmade · Author: Linaewen · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 267
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:00:06
Hooray! The redemption of Boromir. Thank you for writing this AU. This
is the Boromir I would have expected and hoped for. That Tolkien
disagreed just made *his* work more complicated and tragic. *This* is
how the story should have gone.

Title: Portrait of a Queen · Author: Aruthir · Races: Men · ID: 338
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:00:30
Oooh, I like this. You have given us the progression, the reasons
*why* she was as she was. Incredible, in such a short space of words,
to give the whole life and motivations of a complicated woman, and yet
you've done a good job at it. I especially liked the voice of the new
king at the end, discussing her burgeoning madness in old age. Ha! If
only he'd known: she'd been seeing things and hearing voices for a
long long time. And I loved Ancalime having "terrible eyes." Gave me
the creeps in the best possible way.

Title: The Last Words · Author: Rhapsody · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 409
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:01:26
I really like how you've personified the Silmarils, as ["mistresses"]
and ["temptresses,"] because that's just what they were in the
marriage of Feanor and Nerdanel. Excellent insight, there. And how
nice to give the Ambarussa a special role in relation to their mother,
as well. They're often overlooked among the sons of Feanor, I think,
and I appreciate this little spotlight on them. The ending was
satisfying too, to have Mahtan come to take his little girl home.

Title: Apart · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: Gondor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 551
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:01:55
Awww. Their relationship is sort of at the core of Tolkien's world,
isn't it? I love how they both take responsbility for the fracture in
their friendship; they both imagine that it's all their fault. I've
seen a similar pattern in real-life friendships resolving issues; that
is, to get to the kiss-and-make-up stage, each person has to admit his
or her mistakes, at least privately. Apology is very wise. I almost
want to know what caused their temporary rift, but after reading it
again, I find that I really don't care. The important thing is that
they've made up.

Title: Footsteps in Time · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves · ID: 76
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:03:02
Your description of Melian could be the best I've ever read. I can
absolutely see her head tilting ["bird curious"] and her voice thin
and ["silvery."] And Elu with his bling! Ha! But what I really liked
most was that opening scene, between Galadriel and Celeborn: so tender
and intimate. But what was she waiting for in that scene? Argh.

Title: They Also Serve · Author: Marta · Times: Late Third Age · ID: 365
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:04:20
Homespun wisdom, indeed! That seems to be the pervading theme of this
piece. I love Arwen's voice here, so down-to-earth and *normal*. As
alarmingly lovely as she must have been, she was also a person, and
that comes through alive and warm here. This was also a tribute to
women throughout the ages, and considering that Tolkien completely
lost sight of this nuance, you've given commendation to the lesser
known heroes (heroines!) here. Thank you.

Title: DISGUISE: Emissaries · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor: Valar &
Maiar · ID: 56
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:05:30
Oh, I loved this! So often stories concerning the Valar and Maiar are
so ponderous they're pretty much unreadable. But I liked the ease of
this conversation, the clear characterizations of the Maiar as sort of
junior to the upper-ups, the Valar. But most especially enjoyed your
characterization of Radagast. Have you written other stories with him?
If not, I hope you will. You captured his innate joy vividly, and with
just a few words.

Msg# 9550

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 16, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 16, 2008 - 21:55:24 Topic ID# 9550
Title: Feelings of Superiority · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 362
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:06:14
Spoilers!
I felt like taking a shovel to that Numenorean daddy in the first
drabble. What a pompous, condescending, doof! Easy to see how the
Numenorean civilization fell, with folks like that infesting it. (I
suppose I'm not the first fan to ponder Numenor vis a vis Rome, eh?
Your drabble here recalled that comparison as well. Clearly.) And
drabble number three ... Annatar's light! *sperfle* Oh, nooooooes.
Poor little hoodwinked Men. And Elves likewise, eventually. Although
your elves seem much *nicer* than your Men. Very Tolkienesque. And I
really enjoyed the twist in the last drabble. I can see how one of the
Avari might perceive his choice in just such a way. Most of all, I
enjoyed the parallel theme running through all these drabbles: the
passing of wisdom, and misinformation and bigotry, from father to son.
Ain't it just like that. What excellent work you've done here.

Title: Loudwater · Author: Adaneth · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 63
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:07:14
Nice poetic rhythm here. I would have been tempted to format it as
poetry, because it certainly lends itself to that kind of reading. But
even as prose it works well enough. I especially liked how the river
considers Rivendell ["the haven of the Mariner's son."] Water making a
water connection, and all that. Lovely writing, all in all.

Title: The Captain's Mare · Author: The Lauderdale · Races: Villains ·
ID: 575
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:10:19
Not sure if I've ever read more appropriate use of expletives. This
orc narrative voice is beyond excellent. Feels like I'm sitting on
somebody's revolting grandpap orc's knee and he's telling me a story
of the wars and mud. And horses. I've read a bit about horses in
Tolkien fic, but this is extraordinary. This is complicated, this
relationship between the horse and the goblin. Complicated and filthy
and ... somehow not as horrible as it ought to be. This bit, though,
this is horrible: ["and her with her head down. It had been getting
lower as the days went on."] The darkest line of the story, and it
slides in at the end of a paragraph. In fact, this whole story is a
study in understatement. It rolls on in with all its filth and mess,
and by the end, you end up not minding the orc. Pitying him, even. ...
I wrote this review months ago, but even now as I re-read it, I can
visualize the story. I read so much in fic that such recall is rare.
Truly, this is a remarkable story with a visceral pull that lingers
with a reader.

Title: Love at First Sight · Author: Gwynnyd · Races: Elves: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 432
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:13:08
Though still subtle, each of their destinies shine through this piece.
Heartbreakingly so. At one moment, I see the splendor of Feanor, yet
uncorrupted by his pride; the pride of Finwe in his son, to exclusion
of all else; and the marginalization of Miriel, scooted to the shadows
even for this, Feanor's first glance at the Light. What a stark
tableau you've shown in such few words.

Title: The Ritual Disturbed · Author: Larner · Genres: Horror · ID: 68
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:13:28
Fascinating: a side of Tom Bombadil that doesn't get much play in
Tolkien's work. But Tolkien did hint at such hidden depths, and it's
interesting to see your interpretation here. Plus, of course, I just
love it when folks write about Old Tom. :)

Title: As Close As · Author: Dana · Genres: Romance · ID: 88
Reviewer: viv · 2008-11-16 22:15:03
Spoilers!
A nice twist on the whole newlywed honeymoon theme. I like how they
don't rail on how the decision to marry was made for them rather than
by them. Fighting it seems a cliche in fic, and in novels for that
matter. How refreshing it is to see characters who make the best with
what they're given. I think it says a lot for them. And this was a
nice simile: [gentle as a wing]. As much as I enjoy good R-rated het
romps, this particular fade-to-black was very satisfying. Finally, I'm
impressed with how subtly you paint the relationship among the hobbit
Walkers: neither slashy nor completely platonic, but somehow deeper
than either. Even more brilliant is that Estella *gets it*.

Title: Some Confusion in Accounts · Author: viv · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 276
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-17 00:47:04
Spoilers!
Modern reporter on the "star" beat gets to interview a former--very
former--A lister and her spouse, and ask a few tough questions. In the
process, the reporter discovers the secret for the longevity of the
couple's relationship. Snort!

Title: Drawing the Eye · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Late Third Age
· ID: 569
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-17 01:17:21
Concise descriptions that serve well to not only set the scene, but -
in the reference to Théodred - to create the appropriate somber mood.

The dialogue seems stilted at times, but the sincerity of Halbarad's
concern for Aragorn is conveyed clearly, as well as the depth of the
bond the two men share.

The story is a convincing take on a scene that Tolkien left mostly off
the page, while still preserving the mystery of the very private
struggle between Aragorn and Sauron.

Title: The Dooming of Small Hands · Author: Thundera Tiger · Times:
Late Third Age · ID: 639
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-17 01:19:07
The scene setting was lovely and evokes very well the peaceful shelter
Rivendell usually is, before it segued effectively into the
contrasting mood that opens up the actual story.

The interaction between the characters was described excellently. The
dialogue flows smoothly, and I found the strategic discussion between
Gandalf and Elrond very effective in summarising the state of things
in various parts of Middle-earth. It was interesting to see them hash
out their disagreement about Gandalf's suggestion prior to the actual
Council (particularly fascinating was Gandalf's observation in the
passage beginning with ["It seems to be the way of things..."]).

The severity of Gandalf's responsibility in his decision to encourage
Frodo in accepting the task is brought home very poignantly, and I was
moved by the obvious doubt, guilt and sorrow he felt for not being
able to be quite open with him.

Title: The Roses of Imloth Melui · Author: Aervir · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 435
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 02:53:09
Spoilers!
A moving behind the scenes look at those who worked in the Houses of
Healing during the Ring War.How horrific to imagine so much blood that
crimson roses lose their charm!

Title: Put Aside Your Doubt · Author: sophinisba solis · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Frodo and Faramir · ID: 187
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 03:39:45
A beautifully written look at Frodo and and Faramir's encounter and
the disturbing dreams Frodo has while within the caves.I like the way
the brothers are compared and contrasted. I think Faramir and Aragorn
are much alike.They may not seem all that friendly,but are men of
honour. A well written story.

Title: Forfeit · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 401
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 03:43:26
I loved this moving drabble. You capture the essence of Beregond
perfectly,a man of honour who only killed out of his love for his
Captain.It must have been a sore temptation for Beregond to
flee.Luckily,he is rewarded for doing the right thing in the end.

Title: Farewell · Author: agape4gondor · Genres: Drama: Final Partings
· ID: 127
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 03:49:00
A heartrending farewell for Boromir and Faramir .The two brothers are
prepared to argue over Boromir taking the quest, but as foresight
tells them he will never return they savour their last moments
together.This story should carry a tissue warning. I liked it very much.

Msg# 9551

MEFA Reviews for Monday, November 17, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 17, 2008 - 20:20:21 Topic ID# 9551
Title: Somewhere I Have Never Traveled · Author: Fiondil · Times:
Fourth Age and Beyond · ID: 578
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 03:57:36
Spoilers!
A unique and refreshing view of Arwen's departure.I liked the idea
that Eowyn would stay to meet her.Poor Arwen,though, this is not quite
the reception she hoped for.One wonders what did she expect in the
afterlife as Elves have a different destination to humans? I'm glad
her sacfrice was appreciated and she was reunited with
Aragorn.Beautifully written as one would expect from this talented writer.

Title: Dispelling the Fog · Author: fantasyfan · Races: Other Beings ·
ID: 642
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 04:05:48
I enjoyed this story very much as it discusses the oft debated
question about who exactly was Tom Bombadil? I like it that here Frod
is every bit as curious as the average reader! Not that the Hobbit
gets a proper answer,though!

Title: Call of the Wild · Author: annmarwalk · Genres: Romance:
Drabbles · ID: 94
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-17 05:36:34
Spoilers!
This powerful drabble nicely characterizes Morwen Steelsheen as she
views Thengel, the current king of Rohan, for the first time. So vivid
is the author's portrayal of Morwen's emotions that we feel as
attracted to Thengel as Morwen is.

Title: The Prisoner of Time · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 313
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-17 05:52:28
Spoilers!
In "The Prisoner of Time" Raksha tackles a popular AU theme, what if
Denethor had survived the siege of Minas Tirith and lived to surrender
his stewardship to the man who had been the rival of his youth. The
result is an extremely bleak short fic, with excellently done Denethor
angst to make fans of the genre happy. Denethor appears more bitter
than mad, more ruminating than calculating. In the end, the former
Steward's misery is chilling, but you feel sorry for himself despite
it all.



Title: Surprise Inspection · Author: AmandaK · Genres: Humor: Gondor ·
ID: 207
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-17 06:22:01
Spoilers!
A sassy, yet very realistic bit of fun, in which Captain General
Boromir decides to spring a surprise inspection on the garrison
protecting the ruins of Osgiliath--and catches the whole crew skinny
dipping on the bristling hot day. Although "Surprise Inspection" has
perfectly fluffy intentions, what works best for me in this story is
its depiction of life in a Medieval army base. Boromir comes across as
a business-like and capable commander, sympathetic to and
understanding of the soldiers that he leads.

Title: Lost · Author: Claudia · Genres: Adventure · ID: 226
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 06:22:20
A fascinating "what if "?story that explores how Frodo might feel if
he lost the Ring.Most interesting to me were the reactions of his
companions. I enjoyed this skilfully told tale very much.

Title: Loving a Book Lover · Author: Avon · Genres: Romance: Drabbles
· ID: 721
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-17 07:55:49
Very nice. Subtle, amusing and suggestive. Well done!

Title: My Precious · Author: SheBit · Genres: Romance: Drabbles · ID: 14
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-17 08:03:37
The author certainly met her goal: we get into the head of the PoV
character with a completeness that leaves me feeling slimed. I need to
read a light, fluffy drabble as a palate-cleanser, quick!

His obsessiveness towards the object of his desire is drawn out well,
shedding light on his horrible betrayal. The contrast between his
countrymen and his "shiny" is a nice touch, adding some depth and
meaning to how he could have become so twistedly in love. Wonderful
choice of title! That all by itself throws added layers into this drabble.

Title: Home is where the heart is · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres:
Romance: Drabbles · ID: 505
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-17 08:04:05
A sweet and beautiful drabble! Her longing for what she knew is
palpable, and the author brings out some familiar and likely images
that give us a connection to what Arwen is missing. No doubt it will
not be the last time she experiences these feelings.

Then (like all Aragorn fans *g*) she's swept away and reminded of why
she is giving up so much, both tangible things and deeper, more
personal ones. ["Home is where the heart is"], indeed. Lovely language
makes this work feel very intimate and brings Arwen close to the reader.

Title: Loving a Book Lover · Author: Avon · Genres: Romance: Drabbles
· ID: 721
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-17 08:04:26
I had to laugh out loud at the beginning of this drabble. Oh, yes, I
can certainly completely empathize with Faramir; I think that
connection we voracious book-lovers immediately feel is one of this
work's most powerful attractions for me.

The other attraction, of course, is Eowyn's eventual success. Never
spelled out, every individual with an imagination can immediately call
up the tactic *they'd* like to see tried as a distraction! Delightful
and funny, this is a wonderful glimpse into Faramir and Eowyn's
relationship.

Title: Expert Treasure Hunter · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 447
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-17 08:06:00
Tanaqui really nails Smaug's perspective in this drabble. It's a bit
of a different take from the usual view of dragons; here we see just
how their well-known discrimination between fine and poor-quality
treasure is accomplished. It's both humorous and plausible; and since
it is Smaug talking, the accompanying destruction and desolation is
oh-so-matter-of-factly mentioned - just another day of rearranging the
furniture. :)

The author's wonderfully descriptive writing conveys Smaug's
characteristics, methodology and power very clearly. His inner
thoughts are particularly delightful.

Title: Orc Dreams · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Villains: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 448
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-17 08:06:23
I'm not sure if it's a compliment or not, but Tanaqui does capture the
orc PoV quite well. I'd never even noticed the referenced quote
before, yet the author spins it into a clever take on orc astrology! I
love the names she's come up with for the old familiar constellations,
and the ending: no matter what little prescience may be dancing
around, orcs will be orcs. Somehow, it's reassuring to know that the
enemy also has nightmares...

Title: ...and the sound of a battered heart, beating · Author:
Lindelea · Genres: Drama: Ring War Drabbles · ID: 690
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-17 08:06:48
I think this is almost a special art form, that nearly an entire
drabbled scene can be dialogue - and very excellent dialogue it is,
too. The speech patterns capture not just Hobbity characteristics but
the emotions of the characters as well, with nary a facial or voice
description in sight.

Brilliant last line; yes, that's the wisdom of this particular Hobbit
and that particular wizard. And something all of us can carry off and
keep for ourselves.

Title: Now the Green Blade Riseth · Author: annmarwalk · Genres:
Drama: Ring War Drabbles · ID: 37
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-17 08:07:31
The dialect and phrasing are exceptionally well done; I can see this
being the Gaffer exactly. His view of his son comes through clearly,
too, in one brief reference. But my favorite is how this old, cranky
and suspicious plant-lover ends up viewing the new Party Tree. I can
see it being the same reaction among all those stout-hearted Hobbits
of the Shire: a resurrection of hope for an entire community. Sam's
lovely, lovely, deep and homespun wisdom...

Title: Primum Non Nocere (First, Do No Harm) · Author: febobe ·
Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort · ID: 628
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 09:12:31
A charming take on what might happen should Eowyn be called upon to
tend Frodo.Sam's reactions are very realistic.I personally don't see
Eowyn as a 'cuddly' type but still an enjoyable story.

Title: Even Legends Fade · Author: Star In Ruin · Races: Elves · ID: 555
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-17 09:25:19
Spoilers!
A touching and unusual story on a well known theme,the death of
Aragorn, but from the viewpoint of an ordinary guard. Although,I'm not
certain Legolas was Aragorn's very best friend,his grief ,together
with Arwen's is movingly portrayed.I'm pleased I found this story
through the MEFA awards as the writer is very talented.

Title: The Last Words · Author: Rhapsody · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 409
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-17 09:31:23
A wonderfully written, compelling and heart-breaking portrayal of
Nerdanel. Rhapsody conveyed the pain of Nerdanel's lost love and the
power that the Silmarils had over her husband. This is a very poignant
take on the thoughts, and words, of the woman who felt robbed of her
husband's love, which he seemed have turned to his own creations, and
yet she still loved him – and that made the estrangement of Fëanor and
Nerdanel more tragic.

Brilliantly done!

Title: Aulë the Smith · Author: Oshun · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character
Studies · ID: 530
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-17 11:38:17
A well constructed, informative and very interesting essay that
presents the Smith of the Valar – Aule. I enjoyed reading this
portrayal not only because Oshun provides a lot of information and
gives us a deep insight into the character she writes about, but also
because the essay is far from falling into a short, dry note such as
those we can find in encyclopedias. Her knowledge and attachment to
the subject matter can be clearly seen in the writing, and that is
what I like the most. But that does not come as a surprise – Oshun's
knowledge and devotion for the Tolkien universe shine through all her
stories.

It is also worth pointing out that each and every essay that she
monthly writes for the Silmarillion Writers' Guild archive is a treat
to read, and worth my sincere recommendation. Thanks, Oshun! Great job!

Title: The Least of Rings · Author: Marta · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Drabbles · ID: 621
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-17 16:04:03
Marta, this is very good. I love both drabbles and angst. I was a
little confused about a couple of things, though. Boromir had stolen
the Ring. Was Frodo fighting with him to try and get it back? Did
Boromir kill Frodo or just decide not to go with him? Or not take him
along? It is late, I am tired. Perhaps what happened here did not
matter. Boromir did have the Ring and would have planned on taking it
to Gondor to try and use it to save Gondor from Sauron and the hordes
from Morder. But it never would have worked that way, like he had
wanted it to, because the Ring had already taken him. For how else
could he exchange his marriage ring for the One Ring and convince
himself that that would be all right with his late wife? No, she would
not have understood. So who knows what would happen? We would have
Boromir as evil ruler of Middle Earth? Well that could be interesting,
do you not think? I have never read a story like that. But there
probably are a few out there. A new plot bunny? You say quite a lot in
just a few sentences. I like that! I really liked this !

Title: Fait Accompli · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Mystery · ID: 381
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-17 17:53:54
I don't exactly know where to start with this review. This is a
well-crafted, dark and fascinating story. It has a mystery, which is
only gradually revealed to be a mystery (for me at least—I though I
knew what was going on and it turned out that I had not a clue). The
ending is one I absolutely did not see coming, although I have been
privy to a lot of discussions of writing with the writer and know
something about his taste. I also think that one could discuss what
the ending means and argue about it. IgnobleBard loves to explore the
character of Legolas. In this case, he takes off in a totally, new for
him, direction. It is a serious psychological study in that it
examines one's desire to do the right thing and yet still make
decisions that may have disastrous effects. It is also about the quest
for self-knowledge and the difficulty of overcoming pride to
understand one's own motivations.

I am not one to usually be attracted to stories which deal with lack
of consent in any detail, much less torture, but my choices in reading
are based upon the premise of never-say-never. This story is an
excellent one, where overcoming by usual taste and taking a look was
worth it. It is not written in a titillating or over-the-top manner,
but is nonetheless convincing and disturbing. It also is one of the
longer stories IgnobleBard has written and causes me to want to urge
him that he should do that more often (he actually has in the past
period and I hope he will continue to do so).


Title: Home is where the heart is · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres:
Romance: Drabbles · ID: 505
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-17 18:34:38
A beautiful and utterly romantic (in the best way possible) drabble. I
love the imagery -- it is a vivid scene, and a very nice insight into
Arwen's thoughts. She realizes -- with a hint of bitterness -- that
her home is no longer Imladris, but the White City, where her love for
Aragorn has led her to.

Lovely drabble, Linda. I think it is safe to say that every fan of
Aragorn smiles warmly while reading it.

Title: Black is the Color of My True Love's Hair · Author: Marta ·
Genres: Romance: Gondor · ID: 405
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-17 18:41:24
Spoilers!
This story, standing on its own, is probably my absolute favorite of
all of your stories. I have always found Denethor a fascinating and
complex character. I have also been drawn to examine him in the
context of comparing him to Aragorn. The way he is written in canon
impels me to do so. The manner in which you described his attraction,
more obsession, with Aragorn, is psychologically convincing, dark, and
utterly mesmerizing, and can be made to fit within my conception of
both of them. The language and imagery is fantastic. This is a
gorgeous story. I'm scoring you here for a fabulous story. I have read
it several times and recommended it widely (although with reservations
and one piece of advice—please read the story text all the way through
before reading the notes on every page and getting discouraged).

On that last point, I seriously thought about not mentioning it,
especially since this is a subject that is controversial: the question
of the author's notes at the top of the individual chapters and the
footnotes within each chapter really detracted from the work for me. I
found them distracting in the extreme.

I cut and pasted the body of the story on my harddrive, deleting
those, and found the story to be perfect, a classic in the genre, with
them so-so. You had already created an author's notes' chapter,
longish for a story of that length. I would have appreciated it, if
you felt you absolutely had to make those further points upon each
chapter that you had posted them within that author's notes' chapter.
I would have read them there and probably appreciated them.
Personally, I do read author's notes chapters—virtually always—and
don't even mind lengthy notes at the beginning of an initial chapter.
I cannot think of a case where I have skipped them. I almost always
write author's notes myself, but I try to place them so the reader can
read them or not as a choice. I wrote one humor story myself, which
began with author's notes almost as long as the story, in fact. I also
noticed on this story, that some reader's commented that they
appreciated your notes. Like everyone else, I can read less than
amazing fanfic stories about my favorite characters and enjoy them.
But, I tend to judge excellent stories like this by my standards for
original fiction. That in and of itself is controversial, but I think
it should be flattering.


Title: Epiphany · Author: Larner · Races: Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 293
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-17 19:06:42
A very poignant drabble. It must have been a somewhat odd feeling for
an immortal being to realize that time indeed passed swiftly. Larner
conveyed Elladan's and Elrohir's realization, as they watched their
foster brother -- no longer a boy, but the King of Gondor -- in a very
gentle and thought-provoking way. Well crafted!

Title: The Prisoner of Time · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 313
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-17 21:19:28
This was a very well-written and dramatic piece of fanfiction. I loved
to read it as an AU and a psychological exploration of what could have
been, but I'm very, very glad it's still an AU. I wouldn't have minded
Denethor surviving the war (he would have been of course affected by
his long time in contact with the Palantir...) but I can't stand the
idea of Faramir dying because of his father's pride.

Your characterization was, as always, extremely good. Even in an AU,
Denethor is very much the character we know from the book. I think
that book!Denethor would have been able to hold the defences of the
City, that's why I absolutely loved your description: ["He had led the
defenses on the south wall, fighting in the front until the
Morgul-spawn retreated, caught between the hammer of the captains of
the West who scoured the Pelennor and the anvil of Minas Tirith itself."]

I also loved your indirect description of the celebrations in the city
- ["The City (...) now throws open her broken gates to Isildur's
upstart heir like a giddy strumpet opening perfumed knees."] - a very
expressive simile and feminine personification of Minas Tirith... and
again, this belongs to your excellent writing! :)

All in all, beautifully-written fic, but thank God it's just an AU!

Title: Undivided · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Elves: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 46
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-17 21:24:20
Actually, this was the first fic I read where the twins are not just
part of the background or a couple of mindless, imature Elves who do
nothing but play pranks on others... Your story was so different from
those, that I start to think more about these two...

First of all, I loved your characterization of the two - of course,
they're not individuals, but they have at least some individual
identity - their reactios are very similar, but not identical. It's
great that you kept this balance. The description of pain was very
vivid as well, and your writing skills helped you create some palpably
dramatic scenes... great drabble!

Msg# 9552

MEFA Reviews for Monday, November 17, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 17, 2008 - 20:22:54 Topic ID# 9552
Title: Healing · Author: Bodkin · Races: Elves · ID: 419
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 21:27:54
Spoilers!
It's so seldom that anyone takes a clear-eyed look at the world after
the War and its effect on the elves who remained behind for a season.
The reasons given here for their choice make absolute sense, as does
the final retreat into the West. I have always wondered at Arwen's
decision to travel to Lorien after Aragorn passed, and the explanation
here makes a good deal of sense. It certainly answers my own questions
on that score.

I loved Glorfindel's part in this, his voice was very true, his love
of life and sense of responsibility shine clearly. The sense of the
few remaining elves being almost under siege by a silent world that no
longer has a connection to them is well-captured and achingly sad. I
liked the final brief conversation between Elladan and Elrohir, I
think it might well have happened like this in the end. And Galadriel
was right; Celeborn needed to know how it would be, he needed to have
no doubts or longing to return to cloud their reunion.

Lovely, lovely work.


Title: Unwilling · Author: Elena Tiriel · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 64
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 21:30:13
Very evocative and haunting. Paradise lost indeed. I like the way it
starts off slowly and then speeds up, intensifies, when Men become
part of the world. Lovely last line, too.

Title: The Blessing of the Waters · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Romance: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 61
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-17 21:31:34
So sad and so beautiful in the same time... You managed to capture
Elrond's voice very well, and the dynamics between him and his wife
Cerlebrian is very well portrayed.

The change in tone that comes with the last paragraph has a great
twist, even if I could somehow anticipate it from the undertones of
melancholy that were also present in the first part...

I also loved the "water" motif... Yes, Elrond was very wise and the
symbolism around him wouldn't have escaped him...

And, as always, beautiful writing! :)

Title: National Treasure · Author: Baranduin · Times: Modern Times ·
ID: 201
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 21:36:19
I was only about four or five paragraphs into this when I started
thinking it would make a really stunning book. I have always loved
stories where archeological digs have turned up strange, unknown
civilizations, and the reference to the Templars is something always
likely to catch my attention. I loved the little nods to descriptions
in [Lord of the Rings], which were just obvious enough to make me
smile without being overdone. The description of the location and how
they reached it was very atmospheric, too. The setting of the Scottish
highlands felt absolutely right, as well.

The couple come across as really likeable people, and I am left
wondering if they will ever make the association between their current
bedside book and the runes they found at the site or might discover in
the recoverable contents of the book. And the quote at the end from
said book was perfectly chosen.

Great idea, well executed. My only complaint with this story is that
it wasn't long enough.


Title: Hammer · Author: Aranel Took · Races: Dwarves: Drabbles · ID: 468
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 21:38:00
Ha! Nothing to choose between any of them, Men, Elves, Dwarves (and
probably Orcs, Ents, Trolls…) The male of the species always comes
along with an utterly cringeworthy pick up line, and the female thinks
about it, smiles, and decides that, yes, he's cute, may as well let
him get away with it.

Nice touch, the mention of her beard.

Title: The Captain's New Clothes · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 421
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-17 21:40:09
This story is an example of how a bad hint can trigger a very good
story... The drawing that inspired you is... well, let's call it "not
the best of Tolkien-inspired artwork", but you managed to build quite
lovely around it...

I've seen the picture before and thought it ridiculous: not only are
the poor Hobbits horribly painted, but Robin-Hood!Faramir is so
outlandish as well!

But your story was a very amusing (and surprisingly realistic!)
explanation to that... :) The well-meaning aunt was a good addition,
and of course a good idea of the reason behind Faramir's bizarre attire...

I also loved the glimpse in Faramir's life as a Captain of Rangers! :)
Characterization was great, and wrting, as always, impeccable! :)

Title: Gone Amiss · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama: Ring War
Drabbles · ID: 44
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-17 21:43:34
This in indeed one of the saddest moments for the Fellowship of the
ring, and you've captured it very well - dramatic and powerful and sad.

Great writing (I'll keep repeating that because I trully appreciate
the style of a piece of literature, even if it's "just" fanfiction!)
and I loved your conciseness!

Title: The Making of Werewolves · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races:
Villains · ID: 42
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 21:48:09
Spoilers!
For me, this is the perfect gapfiller, because not only does it flesh
out the details of Sauron's rule on the Isle of Werewolves and explain
how his servants were created, but it does so in a way that fits
seamlessly into canon, adding an extra dimension to an already dark
story. The language feels Silm-accurate, and the concepts seem
absolutely authentic. The atmosphere of casual cruelty paints a
wonderful picture, and tells us more about Sauron himself than the
title would suggest.

.

Title: Seeing Stars · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 360
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-17 21:48:31
Fabulous!!! And even if he drank a little too much, Farramir is shtill
the wonderful Shteward we all wove!! :))

I loved every bit of it, it seems so... beliavable, first of all.
Everything: from the joyful customs to Faramir getting drunk to
Aragorn's fatherly affection! I really appreciate the historical
references - I'm sure by now you're aware I'm a fan of scholar!Faramir
above all... :) The devotion to Gondor and the King, and the
bittersweet memory of Boromir fit very well in this story. And I went
"awwww" again when I read this line: ["Eowyn thinks already of his
first sword, but I would fain see those hands open a book, or hold a
quill."]

I'm sure Faramir was an amazing father - being deprived of affection
himself, I know he would have strived to make time for his family...
And already in this early stage of his fatherhood he is such a dear!

But it was not nice of you to have Aragorn take him home before seeing
Eowyn and the baby again... He would have loved to, and I doubt Eowyn
would have minded - she would be the first to laugh at his state of
alcoholic merriment.. :)

In conclusion, a great fic about a great character... Atmosphere,
characterization, writting, they all make this a wonderful story!


Title: The Conscience of the King · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor · ID: 649
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-17 22:00:04
Wow, what a great little story!

I admit I hadn't read this before coming here, and it was a pleasant
surprize for me indeed. I rarely make more than a small smile while
reading fanfiction (even humor), but your story literally made me
laugh out loud!

First of all, I loved your original technique. The overlapping of the
inner world of Eomer's feelings and the exterior one was well done,
and I admire how well you managed to capture Eomer's voice. An A+ from
me for subtle characterization and for being able to show all his
sometimes contradictory feelings: his love and caring for Eowyn
(almost overprotecting sometimes), his slight mistrust in Faramir (I'm
sure that disappeared after a while) and finally his conclusion that
this is the way it shoul be and that being Faramir's wife would not
mean that Eowyn will cease to be his dear little sister...

Very, very good psychological analysis and great use of the
"Conscience" voice... And a plus for creating atmosphere as well... :)

Title: Reflections in the Smoke · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times:
Late Third Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 294
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 22:07:08
Spoilers!
I suppose that must have been a strange feeling, having nothing left
to do, nowhere left that he absolutely had to be, the war over, the
task completed. Nice sense of him sitting a little apart from all the
noise and revelry of a victorious army, smoking his pipe and thinking
his thoughts. I wonder though if he won't find life in the West just a
little – tame after all this urgency and responsibility?

It also reminded me of what a really bad error in judgment Sauron had
made in placing so much of his personal power into the One. He might
well have termed himself [Sauron the Fool] in his last moments, too.

Nice little window on Gandalf/Olórin's thoughts.


Title: Possessing the greatest powers · Author: Tanaqui · Times:
Multi-Age: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 387
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 22:11:33
The beginning with Celebrimbor was nicely explained. Of the
Ringbearers' tales, I think I liked Galadriel's with the Ring of Water
best myself, although Elrond's response at the lifting of the burden
and his realization of what that sense of lightness meant made me
smile with him. Very nice look at the response of each Ringbearer to
both their situation and the passing of the One. Unusual and
well-conceived.

Title: Lock Out · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits · ID: 307
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-17 22:14:29
A very amusing comedy of errors!

Title: Broken Star · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 54
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 22:27:34
Spoilers!
I had to check back at the top when I had finished reading this, but
yes, it is a double drabble. I felt as though I had read a far longer
piece, which I suppose is proof of what a very good double drabble
this is. I am very glad your brain did not explode/implode/crawl into
a dark corner and whimper.

There is such an air of inevitability about this scene, especially
once the name 'Sauron' is uttered, proving that words do indeed have
power. Celebrimbor does what he has to do, Sauron also has no other
real choices open to him beyond the primitively effective [glowing hot
iron rod]. I suspect you could have reduced this down to a true
drabble had the need been there, but it would not have been half as
evocative and I doubt I would now have this very clear picture in my
head of a courtyard filled with dark invaders, of the nearby brazier,
and the bound captive. So much detail contained and implied in so few
words.



Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 22:36:41
Spoilers!
I liked this very much. Particularly enjoyed the way the author uses
the device of the wind to carry the omen of Eowyn's birth to both the
Lord of the Nazgul and to Glorfindel, united as they are by a prophecy
that has just drawn breath. I like the part about her father finding
that he can [only see the snapping of banners in the wind and hear
only the clatter of swords] when he tries to picture his newborn
daughter as a grown woman. That line seems to me the heart of this
short piece, and sums up her future fame in very few words.

Title: A Sea Visit · Author: Elen Kortirion · Genres: Humor: Drabbles
· ID: 96
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 22:44:10
Having lived most of my life close to the sea, the title promised I
would enjoy this - and sure enough I did. It left me with a broad
smile on my face. I could smell the sea, almost feel the water, and
was grinning along with the elves even before I knew the joke. I'm
sure Aragorn had a great time getting to know his new friend.

Title: A Great Cause for Concern · Author: Alassante · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Post-Ring War · ID: 682
Reviewer: Sivan Shemesh · 2008-11-17 22:54:28
I enjoy it... poor Legolas.

Title: Galdor: An Elf By Any Other Name.... · Author: Marta · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 475
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-17 22:56:06
Spoilers!
That was really very interesting. Unlike the writer my first love is
for the Elves, so this was very much aimed at my sphere of interest.
There were a couple of points I would have found interesting to debate
a little perhaps, but all in all this was a very well-considered
examination of what were in some cases very tiny clues and hints that
lead to surprisingly clear and logical conclusions. I rather like the
idea of Galdor of the Havens being the same as Galdor of Gondolin. It
would certainly explain Cirdan's trust in him, both as an emissary
able to take decisions on his account, and as someone who would
survive a rather long journey in perilous times.

Thought provoking.


Title: Somewhere I Have Never Traveled · Author: Fiondil · Times:
Fourth Age and Beyond · ID: 578
Reviewer: MithLuin · 2008-11-18 00:13:56
This story has so many different facets to it - grief and solemnity,
jokes and lightheartedness, hobbits and Valar, the sisterhood of
queens. I love how Arwen seems so sure of her choice, but is easily
thrown for a moment when things do not go quite as she expected.
Having her brothers there, and having even Sam Gamgee comment on it
really makes this one, brief, story a lovely epilogue to The Lord of
the Rings. Thank you so much for writing it!

Title: Bibliophile · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Romance: Drabbles ·
ID: 370
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 00:31:22
Spoilers!
There are so many facets to touch on with this drabble; I'll just set
to working through them in the order that they occur to me when
reading (and rereading)...

The first is simply the lovely image of an intelligent and literate
Eowyn, sitting and reading. I have to wonder why she chose the book
she did, too. Was it simply that the Rohirrim didn't have knowledge of
that House of Hurin's ancient tragedy? (I note that Imhiriel's brief
commentary on Tolkien's most messed-up family's dynamics, ["It's...
interesting."], impeccably brings the whole screwy ordeal to my mind.)
Was it that this House shared its title with another, that had its own
share of more recent (and close to the heart) tragic history? Or was
she trying to learn more about the mother that Faramir loved and
hardly knew, and whose mantle Eowyn now wore?

Possibly a bit of it all; at any rate, Eowyn is embarrassed when
Faramir asks her about the book. It's a sign of his respect for her
when he asks her opinion; I think it's a sign of their closeness that
she felt at ease borrowing a likely-treasured remembrance of his mother.

What ends the discussion is a particular sign of closeness *g*,
particularly when Faramir-the-scholar doesn't even notice that the
book plunks down to the floor...

This is a charming and I think deeper-than-it-looks drabble,
encompassing a lot of territory in a brief span of words.

Title: Broken Star · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 54
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 00:32:09
This is really an excellent double-drabble that packs a huge punch for
its size. It's only a glimpse, one quick scene; nonetheless,
pandemonium deftly sets forth not only the current event, but brings
out the history between the two protagonists and leaves the future
playing out in our imaginations.

I think I like best that Sauron is given his full potential as a
multi-dimensional character here; the ["...vestige of myself..."] line
is all we need to realize it. Celebrimbor's bravery is on full
display, too. Though nothing is graphic, the author's careful
descriptions leave me with no doubt of the level of horrors he has and
will endure.

Sort of an aside: Reading the title, I had first a flashback of
Feanor's heraldic device being in a fire/sun/star style, and second
that there was a "Star of Feanor" symbol carved into the west gate of
Moria. I don't know if there was any intentional connection, but that
combined with the terrible line in UT, that Sauron went forth
["bearing as a banner Celebrimbor's body hung upon a pole"], somehow
made all this even more deeply painful and poignant - the symbolic
final shattering of Feanor's House linked to the use of his grandson's
broken body as Sauron's device. At any rate, even if my rambling
doesn't make sense: great title. :)

Title: The Shadow · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres: Drama: Ring War
Drabbles · ID: 25
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 00:32:40
Spoilers!
["The Shadow"] is wonderfully powerful and very moving. I can feel
Frodo's pain and despair fresh and clear again, as from the books. The
idea of Smeagol still haunting him - shadowing him like he did during
the long, hard toil to Mt. Doom - is insightful and unique for me.

I'm reminded of the conversations between Smeagol and his alter-ego
Gollum, and think it's not far-fetched that, although Frodo carried
the Ring for a shorter time, the intensity of its pressure on him
could have created a similar "fracture" in his mind - almost a split
personality like Smeagol had. That the "other" would have Smeagol's
face in the mirror speaks volumes to the strange connection that bound
him and Frodo together.

The language and tone seem perfectly fitting, with the first sentence
grabbing me right away. It all underscores Frodo's inability to stay
in the Shire and his almost desperate desire to escape this ghost.

It's a terrible brotherhood, and I commend Linda Hoyland for exploring
it so well in so short a piece. Very nice!

Title: Charge! · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: Ring War Drabbles ·
ID: 444
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 00:33:30
Spoilers!
Tanaqui has a way with tossing out twists to the story, guiding you
blithely along to the "expected" outcome, and then - whoops! What
constantly amazes me is that she carries it out in a drabble format
over and over again. It doesn't seem like there should be enough space
to do a 180, but there you have it.

The descriptions are marvelous, rich and thrilling. The reader gains
an immediate connection with the PoV character - a startling one at
the conclusion, when realization dawns. Word choice and phrasing is
sublime, and the pace feels very much like a battle-charge; I tense up
in anticipation as the drabble builds momentum.

Beyond being sneaky and clever, of course, the misdirection also
serves the purpose of pointing out that the other side often believes
just as deeply, is just as committed, as the side that you are on:
we're gifted with a pertinent vision from the other half of the field.

Title: O Kheled-zâram fair and wonderful! · Author: Imhiriel · Races:
Dwarves: Drabbles · ID: 354
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 00:34:35
This drabble is beautiful when read simply as a straight-up romantic
encounter: sparkling stars, a shimmering lakeside tryst, entranced
lovers, a longing to find that one particular partner for life.
Imhiriel abundantly enhances this basic richness by making these two a
specific pair of Dwarven lovers, and by employing superb language to
evoke the setting and characters.

The descriptions are all harmoniously chosen to reflect the fact that
these are Dwarves, who see the world in a certain way. Their hearts
may soar as high and gloriously as any other being's, but Imhiriel
carefully selects metaphors, similes and phrases to bring home their
unique and abiding connection to the earth and its hidden glories. All
of it is blended smoothly and naturally together, until I feel I
really am looking through Dwarven eyes.

Then the enjoyable surface story is greatly deepened when it's
revealed just who these two individuals are. The setting the author
chooses is incredibly apt, a reminder of past history and the special
role that the man holds. There is a great weight to the moment indeed,
and true love here, to accept joy and burden both of a joined
leadership. Particularly a leadership of people so stubborn as
Dwarves... *g*

Title: Love at First Sight · Author: Gwynnyd · Races: Elves: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 432
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-18 01:17:46
I don't usually read stories set in this era,but I loved this poignant
ficlet knowing as we do that Miriel will soon fade.Finwe's instant
paternal love is deeply moving and again sad as we know the full story
of this tragic family. A beautiful and very well written story.

Msg# 9553

MEFA Reviews for Tuesday, November 18, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 18, 2008 - 20:13:19 Topic ID# 9553
Title: A Moment in the Morning in Bree · Author: Budgielover · Races:
Cross-Cultural · ID: 731
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-18 03:22:20
[the 'getting to know you' period during which strangers become
friends] reads the tag line. Alternatively, one could find new
temptations to strangling certain traveling companions!

Amusing - I can sympathize with the sentiment in that last line, even
as I laugh.

Title: Heart of the Wood · Author: Kenaz · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 60
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-18 03:48:23
Spoilers!
Although I don't generally go with this interpretation of Elves, the
writing and the power of the emotional sweep of the story are
impressive. The pieces of the story tumble by and down the way to
consummation, and one can believe that despite Túrin's infamous
temper, pride, and sullenness, Beleg would still love him.

The shift from a linear perspective, that builds towards the
anticipated climax or at least establishment of the (limited)
relationship of the two to a retrospective is well-done. Kenaz uses it
to great effect and reminds us of the burden of memory, but also that
sometimes we love our burdens and cannot easily relinquish them - not
even if we are Elves.

Thanks, Kenaz!

Title: The Revenge of Curufin's Horse · Author: Moreth · Genres: Humor
· ID: 139
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-18 04:13:08
A delightful story concerning a horse with more horse sense than
anyone might guess! One usually only remembers the hound in stories
about Luthien and Beren so it is high time the horse got its fair due.
I don't usually read Simarillion stories but I enjoyed this.

Title: Tolo Dan Na Ngalad · Author: Elwen · Races: Hobbits · ID: 735
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-18 04:14:20
Spoilers!
Three days while Elrond tries to determine what is wrong and how to
cure it are three days worth telling of - the story picks a good gap
to fill!

Elwen makes good use of what Tolkien gives us canonically, and then
fills in with a sort of telepathic set of healing sessions that are
about as much fun as surgery without anaesthesia for poor Elrond. The
stakes are higher than we think, even, as elven rings come into active
play for the first time since Elrond became Vilya's bearer.

Good job of infusing suspense into an interval that might have lacked
it just because we know the final outcome!

Title: Black Memory · Author: mrkinch · Races: Villains: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 603
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-18 04:15:36
An interesting drabble.We love reading of Luthien's heroism ,but
sometimes forget the horrors she must have witnessed.This drabble
provides a clear and chilling reminder.

Title: Boromir at the Bat · Author: White Gull · Genres: Poetry: Late
Third Age · ID: 632
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-18 04:18:31
A delightfully amusing poem which I have to admit reflects some of my
own feelings about Boromir whom I pity but cannot say I exactly like.

Title: Dol Amroth Yule · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres:
Adventure · ID: 295
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-18 04:34:12
Spoilers!
No matter what point in the Unabeauverse you start with, there is one
constant (okay, there are more constants than that, but this one is
magnetic north): being Andrahar's pupil is a trial that will make or
break you. Here, we have Andrahar and Hethlin at their absolute worst
with each other - or at least, Andrahar is at his worst. Hethlin is
just trying to survive his tutelage and barely managing it on native
talent, endurance, and native stubbornness that won't give in if he won't.

So when she steps right into the middle of an old feud one dark Yule
night, things explode, believably and messily. One of the things we
tend to forget because we have the luxury of it is that all our heroes
(and heroines - well, in this story, anyway) are violent people. They
can and will and have killed others - to survive, to render justice,
but sometimes also because they want to on top of all of that.
Andrahar shows that darker side of a killer's constitution with Heth
and it would all be just part of a day composed of good and bad in
measures Heth doesn't try to specify, but that there's an
assassination in the offing this Yuletide.

At that point, Andrahar's work with her, despite all their troubles,
bears fruit. There are layers of irony to it, especially thinking of
later stories, where we know more of Andrahar's background - obviously
it's his own training that saves the day in the person of the student
he least likes, but there's more than that. Unlike Heth, he can speak
Khandian, yet he doesn't hear what Heth hears; that 'deafness'
resonates well, actually, with the fact that that night, their
troubles started over language and Heth's refusal, as it were, to
weaponize what should be used to create understanding. Then there's
the fact that Hethlin, as a woman and warrior, is able to recognize
another woman warrior, where Andrahar's culturally-inculcated bias
blind him and everyone present.

It's a nice, cathartic little sidebar story, and though I know Isabeau
has always planned a few alterations to it, I quite like it as it
stands. It's bitter and angry where it needs to be, and the come-down
from those emotions is believably handled and shot through with a
violence appropriate to the temperaments of those involved.

Thanks for the great story, Isabeau!

Title: The Librarian · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Races: Elves: Family
· ID: 700
Reviewer: mbumpus_99 · 2008-11-18 04:37:35
Raising an intelligent child is always a challenge, but when Legolas
is aided in his flights of imagination by a librarian like that... No
wonder Thranduil was tearing his hair.

Very nicely written, Jay. Thank you.

Title: Best Three Falls, No Gouging · Author: Brigantine · Genres:
Humor: Gondor · ID: 587
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-18 06:25:08
Spoilers!
Purely fluff and a total howl. At the tail end of my hefty quota of
MEFA awards, it's so nice to read a story that is nonsensical,
whimsical, and simply a lot of fun. Brigantine has Merry and Pippin
provide commentary to a totally implausible brother/sister combat
between Eomer and Eowyn, the latter with her arm still in a sling.
Matters get even more ridiculous as Faramir stolidly enters, wondering
if he should try to end the battle.

The dialog, particularly the banter between Merry and Pippin, is what
drives this story. It gets devilishly racey, but never in bad taste,
as adding Faramir to the mix really increases the riotous hobbit
commentary.

Title: The Wanderer · Author: Lackwit · Genres: Adventure: Incomplete
· ID: 627
Reviewer: phyloxena · 2008-11-18 07:24:08
Spoilers!
A wonderful beginning. Faramir returns to Ithilien after the long
absence, unrecognized, unexpected, and largely believed to be dead.
The story is very well written, very tense, abundant with beautiful
details. I hope there will be more of it. "Odyssey", of course, is one
of the best stories ever - I wonder how close it is possible to knit
it with what is plausible for the Middle-Earth. One of the obvious
questions a reader wishes to see answered is why the king wouldn't
take care of Ithilien in the prince's absence: is he deceived,
oblivious, incapable?

Title: The Pillar Perished Is · Author: Imhiriel · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 356
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-18 07:57:30
Spoilers!
This is a devastating glimpse of the anguished mind of Fëanor as he
departs Valinor, his inner turmoil mirrored by the wonderfully
evocative images of storm-tossed ship and raging elements.

By focusing on the death of Finwë rather than the loss of the
Silmarils as the driving force behind Fëanor's disastrous behavior
(and citing the canon passage to back this up), Imhiriel has made him
much more sympathetic than he otherwise would be. We see him oblivious
to the death and destruction he leaves in his wake, to his confused,
exhausted sons [ghostly shades], even to his precious Silmarils...all
pale compared to the loss of his father; all guilt, regret, and drive
for vengeance emanate from this one obsessive grief.

His hubris is perfectly captured here, as he imagines himself equal to
the challenge of battling Morgoth--making me think of Mandos' laconic
prophecy: "To me shall Fëanor come soon."

A fine portrait of a complex, tragic figure.


Title: One Step More - The Heroism of Frodo Baggins · Author:
ConnieMarie · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 395
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-18 08:31:50
This essay should be required reading for anyone--inside or outside
the fandom--who "doesn't get" the appeal of Frodo. It's not the
unrestrained gushing of a rabid fan but rather a rational, clear-eyed,
footnoted analysis of the nature of Frodo's heroism, contrasted with
popular culture's predominant action heroes.

ConnieMarie explains it better than I ever could, with elegant clarity
and simplicity, and in deeply moving personal terms. She expresses
what I think many of us feel but may not have clearly articulated,
even to ourselves: how a character in a work some dismiss as escapist
fantasy (be it Frodo or so many others in Tolkien's world) can be such
a profound real-life comfort or inspiration.


Title: I Stand No Longer Alone · Author: Larner · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 62
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-18 08:36:27
The old adage "If walls could talk" gets a new twist in this cleverly
imagined glimpse of Aragorn's ascent to the throne from a most unusual
POV. I like the allusion to Thorongil in the almost-familiar tread.
No, no mistake there...it was just the timing that was wrong. And I
love the idea of [the stones of the city itself ringing with joy!]
Nicely done.

Title: Jewels of Light · Author: Larner · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 394
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-18 08:40:07
This is lovely. Through just a few beautifully drawn metaphors Larner
has conveyed so much about the budding friendship of Elf and Dwarf,
and about each member of the Fellowship observed. I especially liked
the passage where the light of Frodo and Aragorn is caught in the
faces of Merry, Pippin, and Boromir, as planets reflect the sun. And
Gimli and Legolas as perfectly matched twin stars!

Title: Wave-Singer · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 33
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-18 08:56:31
An evocative glimpse at what might have been Maglor's ultimate fate.
Powerful writing, and I love the narrator's voice in this drabble.

Title: Cuts Gone Wrong · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Mid Third Age:
Eriador · ID: 156
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-18 14:45:39
Spoilers!
When I began this story I thought 'well this will be a charming tale
of growing-up Aragorn. Nice' though I noticed particularly how well
the dialog was done. But as I continued I realized it was that and
much more. This story incorporates wonderful, true-feeling, imaginings
of Ranger heirarchy and practices, as well as Dunedain society. The
characters are real and three dimensional, while still fitting neatly
into useful archetypes. This is an excellent story, endowing a fairly
common story - lessons of growing up learned - with extraordinary
depth and richly, uniquely imagined details.

Title: Taking Roots · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Romance: Drabbles ·
ID: 367
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 18:22:37
Spoilers!
Imhiriel has captured an unusual look at Galadriel, to say the least.
"Uncertain" is most definitely not a description I'd normally pull out
of my readings of Tolkien's works, but I think it works really well
under these circumstances and with this particular witness.

In the first place, it is an arrogant individual who never feels the
need to question; while I definitely characterize Galadriel as proud,
that's a different thing. While all Elves have an affinity for Arda,
and I've always assumed that meant a deeper tie to *all* of Arda's
aspects, it's an established and natural precedent that some Elves are
better at some things. Here, Galadriel is acknowledging that she's in
the presence of a Master of his craft, which she is dabbling in.

Second, if there was anyone she would feel comfortable revealing this
lack of sureness to, it would be her husband of... how many centuries?
Reading this from Celeborn's perspective, I get a lovely sense of his
mingled respect and love (and yes, perhaps a bit of indulgence *g*).

The whole work both fleshes out Galadriel a little more for me by
showing a less-than-typical aspect of her, and provides a marvelous
snapshot moment that encapsulates much of this Middle-earth couple's
marriage.

Title: Call of the Wild · Author: annmarwalk · Genres: Romance:
Drabbles · ID: 94
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 18:23:27
Spoilers!
Oh, magnificent! I got shivers reading this: from the description of
Thengel, yes (woohoo! *swoon*), but most particularly from Morwen's
emotions at the end.

The descriptive writing is wonderful and lovingly employed, well
befitting the thoughts of a would-be lover. Thengel's characteristics
come across perfectly; I especially adore the animal imagery, because
it captures my impressions of the Rohirrim so well (admittedly a bit
influenced by movie-Eomer's hair) and highlights what makes him stand
out from the crowd.

Other maidens might see such an untamed and untamable being as
threatening or worthy of dismissal. Morwen's opposite reaction is
excellently captured, and leaves me wondering what has made her so
different from her peers. She's a female character I wouldn't mind
knowing a lot more about.

I love how all of it also leads to thinking of another Gondor-Rohan
alliance that will come further down the road for kin of these two,
and whether there was a similar fiery attraction.

Title: The Waker · Author: Nancy Brooke · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 287
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 18:24:32
What an awesome take on the prompt that inspired this... The drabble
is subtle, with some truly inspired writing that definitely carries
the feeling of instinctual response versus any intellectual capacity,
and lends a distinctive voice to this voiceless one. The sounds we do
get are not even of the creature's making, but what wakes it. Somehow,
the connotation, phrasing... I can't put my finger on it exactly, but
the author manages to place me right where this happens in the books
or movies, almost immediately, even though it's never explicitly
stated either in the drabble or in any author's notes.

The rhythm and rhyme of the words, the careful structure, are all
extremely well employed; it feels nearly poetic. The author also does
a good job of expressing everything from this foreign being's
perspective. (The clever inference about shallow water injuring the
eyes, and the remembered flavor of certain prey, for example.)

And the last section to the ending - I can only say again: inspired.
The one true temptation for this creature and how it is unveiled is
simply brilliant. Great writing, great PoV and a neat final twist.

Title: Gone Amiss · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama: Ring War
Drabbles · ID: 44
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 18:25:04
Spoilers!
Wow, such a believable and wrenching outpouring of grief and regret...
While certainly they shared their differences of opinion, and may have
found themselves at times opposing each other in the future, I agree
very much with what Raksha shows: that Aragorn at the least respected
Boromir as a warrior and as a man capable of the Stewardship of
Gondor, and deeply mourned his death.

Aragorn's shock at this part of the battle's outcome is written
exceedingly well, the phrasing and pacing of the words expressing his
disbelief, thoughts tumbling on to his feelings of having failed as a
leader, as a healer, as a fellow fighter. The quoted line is fleshed
out and given real life here.

And finishes up with a superb last line! Just a single mention of that
name invokes a palpable overshadowing presence... Well done!

Title: Dreamscape · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Dwarves: Drabbles · ID: 442
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-18 18:25:52
I really enjoy that this is from our beloved Gimli's perspective,
still a young dwarf and not yet tested by the trials of the
Fellowship. His excitement at joining his father must have been
tremendous on its own (the recovery of an ancient home!), but I can
clearly sense the adrenaline rush when he spies the glitter across the
newly-opened room.

One can't forget the relative poverty Durin's people faced in the Blue
Mountains, as Tanaqui gently and naturally reminds us. The contrast
between images Gimli knows from his youth and what he now beholds is
artfully presented: not just new veins of ore, but something even more
precious.

Perfectly chosen title, too, encompassing Dwarven dreams of returning
- from finely crafted replicas to what Gimli sees before him in the
opening quote. Yes, I can well imagine that this is exactly what
springs to Gimli's mind as he stands with Legolas and names those
mountains once again...

Title: Fennas Haradren · Author: Linaewen · Genres: Adventure · ID: 280
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-18 18:26:25
This is an excellent story and I greatly enjoyed reading it. It tells
a ripping good story, with true-feeling characters, suspense, and
action, and was nicely written. For every clean, uncluttered and
straightforward statement ["Boromir did not like waiting."] there is a
lovely, lyrical, liesurely description ["The early morning breeze
quickened and there was a soughing and sighing in the trees. The
leaves fluttered overhead, their undersides flashing silver in the
light of the sun as it rose above the clouds that hung over the land
of Mordor."] sometimes in the same paragraph creating a nice rhythm
and balance.

Great Boromir characterization.

Title: The Kindly Airs · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Late Third Age:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 480
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-18 18:42:59
And another one of the beautiful gems I received for my birthday - as
unique and sparkling as one could wish for and more!

The drabble opens up with a sweeping glimpse of the wide-ranging
purview of Middle-earth's winds, providing us with a broad picture of
the land showcasing its diversity.

No wonder than that the East Wind, too, obviously would love to have a
part in this, to range and roam freely.

But she is bound, bogged down, burdened by the malice happening on her
"watch" she is helpless to prevent, just as she is helpless to prevent
it from spreading through her, and to be associated with it.

All the more great is her delight when she is freed at last -
literally able to take a fresh breath of air after so long a time, and
lift herself up. And what a completely fitting recompense and reward
that she is allowed to carry the messengers of the glorious tidings to
spread the news. I can certainly feel her pride and her joy.

I also found it an interesting twist that Dwimordene changed the
neutral "it" from the poem to a "she" in her drabble, thereby
increasing the feeling of the winds as personlities.

Title: Renewal · Author: Elena Tiriel · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 208
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-18 18:43:10
Spoilers!
I have been so exceedingly lucky in my "harvest" of birthday stories
this year, and a fair number of them have ended up in the MEFAwards to
be exposed to a wider readership who might appreciate them as much as
I do.

This drabble evokes the power and heat and passion of the process of
sword making, at once violent and creative - and also healing in a way
- which the striking form and its particular, driving rhythm evokes
perfectly. The melding (pun half intended) of describing the process
while bringing alive the sword as an aware personality which reflects
this process on a different level is done very effectively.

The readers can follow how, step by step, the sword comes alive and
regains its former strength and purity. IIRC, it was old custom to
quench the sword with blood - it was an intriguingly reverse touch
that here the sword had to be purified by heat from the taint of
Sauron's blood.

And my hat off for extra geekery *g* in the author's notes: I love
reading details which revealing something of the creative process
before and during the writing - the more the better. I especially
appreciated the explanation about ["the resilience of Isil"].

Title: One Step More - The Heroism of Frodo Baggins · Author:
ConnieMarie · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 395
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-18 23:25:56
This essay is more moving than you would expect a nonfiction piece to
be. Connie Marie draws comparisons and parallels among action heroes,
Frodo Baggins, and real people with great problems. The essay makes
the case that small heroes, though not the stuff of archetypes, are
more the types of people (and hobbits) that we can relate to. We can
use Frodo's horrendous quest and dogged determination as inspiration
for moments in our lives that are full of trials. In these trying
times, the conclusion that the essay draws is particularly uplifting.

Msg# 9554

MEFA Reviews for Tuesday, November 18, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 18, 2008 - 20:15:56 Topic ID# 9554
Title: Footsteps in Time · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves · ID: 76
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-18 23:37:44
Spoilers!
A beautifully written fic for as far as it goes. The two chapters
written are lyrical in their beauty and illuminating in their
characterizations. And that Galadriel's gift was much taught by Melian
herself as well as the idea that Melian might tend to be fleeting and
contrary in her interests is a fascinating pair of concepts to consider.

I look forward to the day these two chapters are built upon and the
story continued and finished. This look at this long-bonded pair is
fascinating and so well done!

Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-18 23:42:13
Spoilers!
This is a wonderful short story which connects the fates of three very
different characters in three lands that span almost the whole of the
west of Middle-earth. There is a strong sense of the ["ensorcellment"]
mentioned towards the end of the drabble running throughout the piece
– with all three characters having power of their own kind and being
subject to the power of others. However, although the strands of the
story are cleverly woven together, it is not the connections between
he who made the prophecy, she who will fulfil it, and he who will fall
by her hand that resonate most strongly in this drabble from Raksha
the Demon's fertile imagination. Instead, it is Eomund's response to
his daughter – his delight in her beauty, her strength and her spirit
– and Eowyn's own indomitable spirit, already clearly present, that
remain in the mind. A terrific piece – well done!

Title: Before the Black Gate · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Late
Third Age · ID: 45
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-18 23:42:23
Spoilers!
Raksha the Demon has created a charming little vignette in which
Pippin and Beregond share a last breakfast before the final battle.
Pippin's mix of entirely natural fear for the coming day and his
high-heartedness and courage in the face of it shine through the piece
in the author's subtle descriptions and nicely turned phrasing. I
particularly like Pippin's reflection ["Only sixteen days, and now I
go to die in it"] when contemplating his fine Gondorian livery.
Although I consider Raksha more of a Mannish writer – and one of the
best exponents of Mannish tales in the fandom – this piece shows that
she has a fine grasp of Hobbit sensibilities as well. Good work!


Title: Seeing Stars · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 360
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-18 23:42:41
Spoilers!
I have a somewhat unusual credit in the author's notes for this
particular piece, but all the credit for its brilliance goes to the
author, Raksha the Demon. This piece provides us with a lovely vision
of Faramir celebrating the birth of his and Eowyn's first child.
Faramir seems as much thrown off balance by the momentous occasion as
by the rather-too-many celebratory drinks he has consumed, although
that famous insight and dry wit are still very much present as he
considers his current condition. (And I chuckled at the thought of an
inebriated Faramir propping himself up using the White Tree.) However,
this is more than a comedy piece. Faramir's relationship with Aragorn
– both King and friend – is delightfully captured as Aragorn escorts
him home. And the day is completed by his contemplation of all those
who have gone before who share blood with this child, and his
realisation that the sorrow of their losses are mitigated through the
birth of a new heir events of the day itself. Beautifully done – bravo!


Title: The Onion Riddle · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Post-Ring War · ID: 13
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-18 23:42:46
Spoilers!
Lady Branwyn does so many wonderful things in this story that's it
hard to know where to begin when praising it. Firstly, there is a
fabulous portrait of Dwarven culture, building effectively on the
little we know from canon. On top of that, the story is told from the
point of view of Beregond, one of my favourite Gondorian characters,
and Lady Branwyn does an excellent job of capturing his good-hearted,
gruff, plain-guardsman personality in his words and actions. Then
there is the amusing plot twist at the end, played out in an
entertaining and credible argument between Beregond and one of the
Dwarven miners. Add to that the inclusion of the riddle of the title,
not to mention the other tales within tales told around the campfire,
and the reader is royally entertained from the first word to last. All
of this is presented in the kind of sharp, evocative and clear prose I
have come to expect from Lady Branwyn, and which makes all of her
works a joy to read. In short, this is a wonderful addition to our
store of stories about Middle-earth – bravissima!

Title: Twentynine White Horses · Author: Jael · Races: Elves: Mirkwood
Elves · ID: 557
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-19 01:25:19
Despite my fascination (sounds less pathological than obsession) with
Elves, I'd never considered what happened when they lost teeth in
adulthood. I usually read Silmarillion fiction, but sheer curiosity
drove me to put this one on my Wish list, and I'm glad I did. This
story is both funny and tender without being sappy, and Jael
characterizes her players and captures their culture in admirably few
words. (I loved the female healer in particular!) And Thranduil's
parting line to Legolas ... priceless! I'm glad I broke type with this
one and will be looking up more of your work, Jael.

Title: The Captain's Mare · Author: The Lauderdale · Races: Villains ·
ID: 575
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-19 01:51:58
Spoilers!
I haven't seen many stories from an Orcish point-of-view, and those I
have seen generally don't work for me. This one does. The Lauderdale
doesn't shy from the brutality that would have been a mainstay among
the Orcs of Mordor, yet it is not the sole focus of the story: The
Orcish narrator feels more realistic--I dare even say "more
human"!--with details like the mundanities of working the convoys in
Mordor to bring the culture to life. The voice of this piece is
fantastic, four-letter words, bad grammar, and all!

The denouement of the story, however disturbing, is also intensely
sad. It reminds me that one of the theories on the origin of Orcs is
that they were made from Elves. That, many ages later, the most
villainous race on Middle-earth still expresses that intensely human
sentiment, ["They wanted touch and so did I; that's all we ever
wanted. Just to touch and to be touched in turn,"] is a reminder of
their origins and, underneath what they have been made to be, their
humanity. Original, dark, and insightful--an excellent story!

Title: And Then There Was Cake, or Begetting Day Horrors · Author:
Klose · Races: Elves: Family · ID: 540
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-19 02:08:52
Spoilers!
Raucous Feanorians, too much wine, and a second-person point-of-view
... what's there not to love? "Begetting Day Horrors" is one of my
favorite Silmarillion humor stories. I laugh out loud every time I
reread it! The story combines Elven traditions with familiar
modern-day conventions, giving it a ring of truth that I think that
anyone who has ever attended a family birthday party can appreciate,
and it mines the familiar Finwion family circus for all of its
humorous worth. The story starts dreamily, languidly, as Maedhros
passes through the hallways of the palatial paternal home, and it
quickly escalates into a whirlwind of begetting-day horrors, much like
the "pile up" instigated by Celegorm. Klose touches on just about
every Finwion relationship of note--the "friendship" between Aredhel
and Celegorm, the bitterness between the Feanor and Fingolfin,
Caranthir's dislike of the sons of Finarfin--as well as the quirks of
the individual characters: Feanor's obsession with his virility (and
Galadriel's hair), Maglor's musical talents, and the twins' ...
"fragrance." All of this, by story's end, would make me quite sorry
for Maedhros. If I wasn't laughing so hard, that is.

Msg# 9555

MEFA Reviews for Wednesday, November 19, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 19, 2008 - 20:52:44 Topic ID# 9555
Title: Maglor's Harp · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Genres: Horror · ID: 660
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-19 02:27:33
Spoilers!
I am a fan of horror, and this story does not disappoint. It is
delightfully creepy and written in with the vivid imagery that I have
come to expect from Uli's writing, which always comes with my highest
recommendations. Even in its relatively innocent beginning, as Maglor
gathers scraps from the sea to form the "audience" for which he will
sing, his numbness toward death and his longing for something lost and
not quite remembered is palpable, and this will drive the story to its
awful completion. He says of his victim, ["Once she stopped struggling
he sat watching her, watching the red blood in the white snow. It was
beautiful, familiar. He had seen something like it before."]
Throughout this piece is the unmistakable feeling that Maglor is
damaged, seeking something that was once beautiful and redeeming--his
music--but warped irrevocably by his deeds across the First Age. After
what he has done--of which we are reminded with the aforementioned
quote--what he has become seems almost plausible. His detachment from
his deeds and the loving detail with which Uli writes of them make a
most chilling combination and a horrific depiction of a man driven to
the brink of his humanity.

The thought of Maglor working over his final harp is shiver-inducing,
not to mention when he drags it up the beach to find his final
audience ... but what a delight for a fan of horror! For those who
aren't faint of heart, this one comes with highest recommendations.

Title: The Conscience of the King · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor · ID: 649
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-19 03:43:07
I really like this one, Raksha. Eomer sounds like a very jealous and
over-protective older brother. That is really sweet. He loves her so
much. He would like to keep her there at Meduseld forever as his
younger sister, basically tied to no one but him. He's afraid to lose
her to someone else; he doesn't even want her to lose her virginity,
swive? I think these are all very legitimate feelings for a sibling,
good friend or parent, even. Someone might really be thinking or
wishing for this kind of thing, but everyone knows it's not realistic.
I felt very much that way when my only sister got married. I felt
jealous, and somewhat angry at her because I felt like she was
abandoning me and I'd never see her. If I had never let her go, I
would not have my two wonderful nephews. It is very unrealistic, and
sooner of later you learn that. It is something you think about to
yourself, not discuss with other people even though they might be
feeling the same way. Everyone has to make their own choices in life.
And Eomer wants his sister to be happy. He does really know that they
will be siblings and love each other. I'm sure Eowyn is dad to leave
her brother and home as well. This is a great story, Raksha

Title: On Amon Sûl · Author: Dreamflower · Genres: Drama: Featuring
Frodo or Sam · ID: 299
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-19 04:34:10
Spoilers!
This has always been a favourite part of the book of mine how Aragorn
tries to heal Frodo after Weathertop and I love the way his warmth and
strength are conveyed here,though all his efforts can do little to
help poor Frodo.I also enjoyed seeing Frodo's perceptions of his
Hobbit companions and how they tried to comfort him. I found the
formatting rather difficult to read,but that is my only complaint
about an excellent and beautifully written story which I'm pleased to
have discovered through MEFA.

Title: House of Ransom · Author: Robinka · Races: Elves: Drabbles ·
ID: 657
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-19 04:44:41
With a sure hand, Binka conveys the push-pull of the relationship
between Beleg and Túrin. Beleg's frustration with Turin's character
builds and burns with the last excellent line. Hat's off to you
masters of the short form who convey so much in a few words. Binka's
drabbles are among the best.

Title: A Midsummer Day's Dream · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 422
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-19 04:46:00
Spoilers!
I first became acquainted with Raksha's vision of Faramir in [The
Burning of the Year] and fell hard for him. In [A Midsummer Day's
Dream], Raksha presents Faramir at the waning moments of his life and
takes us into his thoughts as he steps across the threshold in final
passage. With carefully constructed -- and lovely -- prose, Raksha
does something that I found quite extraordinary: writing from the
perspective of one who is dying peacefully. Starting with the
beautiful garden setting to the presence of his loved ones who are
around him to those who have taken the final passage before him,
Raksha builds the story to its emotional culmination, one which moved
this usually unsentimental reader to get misty eyes. A beautiful,
bittersweet piece.

Title: Utúlie'n Aurë · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 163
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-19 04:51:31
Spoilers!
A joyful echo of and homage to the Silmarillion, as Glorfindel
realizes that Sauron has fallen and reprises the cry of Fingon at the
arrival of his brother's army, Ages past. Glorfindel is one of the few
characters who can link the Silmarillion to LOTR with his very
presence, and he is used quite effectively here.

Title: Incarnation · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Drabbles · ID: 242
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-19 04:55:53
GA's drabble offers a wicked good dollop of irreverence with which she
addresses the realities of incarnation for the Maiar. I got a
significant chuckle out of Manwë's pious admonitions to Olórin and the
juxtaposition of the more unsavory aspects of having a human body.

Title: Undivided · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Elves: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 46
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-19 05:56:57
I really like this ficlet, Raksha! I love the twins! They are
genetically basically the same person, with only different
personalities, ideas, ways of doing things. But I believe that there
is something very special between all identical twins. Something
unknown. Elladan and Elrohir loved their mother so much, and felt such
guilt over her trauma, feeling that if the had been there they could
have saved her from her grief. They are putting undo stress onto
themselves, for there was nothing they could have done. What happens
just happens and no one can change that. I can see how a situation
like that could make them feel that way, though. They were also torn
between leaving for the West with their mother, or staying behind in
Imladris with their father and sister. What a difficult choice that
would be. When Elladan asked Elrohir if he'd be willing to go with
'them,' into the West, and Elrohir said he must stay, the decision was
made for the two of them instantly. Nothing else is even said about
decisions . They both just knew they could not be separated, no
question about it. I like that they chose to stay in their old room
and bed that they shared as children. There, I believe, they shared so
much of themselves, when younger, and probably were closest and most
at ease, I am sure. I believe that for them it was a place of comfort
where they felt safest, as children, and they needed to feel that same
way again. And it probably was also the only place they could open
their hearts to each other with nothing held back. They truly are
reflections of each other. Loved it, Raksha!

Title: Men of the Twilight · Author: Elena Tiriel · Genres: Romance:
Drabbles · ID: 209
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-19 07:06:45
Spoilers!
["Men of the Twilight"] is a beautifully crafted drabble with
exquisite imagery, thanks to the carefully-chosen descriptions woven
throughout. The entire theme of light vs. shadow/twilight is played on
both in the surface story and in the deeper cultural exploration,
meshing into a truly lovely commentary on contrasts between peoples
and one-day lovers.

PoV character's observances of Eowyn and Eomer serves as a lens
through which to view the whole Men of the Twilight discussion that
Faramir has with Frodo. The Rohirrim have indeed grown more similar to
the "High" peoples, perhaps to a greater degree than Faramir ever
realized. Although there's so much to like about this, I think one of
my favorite aspects is how (to me) the roles almost seem reversed, or
at least equalized: One of the highest of the Numenoreans has had to
forfeit part of his soul to war, in service to protecting what he
really holds dear; as a result he himself seems shadowed in twilight,
whereas the object of his attention is brilliantly sunlit - a promise
of the path that will lead him back to the light in time. (Erm, if all
that makes sense! I know what I mean, even if I'm not getting it
across well!)

This is definitely one of those works that leaves me pondering over
the various implications long after I've finished reading.

Title: Cold Be Hand and Heart and Bone · Author: Imhiriel · Races:
Villains: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 286
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-19 07:07:24
Rich and evocative descriptions set up this drabble wonderfully. The
atmosphere is carefully and completely conjured: I could easily sense
the cool, dark interior; the weight of earth and stone imprisoning
this lost prince, magnified by the additional veneer of age. The
prince himself is gently but clearly drawn, and the attention spent
upon his appearance paints a picture of someone loved and cherished.
There's a tender sadness that emanates from what has been done for him
or left behind as a remembrance, and it cleverly ties into a certain
scene from LotR.

All the care that Imhiriel puts into evoking the beginning scene pays
off in the final section of the drabble, when the same descriptive
elegance sends chills running down my spine. The feeling changes
dramatically, flawlessly shifting into supernatural eeriness. The
contrast between the early parts of the drabble and the ending only
makes the horror of what happens all the more wrenching.

Although I think this version makes more sense than having the evil
originate with the prince (despite the faults of those divisive
Northerners), it also leaves me intensely curious about what actually
occurs! A fascinating premise, artfully explored.

Title: Sunset Gates · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races: Dwarves: Drabbles
· ID: 342
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-19 07:08:18
*snorfle* Ah, very, very clever!

I think this is definitely one of the most inventive Gimli drabbles
I've ever read. *How* it could happen, I have no idea, and frankly I
don't think I care. The lovely and insightful parallels are worth
exploring all on their own: the welcoming Lady, the immigrant's
emotional arrival at a new land.

Ignoble Bard does a wonderful job of leading the reader along via a
trail of expected clues and preformed conclusions, all the way to the
very end before the twist of the story is revealed. And what a twist!
I'm glad I wasn't taking a big swig of Coke when I read it...

Beautiful and apt title, too. I think this piece has more depth than
might first appear, but the humor alone makes it worthwhile.

Title: Unwilling · Author: Elena Tiriel · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 64
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-19 08:30:09
Spoilers!
Sometimes, I wonder what an elf would have said or thought about us –
modern people, and our civilization, but then I think that I don't
even want to know. In her excellent drabble, Elena conveyed the
feeling of utter helplessness that an elf of the Avari experiences
upon seeing what people have done to their home, and that is a very
sad and hopeless conclusion. Those that were faithful to Middle Earth,
even though called the Unwilling once, fade, and hardly anyone seems
to notice that.

Excellent, though-provoking writing.

Title: National Treasure · Author: Baranduin · Times: Modern Times ·
ID: 201
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-19 08:35:07
I really, really liked this story. I adore archaeology and even
majored in it and have been on a few digs and found some interesting
things. Finding sites and excavating is very exciting. It was
interesting that they went in on this trip thinking it was a Templar
ruin and it turned out to be something completely different from what
they had anticipated. It was Imladris from a very distant past.
Scotland was a good modern place to put Middle Earth. A second idea
might have been Wales, because the Elvish language has many Welsh
elements to it. It would not have been large enough, though. I wonder
if the Elves are still living in Valinor, here. Probably, because they
are Immortal. And Valinor would not be visible to the eye. Having the
shrine of Gilraen still standing is very appropriate I think. And kind
of romantic. If there was only one real thing still standing after all
else was gone, I think I would want it to be her shrine. The magical
feeling of the Elves and Imladris itself seemed to still linger. I
love that. How could it not? As you said, they felt safe there and did
not want to leave. I imagine it felt very comfortable there for them.
There seemed to be a real pull to the place. Your characters, Ron and
Bri wondered if the place had been abandoned; and one of them stated
that he couldn't imagine ever wanting to leave there. I love that they
felt that some major change was coming and it brought the two of them
closer together. The last two lines are perfect. They found a red book
that started at the time Frodo arrived at Imladris. I'm sure it
explained in detail about the quest, etc. What an awesome find. It
gave me a thrill and goosebumps. What a wonderful, beautiful story you
have here, Baranduin!

Title: Cat's Paws · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains · ID: 58
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-19 10:12:02
When I read Pandemonium's story, I immediately thought about "Dr.
Faustus", and also, which did not surprised me either, the lyrics of
"Sympathy for the Devil" by The Rolling Stones came to my mind. Well,
Aulendil, as `a man of wealth and taste', can be convincing, can't he?
A charismatic scientist, who possesses the knowledge that Celebrimbor
desires. He is the one that is able to conduct a sophisticated dispute
and the one who can fulfill any wish. But of course, everything has
its price. And that, along with what we know about the end of
Celebrimbor's and Aulendil/Sauron so-called friendship, evokes a
creepy, blood-freezing feeling.

A brilliant story, Pandemonium, worth my sincerest recommendation!

Title: A Dainty Dish · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 722
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-19 10:41:49
This is a wonderful story, Linda! I think it was sweet that Pippin
called Aragorn, Strider. Aragorn did not care. Pippin could probably
have called him Longshanks and not gotten a reaction from him, except
maybe a smile. Good friends are allowed a lot of leeway. Then, again,
if anyone had called him Strider I do not think he would have cared
all that much. Only the the people around him would! When Prince
Imrahil called him Sir Peregrin, Aragorn jumped right in there with a
Pippin. Gotta love him! When Imrahil commented about mushrooms being a
common food for the poor only and not fit for Royals or Ladies and
Lords, Aragorn hopped right in there again, defending Pippin and his
mushrooms. Faramir and Eowyn did the same. They all loved mushrooms.
When Aragorn commented that they should start serving them at Court,
or Gondor, Imrahil's snobbery showed up again. If I was Aragorn, I
would have stated to him that he was not the King and should be quiet
or leave, or both. That is putting it nicely. He really makes me mad
here! What I get out of what Faramir said, is that the city folk of
Gondor were lazy snobs who were not smart enough to know a mushroom
when they saw one and would only buy their food, not grunge for it. I
thought it was wonderful when Aragorn had mushrooms served in the
dinner, having them cooked in a way that might not make them
immediately recognizable as mushrooms, to see people's reactions and
make a point. And, of course, they loved the dishes. Mushrooms are
good. What were they eating? Mushrooms? Heaven forbid! Imrahil is
shocked again! Snob. Aragorn was successful in his mission in trying
to get people to realize that food, mushrooms in this case, did not
make an individual poor or rich. Food is food, as are people. All
people are pretty much the same and everyone needs a better
understanding of one another, and to eliminate their prejudices. An
interesting thing to figure out with one's palette. So wanting to
exchange recipes was a sweet thing. And a good gesture. As you said,
Imrahil learned his lesson. Sorry if the analysis is wrong, but it
felt right. As you stated, [the simple pleasures of life are the
best.] The part you have written here about Pippin calling Aragorn,
Strider makes me think of one of my favorite lines in The Two Towers.
I do not have my book here so I cannot give the exact lines. There is
a scene in Isengard, when Aragorn and company have just arrived from
Rohan, and Aragorn sat down, spread his legs out, got a pipe out to
smoke, and Pippin said something about it being Strider again. Then
Aragorn stated that Strider never left. I just love that. Strider will
always be there, along with Estel and all his other aliases. He will
always be himself, no matter where he goes or what he does. He will
always he the Ranger. It is so sweet and perfect. He is so humble! I
really, really liked this Linda!

Title: The Least of Rings · Author: Marta · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Drabbles · ID: 621
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-19 11:14:37
Oh, clever! An excellent, perfectly executed in the form of a drabble,
AU take on the fate of the One Ring when the Fellowship was broken. It
simply begs for a continuation, because it gives only a brief, and
still deep and thought-provoking, glimpse at how Boromir might have
taken the Ring from Frodo. Splendid piece of writing!

Title: Heart of the Wood · Author: Kenaz · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 60
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-19 12:01:22
This story was recommended to me by IgnobleBard, and though I
personally don't agree with the concept of a romantic relationship
between Beleg and Turin and prefer a brotherly attachment between
them, I thought I would give "Heart of the Wood" a try, because I am a
die-hard fan of Beleg. And I'm glad I did, because this piece is
finely crafted, presents the nature of the relationship between a man
and an elf in a plausible and engaging scenario, with rich, superb
characterizations and an elegant, beautiful language. The end was
heart-breaking, and perfectly conveyed the tragedy of the original
tale, as well as Kenaz's interpretation of it.

Splendid story, Kenaz. Thank you for writing and sharing!

Title: They Also Serve · Author: Marta · Times: Late Third Age · ID: 365
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-19 15:37:11
Spoilers!
Those days before the arrival of the party from the Shire must have
been nerve-wracking for those who waited. I love this picture of Arwen
trying to keep busy and assuage her fears by baking. And I love the
understanding of the cook--this was a nice picture of things behind
the scenes, something that fanfic can excell at.

Even more, I loved the author's notes. Marta is always punctilious
about telling her readers of the little canonical niggles and tidbits
that lead her to write a story, and I find them fascinating, sometimes
spawning further plot bunnies...

Title: Supporting Acts · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 436
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-19 15:37:56
I enjoy it when an author explores the ["Supporting Acts"] of the
story--those in the wings whom we never actually see in canon, but who
would have been absolutely essential to the running of the world. This
little set of vignettes about one such person is subtle and
insightful--and fun.

Title: The Conscience of the King · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor · ID: 649
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-19 15:39:05
Poor Eomer! No matter how much he likes the groom, no big brother
really likes to think of his baby sister on her wedding night. But I
love the other part of him, the practical common sense and loving part
of him that knows the truth and is willing to face it. A very amusing
inner monologue--or dialogue, as the case may be.

Title: What Goes Up · Author: Dana · Times: Late Third Age: Gondor
Drabbles · ID: 683
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-19 15:40:00
Dana almost *never* writes movie-verse--her stories generally tend to
be set solidly in book-canon, so this little gem is a testament to her
friendship with Baranduin, as well as her fondness for Peregrin Took.
I do love so much Pippin's thoughts here--the way they fly to Frodo at
a time like that, and the very wry, very humourous and very touching
and practical little bit of hobbit-sense at the end. When combined
with the memory of the scene as it was shown in the movie, and the way
it was so skillfully portrayed, the last sentence is quite delightful!

I can never get enough of Dana's Pippin.

Title: I Give You a Rainbow · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 571
Reviewer: Beruthiel's Cat · 2008-11-19 15:44:36
Spoilers!
I very much enjoyed nominating this story, as it is the best character
study of Pippin's curiosity and gentleness of spirit I've yet seen. It
isn't enogh for him to just see a thing, have his question answered.
To Pippin, Evergreen is more than a series of questions and answers,
something must be done to give her things everyone else takes for
granted. A beautiful, quick mind so often underplayed or turned to
make him seem less than he is serves Pippin well to become the answer
to another's isolation without his being overbearing or condescending.
I don't usually read hobbit stories, as some do not gravitate toward
other races, but for this one I'm making a glad exception. Extremely
well written, very emotive, this story shines. Highly recommended!

Title: Don't Explain · Author: gwidhiel · Races: Elves: Incomplete ·
ID: 289
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-19 18:17:30
Spoilers!
A nicely done explanation for the tragedly of Finwe's two loves,
marriages, and families as Indis seeks to understand and apologize for
her own part in the griefs. We see the parts played by all concerned,
I think, and how Miriel and Indis and Finwe were all partly at fault.
It will be interesting to see how this comes out in the end.

Some repetition, but mostly well woven narrative.

Title: An Autumn Fair in Halabor · Author: Soledad · Times: Mid Third
Age · ID: 165
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-19 19:25:15
I love Halabor - and the multiplicity of characters you have created
to dwell therein - when you add elves to the mix it is a delight. The
complexity - the detail - the interactions of the individuals (some of
whom lead very realistically cruddy lives) - your sheer understanding
of the town, its inhabitants and the way they live ... it's just
brilliant. I'm really not sure which of the inhabitants I love most -
the carter, of course, doesn't make the list (unsurprisingly, perhaps)
- but they are real people living medieval lives, obsessed with -
well, making a living, I suppose. Providing for their families and
setting up successful dynasties. I can't remember all the outcomes,
but I am only too (unfortunately) aware that many of them aren't
happy. I loved seeing them in conjunction with the passing elves ...
making a few coins, setting up a few memories. I suspect that some
among the elves were only too aware of the stink of tragedy in the
near future - and maybe happily handed over a few extra coins to
sweeten the present. I just love your detail. The way you know the
background and destiny of all your characters. Halabor is a very real
place. (Although I am rather pleased that I don't have to live there!)




Title: The Return · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Drama · ID: 167
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-19 19:31:59
I found this to be such a moving story. Similar scenes must have been
seen in so many homes across the realm of Gondor. And beyond, really.
The losses must have taken much of the gilt from the final destruction
of Sauron - and, moreover, from the highly unexpected and splendid
return of the King.

And, possibly, fuelled opposition to the new regime in some quarters.
However bad things had become under Denethor, at least their
sons/husbands/lovers had still been alive. I cannot feel that Aragorn
was universally appreciated - except that his arrival was probably
better than the alternative. Many people must have looked back and
thought that things were better in the olden days.

Awful not knowing what had happened to your loved ones. Even more
awful, perhaps, being the one to bring the knowledge home. Messengers
frequently ending up blamed for the news they bear.

Duinhir would be very wise to avoid mention of having more children,
though. If he wants to retain the ability to do so, that is. His wife
will not take the suggestion well. Yet, at any rate. She might change
her mind in time - not that the newly arrived could ever replace those
who lost their lives in the battle.

A delightful tale. If more than a little sad.

Msg# 9556

MEFA Reviews for Wednesday, November 19, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 19, 2008 - 20:54:33 Topic ID# 9556
Title: Sing My Worth Immortal · Author: Perelleth · Races:
Cross-Cultural · ID: 168
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-19 19:41:40
Oh, I found this to be such a brilliant story on so many levels. There
is something I cannot help but love about Glorfindel's recklessness.
(What a guy! He hasn't really learned caution, has he? Fearless and
full of joy, indeed. Or perhaps reckless would be a better
description.) Cultural exchange, indeed! That's a good description.
He's lucky to have escaped with a mere second life. I love Celeborn
and Elrond's wary caution - and Celeborn's eventual irritation with
the dumb dwarf. (Never mention a lady's age, Celeborn. Not even if she
is older than dirt. ... Especially if she's older than dirt. I would
have expected someone cognomened 'the Wise' to have absorbed that
information long before this point - at least if you wanted to
continue to live a happy and contented life!)

Gror ended up with rather more than he reckoned with. And he learned
not to patronise Galadriel. Unless he had imbibed too much gruit ale
to recognise the lesson. Which could, indeed, prove to be the case.

I loved this story, Perelleth. It is a most enjoyable one!


Title: A Problem Shared · Author: Dot · Races: Elves: Mirkwood Elves ·
ID: 169
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-19 19:46:28
Wizards, like elves, don't believe in coming straight out and saying
things. Perhaps they think that their words are perceived as much more
valuable - and infinitely more wise - if the hearer has to strive to
comprehend ...

I love always-in-the-way Radagast and his marvellous creatures. And it
must be so hard for Thranduil to endure what is happening. Bad enough
to listen to lists of the dead and worry about his son ... and the
youngsters training to thrust back the dark, but to feel the suffering
of the forest in the whispers of the trees. It must be nendurable.
Almost, at any rate. If he wasn't such a strong-willed character.

A delightful piece, Dot. I loved it. You are such a talented writer -
I just wish you spent more time in Middle-earth.


Title: The Legend of the Grey Riders · Author: Jay of Lasgalen ·
Races: Cross-Cultural: Elves and Men · ID: 176
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-19 19:58:13
This is such a clever story, Jay! I couldn't help but glory in the way
that the twins looked at each other and made one of the Rohirrim's
oldest tales become personal experience. It's always hard to visualise
the great age of elves and understand what a difference that must have
made in their perceptions of things. I love the way that their reality
contrasts with the rather more dramatic legend - not to mention their
response to their own part in the epic tale. It must have been so much
fun to hear Eomer and Eowyn debating their existence! And I just adore
Faramir's input - such a sharp knife. I liked Erestor calling them
Spawn of Melkor - perhaps he needs to have a word with the Rohirrim.
It has a much better ring to it to call them the agents of the Valar.

I loved this story. (Although it is rather sad to hear that Eomer's
life has been hard enough to make him seem rather more careworn than
his progenitor. It is not as if Eorl didn't have battles enough of his
own.)

Title: The Prisoner of Time · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 313
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-19 20:24:10
Spoilers!
In this AU short story, Raksha the Demon shows us another possible
fate for Denethor than the pyre – and it is one that, on reflection,
seems even worse than the events described in the book. The surviving
Denethor's madness is given a new and chilling twist, and Raksha's
immense writerly gifts makes it entirely credible, compelling and
heartbreaking. Well done!

Title: Lost and Found · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 23
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-19 20:24:15
Spoilers!
Young Faramir is charmingly described in this delightful short story
by Lady Branwyn involving Gandalf, Faramir and the archives of Minas
Tirith. While this is a mostly light-hearted read, we are given
occasional glimpses of the deeper and darker things that lies beneath
the surface in the White City. Nicely done.


Title: The Game of Kings · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Humor · ID: 28
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-19 20:24:21
Spoilers!
Again, Lady Branwyn has taken a common topic in Tolkien fanfic – a
game of chess – and given it one of her trademark fresh and delightful
twists. This short piece is about Rangers playing chess in the
Prancing Pony, to the fascination of other patrons and the
mystification of the innkeeper. An inventive ficlet in which we see
wonderful glimpses of different cultures in each Race's approach to
the game, and with a satisfying pay off in the final line. Bravo!


Title: Summer's End · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring
War · ID: 380
Reviewer: Pearl Took · 2008-11-19 20:49:37
Spoilers!
A delightfully engaging story! Frodo knows he will be leaving
Middle-earth and so has already been showing signs of pain and
melancholy. Here he is at a party, being held by his young cousins,
Merry and Pippin. Sam and Rosie are there too, but they are not at the
party much as Rosie is not feeling well, for a very special reason.

Celandine Brandybuck has asked for a ghost story and Frodo obliges her
- but the listeners get more than they bargained for from the master
story teller. Frodo learned from one of the Shire's best story tellers
and quickly his audience is entranced with the tale of Hobbit history
he is spinning.

A wonderful story, masterfully told! Well done, pippinfan!

Title: The Last Dance · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits: Family ·
ID: 397
Reviewer: Pearl Took · 2008-11-19 20:50:37
This is a wonderful story written for me by pippinfan as part of a
Yule story exchange.

It is based upon a song that I told her I wanted the story to reflect.
It is I WANT TO SLOW DANCE WITH YOU by the bluegrass band NOTHIN'
FANCY. It tells of a husband who had had a long day in which it -
seems like nothing went right - and all he can think of is getting
home to his wife and slow dancing with her in his arms.

Peregrin Took is in his first year as The Took and Thain of The Shire;
Diamond Took is the new Mistress of Great Smials. It is the first time
since Paladin Took's death that they are having the responsibilities
of the large family celebrations of First Yule, plus it is Diamond's
birthday. Both are kept busy with their various official duties and
the day goes by with them having no time together. Will they get to
have even a dance with each other at the feast that evening?

The NOTHIN' FANCY song is a lovely, smooth waltz and pippinfan manages
to capture it's gentle, loving feel. Even though a good deal happens
during Pippin and Diamond's day, even though at times it seems - like
nothin' went right - the story still has a gentle flow to it. You can
almost feel the well known three/four beat of a waltz as you read.

This is everything I hoped it would be. Thank you so very much, my
dearest pippinfan!

Title: Wedding Nerves · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor · ID: 48
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-19 21:08:41
If ever there was a time when a man needed a couple of big brothers
... especially after being tormented by a bunch of people determined
to dress him up like a doll. And he could rely on his brothers' taste,
couldn't he? Even if they made his relationship sound incestuous - and
sound was all it could be! It is, after all, the marriage that will
make them real brothers - although, what do legalities matter where
love is concerned!

Title: Essecarmë · Author: Dawn Felagund · Races: Elves: Family · ID: 247
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-19 21:14:41
Spoilers!

This story has always held particular attraction for me because it
sheds light on a very strong, painful moment in the early history of
Feanor's family which readers, starting by the reviewer, generally
take for granted. It manages to convey the tensions between the father
and the eldest son showing the way for future confrontations and yet
it is told in an apparently easy-going, light-hearted way which leads
the readers almost unawares to that terrible moment at the end that
seems so unexpected to everybody.
The point of view the author chooses makes the story so effective and
appealing: Makalaure is a (not very unbiased) observer of the whole
situation who comments with a wry sense of humour but who is also part
of the problem.
Another great element is the description of the ceremony and of all
the participants. All the characters are full of life: the bored kids
running around, the weary mother, the irritated father, the other
members of the family who don't seem to care too much about the baby,
the grandfathers, the boring ceremonies (for a teenager who has had to
go through this too many times). Everything helps to paint a colourful
picture of an event which could only have been a turning point in the
family relations.


Title: Letters From Faramir · Author: agape4gondor · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Boromir or Faramir · ID: 425
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-19 21:17:12
Poor Faramir. So much courage, but so lonely. I'm glad Peregrin Took
offered his support - he learned to love both of Denethor's sons. And
then there was Eowyn - who probably proved to be the best of all
possible outcomes. I like the letters.

Title: When the King Came Back · Author: Cathleen · Times: Fourth Age
and Beyond · ID: 514
Reviewer: Pearl Took · 2008-11-19 21:18:36
Spoilers!
A very realistic and moving story. Pippin has come home from the War
and soon had his family, especially his father, to deal with. Paladin
has a good deal of anger built up inside himself and he can't help but
let it come out. As happy as he is that Pippin is home, it doesn't
seem to make up for how much he hurt his family by leaving so abruptly
without word those thirteen months before.

Pippin, meanwhile is trying to figure out where he will fit in. He is
a different person than the Peregrin Took who left The Shire with his
cousins. He is stronger and more mature, certainly, but he is also
wounded in body and spirit, haunted by dreams and day-visions of all
he had to endure. Can he tell his family what he has gone through?

Father and son need to work things out between them and that is what
this story describes so wonderfully.

Title: Waterloo · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Romance: Gondor · ID: 158
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-19 21:22:00
Gondor has grown a bunch of ladies who will have little in common with
the butterflies who flew to safety. A far greater understanding of the
men who return from war, too. I'm sure Lothiriel made a much better
wife for Eomer for her experience in the Houses of Healing.

Lady Gailrin is right - no time to waste on courtesies when death is
staring you in the face. Unfortunately this can lead to some
disastrous matches once the days stretch out. But not with Erchirion
and Cammir - or of course Eomer and Lothiriel.


Title: Yule at Great Smials · Author: Dreamflower · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 566
Reviewer: Pearl Took · 2008-11-19 22:01:18
Spoilers!
Oh dear, this is another story that was written from a request of mine!

Dreamflower wrote a magical tale about a very special Yule celebration
at Great Smials. Lalia has been pulled away from the Smials to attend
an important wedding, so while the old cat is away, the happy Took
mice will play. Because of her absence, hobbits who haven't been to
the Smials for Yule in ages have decided to be there. Bilbo, Frodo,
Merry and his parents and many, many others - including Gandalf the
Wizard. Young five year old Pippin Took will be there as well.

Great fun is had by all. Pippin gets into mischief, and meets Gandalf
for the very first time - he decides quite quickly that he likes the
wizard and the wizard decides he likes the little Took.

Dreamflower wrote some lovely songs for this story as well, which
truly do round it out very nicely. I love the warmth and humor in it
as well. It is a jolly, warm, fun, happy Yule Story. Thank you so
much, Dreamflower!

Title: Pippin and Tulip's Excellent Adventure · Author: Cathleen ·
Times: Mid Third Age: Eriador · ID: 595
Reviewer: Pearl Took · 2008-11-19 22:27:07
I'm in awe of this story! Not that it is a great work of art, like
LOTR itself, but for the winding road it follows. Cathleen not only
took Tulip on an excellent adventure, but then has Pippin following
the trail like Sherlock Holmes when Tulip tells him that she won't say
where she has been but that he must figure it all out himself.

Such a fantastically creative story!!

Title: Mournful Fords · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Drama: Ring War
Drabbles · ID: 368
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-20 00:00:31
A perfect gapfiller for a moment that certainly deserves to be
highlighted. I agree completely with the author that it seems a
terrible omission on Tolkien's part when Theoden was riding right past
on the way to Isengard, and the company even stops and talks about
this sad place.

Imhiriel works the drabble form so well, and this interlude is no
exception. We are dropped right into the setting, the "background
noise" placing us precisely within TTT with just a few quick words.

Absolutely wonderful voice for Theoden, with exactly the questions and
recriminations I'd expect to see him ponder. A parent myself, and
knowing two families who've lost children in very different
circumstances, I can easily see this train of thought unfolding. His
despair and grief are clear without descending into sentimentality.
Then, without a misstep, we can segue right back into the chapter.

Truly, how could there NOT be a scene something like this? (It's one
of the only things that I think the movies "got" better than the
books.) That whole section in TTT has a deeper meaning for me now,
Theoden's voice a different timbre when he speaks to Gandalf. I wonder
how much of this moment he must have carried with him onto the Pelennor...

Surely, surely Theoden deeply mourned his only son and heir, and I'm
very glad that Imhiriel found a way to give him an opening to express it.

Title: Aulë the Smith · Author: Oshun · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character
Studies · ID: 530
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-20 01:04:42
Oshun's [Aulë the Smith] is one of a series of engaging biographies
that focus on characters from The Silmarillion. I'd like to think of
Oshun as not merely writing biographical research. In her SWG
biographies, she writes as a columnist, not only providing the reader
with material that has been researched meticulously, which reflects
Oshun's journalistic background, but also commentary: insightful,
funny, and delightfully arch. That distinguishes Oshun's work from
other "just the facts" (and dry-as-dust) biographies.

Although each biography is an informative _and_ entertaining read, I
am particularly taken with Oshun's research on Aulë, the only Vala I
can stomach in his role as Arda's patron saint of science and
engineering. Oshun draws astute comparisons between Aulë and Melkor
and Aulë's influence through the ages. Oshun illustrates that that
although Aulë represents something of an "ivory tower" scientist of a
type perhaps admired by Tolkien (there's no doubt that JRRT was keenly
tuned in on science in its purer forms, e.g., his dilettante's
interest in astronomy and botany), there was still plenty of ambiguity
in Aulë's penchant for discovery and invention as illustrated by his
ill-fated better students and his eagerness to create life, i.e., the
Dwarves. The latter would no doubt violate all sorts of bioethics
these days! ;^) At any rate, Oshun parses this information soundly
from her sources.

And even though this is the bio nominated for a MEFA, I highly
recommend the others she has written. Please do check them out!



Title: Light of the Westering Sun · Author: Dawn Felagund · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 126
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-20 01:09:44
Dawn has a wonderful talent for writing gifts for her friends which
fit them oh-so-well (that pair of knitted gloves with a perfect fit).
[Light of the Westering Sun] was written for Unsung Heroine who has
created a "canonical fanon" of Haleth and Caranthir, a pairing many of
us Silm-geeks quite like. The skill of Dawn's storytelling and prose
is such that even if a story is "custom-fit" for another, the rest of
us are treated to the gem, too. Such is [Light of the Westering Sun].

In a series of double drabbles, Dawn takes the reader back in time,
beginning with Haleth in old age to her initial sightings of the
Firstborn -- human but Other -- when she who would become a
chieftainess was a young girl -- a sighting that was the harbinger of
the intersection of the Edain and the Eldar.

The "backwards" construction of the story is very effective and
heart-wrenchingly poignant. Dawn's language is, as always, poetic,
e.g. Caranthir's eyes with [the same mournful light as the westering
sun]. But most of all, this series of ficlets casts into high relief
the chasm between mortal Men and the Firstborn in Tolkien's world: so
similar as fellow human beings who experience sorrow, joy and love,
yet with such a profound difference to create a nearly unbreachable
gulf between the peoples. Yet Haleth and Caranthir do so here, if only
for a fleeting moment of time.



Title: Name Calling: Group Identity and the Other among First Age
Elves · Author: Angelica · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 322
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-20 02:12:36
Angelica opens her essay with a most appropriate quote from JRRT. To
get a grasp on Tolkien's sometimes slippery legendarium, one cannot
simply focus on [Laws and Customs of the Eldar] or [Athrabeth Finrod
ah Andreth]. His languages are the vital key for unlocking insight
into the peoples of his Middle-earth. Angelica demonstrates this and
then some in her superb [Group Identity and the Other Among First Age
Elves]. This is a rich resource which I have read multiple times.

Angelica's categorizations of her subject matter by the use of
dichotomy -- [Eldar/Avari; Light/Darkness; With us/Against us] is
highly effective in driving home the clannishness that existed among
the Elves, a race just as capable of territoriality and prejudice as
their mortal kin. By examining the etymology of Kalaquendi and
Moriquendi, Angelica illustrates the stratification among elven
society, almost creation of caste systems. In particular, I pored over
the section on the Noldor and the Sindar, two major clans that often
clashed. Angelica's detailing of the roots ñóle (Quenya) and gul
(Sindarin) delves into wonderful subtlety and cultural implications.

Although focused on Tolkien's world, Angelica's treatise and her
approach to her research could just as easily be applied to language
and cultural schisms in our primary world. The formatting and
citations were very well done. The depth of this essay serves to
illustrate the fascinating detail one can extract about Tolkien's
world by digging into the details of his linguistic art.

Title: Alqualondë · Author: Moreth · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 220
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-20 02:40:18
Spoilers!
Using words and phrasing as keen as a sharpened blade, Moreth crafts a
powerful diptych from the perspectives of a young Telerin man and a
young Noldo during the Kinslaying at Alqualondë. Although set in
JRRT's world, there is, to me, a striking timelessness embedded in
these two drabbles which speaks to the author's solid knowledge of
history. The dying man. The realization of the one who took another's
life. Minuteman and British regular, Royalist and Parliamentarian,
Union and Confederate. Noldo and Teler. Moreth takes the horror of the
Kinslaying and humanizes it profoundly, making it shine like
unforgiving steel. A fantastic inaugural offering!

Msg# 9557

ADMIN – Focus on Drabbles and Other Fixed Length Ficlets Posted by Tanaqui November 20, 2008 - 17:21:02 Topic ID# 9557
Hey guys,

Here is your weekly admin post. With just over a week to go and nearly
4000 final reviews already published, I'm sure many of you have reviewed
most of the stories you already know and love, as well as new ones about
favourite characters or settings. You have, perhaps, reached the stage
with your reviewing where, like the guests at The Long-Expected Party,
you are 'filling up the corners'. And what better dainties to nibble at
than some of the 160-plus drabbles, fixed-length ficlets of less than
500 words, and fixed-length ficlet series that we have competing this year.

These stories mostly take just a few minutes each to read  although
they may take much longer to fully digest!  so there's still plenty of
time to select a few to review. They are spread across many Races, Times
and Genres, meaning there's something to suit almost everyone's tastes.
So if you want to cram in just one or two more reviews and make some
more MEFA authors happy, this list will help you find these shorter
pieces in this year's awards.

For the list of pieces in this announcement I've used the story type
"Fixed-Length Ficlets". Finding the list of these works is pretty
straightforward. To do this

1. Log in to www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/
2. Click the "Stories" link at the top of the page.
3. Click the "Show Filter" link.
4. Click the "Clear All Filters" button if you've used the filter before
this session.
5. Select "Fixed-Length Ficlets" from the "Story Type" filter at the top
6. Click the "Display selected nominations" button.

This will pull up all of the nominated pieces that are fixed-length
ficlets, whether true drabbles of 100 words or written to some other
specific length..

******************************

Here are the fixed-length ficlets competing in this year's competition:

Adaneth
---(63) Loudwater
Aervir
---(435) The Roses of Imloth Melui
agape4gondor
---(111) There Was A Hobbit
---(288) The Portrait
Alassante
---(260) Out, Damn'd Spot! Out, I Say!
annmarwalk
---(37) Now the Green Blade Riseth
---(40) The Wedding Gift
---(94) Call of the Wild
---(547) Fatherhood
---(548) Rich and Fair
Aranel Took
---(259) Nine Companions
---(441) Birthday Present
---(468) Hammer
---(533) Home
Archet
---(606) Nothing Less
Avon
---(7) Of Dreams...
---(623) The Chieftain of the Dunedain
---(721) Loving a Book Lover
Branwyn (Lady Branwyn)
---(33) Wave-Singer
---(400) Steward's Trumpets
---(401) Forfeit
---(723) Terra Incognita
---(726) No Man's Land
Dana
---(89) There and Back
---(641) A Path of Wisdom
---(683) What Goes Up
Dawn Felagund
---(126) Light of the Westering Sun
Dwimordene
---(273) Eight Weeks
---(274) The Edge of the Knife
---(480) The Kindly Airs
---(481) Recognition
Elen Kortirion
---(12) Hearts of Stone
---(95) Pulling the Wool
---(96) A Sea Visit
---(474) A Moment Away
---(515) Diamonds For Forever I, II & III
---(516) Collecting Hearts I, II, III & VI
---(517) The Turning Wheel
Elena Tiriel
---(64) Unwilling
---(208) Renewal
---(209) Men of the Twilight
---(465) Last Stroke
Elitihien
---(534) All these hands
Elleth
---(218) Ghost
---(399) Return
Fawsley
---(586) This crown of stars
foxrafer (csevans8)
---(604) The Journey
Galadriel
---(153) Trajectory
Gandalfs apprentice
---(85) Another Prometheus
---(242) Incarnation
---(243) Bears With Honey
Gloria Mundi
---(594) Gifts
Gwynnyd
---(362) Feelings of Superiority
---(432) Love at First Sight
---(433) Night Terrors
Ignoble Bard
---(234) Journey's End
---(342) Sunset Gates
Imhiriel
---(114) Flame of Life
---(216) Sharing Good News
---(217) Fit for a King
---(285) Deliverance
---(286) Cold Be Hand and Heart and Bone
---(353) Pirates Ye Be Warned
---(354) O Kheled-zâram fair and wonderful!
---(355) Return of the King
---(366) Moved to Pity
---(367) Taking Roots
---(368) Mournful Fords
---(369) Forsaken
---(370) Bibliophile
---(374) A Meeting in the Tower Hills
---(375) A Race, To Be Like Me
---(376) Battle upon the Quays
---(377) There shall be Mirth at our Meeting
---(378) Tying Notes
---(512) Least Expected
iorhael
---(666) Stabat Mater
Isabeau of Greenlea
---(706) Homecoming
Jay of Lasgalen
---(10) A Large Bold Hand
---(98) Messengers from the West
LA Knight
---(513) Wife of the Thain
Larner
---(293) Epiphany
---(687) The Birthday Blessing
Linda Hoyland
---(25) The Shadow
---(489) Autumn
---(490) No Regrets
---(505) Home is where the heart is
---(521) Sour Milk
Lindelea
---(689) Where the Sky Kisses the Horizon, There My Dreams Lie
---(690) ...and the sound of a battered heart, beating
Marta
---(297) Leather
---(344) Summer Nights
---(426) Giving Gifts
---(621) The Least of Rings
---(651) Old Friends
Meril
---(219) Burdens
---(390) Flickers
Moreth
---(220) Alqualondë
mrkinch
---(603) Black Memory
Nancy Brooke
---(172) Tree of Knowledge
---(287) The Waker
Nieriel Raina
---(163) Utúlie'n Aurë
---(551) Apart
---(558) Spiced Wine On A Snowy Day
pandemonium_213
---(54) Broken Star
PipMer
---(526) Birthday Double Drabble
Queen Galadriel
---(697) The Queen's Gift
Radbooks
---(601) A Fitting Occupation
Raksha the Demon
---(44) Gone Amiss
---(46) Undivided
---(47) Wind of Change
---(61) The Blessing of the Waters
---(294) Reflections in the Smoke
---(421) The Captain's New Clothes
---(422) A Midsummer Day's Dream
---(423) Refuge
---(424) Your Father Loves You
---(500) Legacy
---(625) The Fire of Hope
---(652) Moonset over Gondor
Rhapsody
---(81) Duty, Honour, Country
---(570) Midwinter Thoughts
---(718) Vengeance's Folly
Ribby
---(100) Tangled Webs
---(122) Blood and Iron
Robinka
---(83) The Sky Is Over
---(657) House of Ransom
SheBit
---(14) My Precious
spookystoy
---(407) My Legacy
stefaniab
---(431) Writer's Bloke
Tanaqui
---(119) Spoiled
---(120) The War of Wrath
---(271) Lost Love
---(279) Celevon a Mallen
---(291) Star-songs of the Eorlingas
---(292) Heavens' Embroidered Cloths
---(300) Creation Myths
---(328) Wild Swan
---(372) Baker's Dozen
---(384) Second Best
---(386) Birthday Outing
---(387) Possessing the greatest powers
---(393) Things as they were in all the days of my life
---(406) An Elf-lord Revealed
---(436) Supporting Acts
---(437) Handy With A Sword
---(438) Another Country
---(439) Saruman of Many Colours
---(440) Songs of Innocence and Experience
---(442) Dreamscape
---(443) No Mercy
---(444) Charge!
---(446) Relief
---(447) Expert Treasure Hunter
---(448) Orc Dreams
---(449) The Lowest Circle
---(450) Stewards
---(478) Alter/native
---(719) The World Is Changing
viv
---(6) Gently Held
---(180) Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast?
---(276) Some Confusion in Accounts

To find more information about any of these pieces, just do the following

1. Log in to www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/
2. Click the "Stories" link at the top of the web page.
3. Type the Story ID followed by the "#" sign into the search bar, and
click the "Search" button.

For instance, searching for "37#" will bring up story #37, Now the
Green Blade Riseth by. Annmarwalk.

Fixed-length ficlets are competing in the following subcategories:

---Genres: Alternate Universe: Drabbles
---Genres: Alternate Universe: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Genres: Drama: General Drabbles
---Genres: Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Genres: Drama: General Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Genres: Humor: Drabbles
---Genres: Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Genres: Romance: Drabbles
---Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Races: Elves: Drabbles
---Races: Elves: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Races: Men: Pre-Ring War Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Races: Men: General Drabbles
---Races: Men: General Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Races: Villains: Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Times: Fourth Age and Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Times: Late Third Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Races: Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Races: Dwarves: Drabbles
---Genres: Drama: Ring War Drabbles
---Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles
---Times: Late Third Age: Gondor Drabbles
---Races: Elves: Noldor Fixed-Length Ficlets
---Times: Multi-Age: Fixed-Length Ficlets

Happy reading!

Tanaqui
(MEFA Tech Support)

P.S. - If you noticed a mistake in this post, please email about it so I
can check whether a mistake has been made and, if necessary, correct my
announcement. You can reach me privately at
techsupport(.at.)mefawards(.dot.)net. Thanks!

Msg# 9558

MEFA Reviews for Thursday, November 20, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 20, 2008 - 19:55:53 Topic ID# 9558
Title: Trinity · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Modern Times · ID: 51
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-20 02:57:08
Spoilers!
In "Trinity," I think that Pandemonium hits on a major reason why
characters like Feanor and Sauron--in their hearts, inventors and
creators--are fascinating to so many of us and who refuse to be
dismissed as mere villains. Underlying the creators and scientists of
Tolkien's world are questions that still torment us, nearly a century
after Middle-earth's first characters came into existence. What
responsibilities do scientists have to humankind? Should morality
temper their desire to learn and do more and more ... and how and when
shall they know this? And when their greatest creations wreak havoc
unimaginable, how do we reconcile the outcome with their humanity:
their human curiosity and, often, the desire to do good that instead
brought about evil?

"Trinity" presents these questions in the form of a conversation
between Feanor, Sauron, and Robert Oppenheimer, the creator of the
atomic bomb. I have seen many stories that consider how characters
viewed their deeds from a distant vantage point offered by
history--especially Feanor is popular for this--but Pandemonium's
perspective is unique and complicated, not easily reduced to "guilt
and regret" or "unfailing pride," and at its conclusion, "Trinity"
seems to awaken in me more questions than it answers.

The story's conclusion is impeccably written and doesn't fall into the
temptation of becoming saccharine or moralistic. It is a fitting end
for a thoughtful story that comes with highest recommendations for all
who like to consider the meaning behind Tolkien's stories.

Title: Cold · Author: febobe · Genres: Drama: Featuring Frodo or Sam ·
ID: 239
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-20 03:20:55
Spoilers!
A lovely warm hurt comfort story set in the film universe which shows
film Faramir in a far more favourable light. I liked the alternate
points of view and Faramir's attempts to help and care for Frodo
together with Sam. I did wonder what became of Frodo's mithril
shirt,here though.An enjoyable,fee good well written story

Title: Engineering · Author: SurgicalSteel · Races: Men: Minas Tirith
· ID: 696
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-20 03:29:21
Spoilers!
As always and now much expected - the author's writing draws me in and
holds me with my breath stilled.

I sat in the operating room and blanched... and marvelled at the
little one's courage. It always amazes me how children seem to be able
to endure things that would send an adult off in a terror!

Bless the little one's heart - I love how she growed up - despite (or
perhaps because) of this terrible accident.

Nicely written.

Title: Wizards' Pupils · Author: Altariel · Races: Men: Minas Tirith ·
ID: 108
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-20 03:35:58
Spoilers!
Beautifully told lesson. I very much liked this. Even being a Denethor
fanatic, it was very profound and well written. My heart cried out for
Denethor, but I could accept what happened. I loved Faramir's gentle
teaching of Elboron and Elboron's learning from such teaching.

I don't particularly agree that Denethor would have succumbed to
Curunir's voice. It is said the Steward battled against Sauron in the
Palantir and never succumbed...

The part of Faramir is well-written. I think the young man would have
'discovered' Curunir's 'secret' and reacted in such a way.

There is a quality to this author's writing that is simple and sweet
and soft - just exactly what I would think of Faramir - when he is NOT
on a battlefield.

Well done!

Title: Maglor's Song · Author: Robinka · Genres: Poetry: Drama · ID: 398
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-20 06:46:23
Spoilers!
A very moving poem concerning Maglor's sad fate.Robinka uses language
beautifully to relate this grim fate in verse

Title: There Was A Hobbit · Author: agape4gondor · Genres: Humor:
Drabbles · ID: 111
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-20 06:50:29
One does not often imagine Boromir and Haldir sharing a laugh and a
comic song together,but this delightfully amusing drabble .Tolkien's
earlier drafts can be a great source of inspiration.

Title: Galadriel Remembers · Author: Savageseraph · Genres: Poetry:
Drama · ID: 583
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-20 06:53:51
Spoilers!
This is beautiful poem in which Galadriel's restless spirit is shown
to still be active even in Valinor when she thinks back to former
glories.Now she is just another Elf.This was very well written.

Title: Untold Tales of the Mark: The Banishment of Éomer · Author:
Katzilla · Genres: Alternate Universe · ID: 206
Reviewer: stefaniab · 2008-11-20 07:49:46
Spoilers!
This epic AU tale of Rohan is easily the longest fan fiction piece I
have ever read. It was worth every page. Katzilla takes a moment from
the LOTR films--the "banishment of Eomer" of the title--and expands
into a meaty story of adventure, angst, and character growth.

Eomer, a consummate soldier usually in control of his formidable
emotions, can barely cope with the massive chip on his shoulder, due
to the trials ot the early parts of his banishment. Eowyn is true to
Tolkien but is subject to dark terrors that are all of Katzilla's
design. There is enough angst in this story to amply fill all its 80
chapters.

Though moments from the films and many characters from the books
parade across the story's vast canvas, Katzilla spins these incidents
and folk in slightly different ways to fill gaps and make her Rohan a
rich, fully realized world. There are occasional language problems,
for English is a second language for Katzilla. These are easily
overlooked when you get caught up in her characterizations or get
involved in the very detailed action pieces, such as the retake of the
Golden Hall.

I personally like long stories, where the author has room to develop
the characters and involve them in challenging situations. I highly
recommend "Untold Tales, especially if you hunger to plunge yourself
into a long, fulfilling stay in late Third Age Rohan.

Title: Tolkien's Parish: The Canonical Middle-earth · Author: Steuard
Jensen · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 91
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-20 08:22:33
Spoilers!
A most interesting look at judging what is canonical in Tolkien's
work, in the end comparing Tolkien's Middle Earth to "Niggle's Parish"
in "Leaf by Niggle" in his "Tree and Leaf." I'm not certain that
anything definite has been settled, but there is no doubt that what
Mr. Jensen has written does inspire thought on the life-long process
of Tolkien's creation of his world.

Definitely an essay those who consider themselves Tolkien scholars
should consider.

Title: The Last Stand · Author: Rhapsody · Times: First Age and Prior
· ID: 82
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-20 09:24:12
This story always makes me exclaim a very fangirlish "WOW" and think
just what a fan of the Sindar of Doriath, and Beleg in particular
(though, I do not have to tell you, Rhapsy, that, do I? ;)) such as
myself can want more. The two Sindarin warriors went to war alongside
the Noldor and their allies and fought with the forces of Morgoth
despite the animosity between the two elven divisions and Thingol's
constantly growing repulsion toward the clan of Fëanor. Beleg and
Mablung could not miss this chance, and though they did not have to
prove anything to anyone, they were granted their king's permission to
go. Every Silmarillion geek knows this story. But Rhapsody did not
simply re-tell the tale; she brought the host of Gondolindrim to the
stage, with their captain Ecthelion of the Fountain, and on the basis
of this meeting of simple soldiers she built a great, captivating
gap-filler, presenting the main characters of the story in her usual,
vivid and emotional style, which I have grown to admire throughout the
years.

Thank you so very much, Rhapsody, for writing "The Last Stand". It is
always an exceeding treat to read.

Title: Light of the Westering Sun · Author: Dawn Felagund · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 126
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-20 10:15:19
Things left unsaid can be at least as interesting as those said, as
Tolkien well knew, and the relationship between Caranthir and
Haleth--allies? Friends? Lovers?--is one of those things. Dawn
provides a tantalizing glimpse of what might have been in a lovely
series of ficlets.

My favorite among the memorable images she conjures has to be that of
Caranthir with the wooden beads and feathers plaited in his hair [as
did her people]. The idea of the Haladin adorned in the style of
Native Americans is both fitting and inspired.


Title: On Hobbits · Author: Aratlithiel · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 457
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-20 10:26:40
Those who think of hobbits as sweet, innocent, childlike, jolly little
fellows may be taken aback by the rather harsh assessment of them--or
at least of the garden-variety hobbit--that opens this essay. And yet,
while the average hobbit arguably has many fine qualities which
Aratlithiel does not dwell on here, her critique is dead on--and I say
this as a hobbit author and fan. As portrayed in LOTR, most hobbits
*are* provincial, intolerant, complacent, and more than a little
arrogant in their willful ignorance. The good Professor himself, in
Letter # 246, described this tendency as ["a mental myopia which is
proud of itself, a smugness (in varying degrees) and cocksureness, and
a readiness to measure and sum up all things from a limited
experience, largely enshrined in sententious traditional 'wisdom.'"]

The essay then moves on to the author's chief topic: Just what makes
Frodo & Co. so atypical...and wonderful. While she has kind words for
all four Travelers, her highest praise is reserved for Frodo. As in
all her fan fiction, Aratlithiel shows keen insight into Frodo's
character. Particularly astute is her concluding observation: that his
virtues are such that are rarely noticed or appreciated by most of
those around him.

Highly recommended.


Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-20 14:01:51
Spoilers!
What a story, before I could summarize the feelings this story
provoked so well, I let it simmer for a while. Keiliss gives us a
rather realistic feel of a grieving widow, bereaved of the one she
loved and coming to the bitter realisation that all that what had been
promised to her by her husband, has not come to pass. Her long-lived
life has not given her the wisdom or knowledge to accept the gift or
perhaps has given her the wisdom to deal with mortality even if it is
extended. Arwen's searching, waiting, desperation made me cry.
However, this is not all what this story has to offer. It is being
told by Maglor (my most favourite elf) in a gorgeous and beautifully
balanced voice, who observes the evening star before she perishes...
Keiliss handles this in such a great way, that the shock of what he
did out of kindness and gentleness... the reaction comes delayed.
Perhaps this is also because of the intensity of the story and that it
takes a while before all is processed, I do not know. What I do know
is that there is more to this story that meets the eye, it is a tale
written with great skill and in a great voice and yet so utterly
realistic that Arwen could be someone so close to your own life who is
fighting and trying to deal with a loss so big (and therefore the
undertone of the great love between Arwen and Aragorn is just
beautifully handled without any cliché's what so ever). It makes me
want to help her too. Well not with a dagger or a knife that is, but
she conveys all emotions so masterfully. This is probably one of my
favourite stories by her and with an impression that lingers for so long!

Title: Eagle of the Star · Author: Neoinean · Genres: Adventure:
Incomplete · ID: 327
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-20 17:19:11
I've been following this story for some years, always enjoying it. The
author has a very different take on the young Aragorn than my own--she
writes in the movieverse--but despite and because of (both at the same
time) I find her story gripping and highly readable. She's got an
acute sense of characterization and drama, and makes the most of it.
Her command of the language of story-telling only gets better, the
occasional spelling error notwithstanding.

I completely disagree with the movieverse Aragorn who "doesn't want
that power." Sorry, but he spent years preparing himself for it, for
those of us who knew him when Peter Jackson was a gleam in his dad's
eye. But Neoinean's Aragorn is also one I recognize--the same humility
and courage--and he grows in stature as the tale develops.

One of the things I enjoy about fanfic is seeing the different ways
different authors can use the same characters and tales to tell their
own, unique story.Neoinean is one of these. I really hope she starts
writing her own fiction some day--she's got what it takes.

Title: A Fair Trial · Author: Maeve Riannon · Genres: Humor: Valar &
Maiar · ID: 403
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-20 21:03:03
Spoilers!
I just cannot help to think to be plunged into a scene that would fit
our times so well (like any lawyer show currently out there), yet at
the same time it also works so splendidly for me in Tolkien's world.
It is the end of the First Age and those who committed any wrong
doings should stand trail (the author makes a good use of what is out
there in canon to make it work so well). Such is the case with Sauron
and Melian, an unlikely and yet believable couple in this sense.
Maeve's small touches upon what both have done brought by yours truly
Eonwe is brilliantly done. The mockery of both steps and failures, yet
also their accomplishments albeit brought with a fabulously conjured
twist. What I love the most about this piece is Melian's shrewd
thinking and I cannot really blame her making her hilarious escape
with Sauron. It had me going like: now that is how he got away from
his punishment! I mean if I would have Saruman as my defence lawyer, I
would also plan my escape. This piece has a delightful tone, with apt
references to Monthy Python, the trilogy that just ads that wonderful
twist to it all. I also love the sharp and witty dialogue to bring
across the crimes of both in a delightful manner and Eonwe's addition
to this crazy mix is just the icing on the cake. Truly, just stay away
from beverages though while reading this.

Title: A Little Misunderstanding · Author: Radbooks · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Elves and Men · ID: 275
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-20 21:15:37
Spoilers!
This story has one shining star amongst a wonderful cast of
characters: a little Halbarad brought to you by Radbooks. As young as
he is, he remembers the day Aragorn was taken away and the author does
such a splendid job in how to translate these memories into tangible
fears. But time heals almost every wound and the adorably fierce shift
from an afraid child to a protective one had me chuckling. This is a
nice angsty piece with wonderful and tangible details, but especially
the manner in which Radbooks portrayed the child's emotions is
brilliantly done!

Title: Too Many Rangers · Author: Larner · Races: Hobbits · ID: 116
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-20 21:31:34
Spoilers!
I'll never forget browsing a volume of HoMe for the first time, coming
across the names Bingo and Trotter, and snapping the book shut,
terrified that my mental image of those noble heroes was forever
spoiled. The horror wore off eventually...

Could we have taken Frodo and Strider seriously as Bingo and Trotter?
Fortunately we'll never know, but in this inspired spoof Larner
imagines a moment when drafts collide with hilarious results.

Larner does a fine job getting inside Butterbur's cluttered head, and
Strider's dry metafic comments are a hoot: ["I'm not speaking of Shire
Reckoning, or even Steward's Reckoning. I'm speaking anno domini."]
But I think my favorite bit is Trotter and Strider vying for the same
table in the corner, as the whole company looks on bemusedly. And I
can't help but wonder: what if Aragorn's nickname *hadn't* been
changed? King Elessar...I wonder what the Quenya word is for Trotter?

I could see a fun sequel to this...with Trotter refusing to leave the
story and both incarnations insisting on leading them to Rivendell,
bickering all the way!



Title: When Trouble Came · Author: Lily · Races: Hobbits · ID: 109
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-20 23:54:52
Lily's tale of the Troubles in the Shire is an exceptional one and I
highly recommend it to all hobbit lovers, particularly those who enjoy
the Brandybuck's. Her portrayals of Saradoc and Merimac are just so
"right", so well done, that I almost feel I actually know them in real
life. Lily does have a soft spot for Merimac, and her continuing hard
work at the development of this less-often seen character is
remarkable. She has really brought him alive for me and I find myself
looking forward to each new story!

Title: Between Childhood and Coming of Age · Author: Dreamflower ·
Races: Hobbits: Friendship · ID: 141
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-21 00:17:19
I very much enjoyed Dreamflower's tale of Pippin's adolescent woes.
There are some very lovely moments in this story and the writer
explores Pippin's moodiness, dreams, and relationships in a humourous
manner, while maintaining the seriousness in just the right places. I
am certain Golden was thrilled when this story was gifted to her in
the Yule fic exchange last year!

Title: The Birthday Blessing · Author: Larner · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 687
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-21 00:22:10
A very tender and lovely story from a talented author! Larner sets
just the right tone in this little birthday mathom. It's a sweet
glimpse of the Gamgee's.

Title: The North Delving Incident · Author: Dana · Genres: Drama · ID: 26
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-21 00:28:55
This is an extremely well conceived, well written story, by a talented
author. It's not the type of story I usually seek out because of its
dark theme, and those can be very difficult for me to read. But this
one is tremendous and I'm glad I read it.

Title: Seven Sisters · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Other Beings · ID: 388
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-21 00:52:19
Spoilers!
I loved reading this deliciously humorous and at the same time,
frightening tale! Pearl has woven together several lovely myths and
the result is a very entertaining and spooky story that's a perfect
read for this time of year. Pippin's reactions to Delphinium's kiss
and his youngest sister's teasing is delightful. The funeral scene is
spooky and surreal and makes the reader every bit as glad as Pippin is
when the other children come to find him!

Title: Music hath Charms · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 361
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-21 00:55:52
This is a sweet and fluffy little story, and one that is sure to bring
a smile to all readers!

Title: Regarding Ents · Author: PipMer · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring War
· ID: 525
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-21 01:00:12
Walking and talking trees - it is incredible and Sam said it
perfectly! This is a very nice little tale and I got a kick out of
Merry and Pippin trying to explain the ents to Sam and Frodo. Well done!

Title: The Last Summer · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits · ID: 143
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-21 01:08:37
So sad and beautiful. Golden's tale of Pippin's granda's last summer
is a real heart-wrencher. Filled with many different emotions, this
story is a lovely tribute to her own grandparents. Well done, Golden.

Msg# 9559

MEFA Reviews for Thursday, November 20, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 20, 2008 - 19:56:56 Topic ID# 9559
Title: Lock Out · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits · ID: 307
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-21 01:14:49
A very clever use of an old saying, and Pippinfan's story creates a
delightful picture of this sweet couple. Such hobbity good fun! Loved
the comment about the petticoat....

Title: Hearts Like the Sea · Author: Ignoble Bard · Times: First Age
and Prior · ID: 36
Reviewer: Jael · 2008-11-21 01:22:14
This story is perhaps my favorite of this author's nominations for the
year. It handles an unusual pairing exceptionally well. The author's
evocative prose made me feel as if I was back walking the mist
enshrouded cliffs of Cuivienen under the primordial starlight,
listening to the crashing of the waves.

The love story is bittersweet, hinting at old tragedy and losses yet
to come. Rarely do we see a good story about the earliest elves. The
author addresses the difficulties presented by Tolkien's mythology --
how do you describe bight and day when there are no sun and moon as
yet? -- with grace and ease. Without giving too much way, these are
two characters we usually see in a much different context. It is
fascinating to see the very early versions of themselves, especially
knowing what is to come. This is an excellent addition to the genre.

Title: The Return · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Drama · ID: 167
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-21 01:25:57
Spoilers!
A haunting and beautifully written story about the side of the Ring
War that is often overlooked, the sorrow of those who lost their loved
ones upon the battle field.What could be a more dreadful task than a
returning to tell the mother of your sons that they are no more? I
felt so thankful that a daughter remained .I actually used these
deaths as a stepping stone for one of my stories,without I fear
thinking more about it.
I loved all the little details about the children,the goats and the
dogs as well as the wounded soldier being put on the horse.The joy of
MEFA is in finding gems like this.

Title: PROPHECY: Changing the Future · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor
· ID: 11
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-21 01:51:31
Spoilers!
I liked this look at prophecy and how those who read it and interpret
it might decide to change it to suit their own beliefs and perceptions.

Msg# 9560

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 21, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 21, 2008 - 21:30:16 Topic ID# 9560
Title: Handy With A Sword · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 437
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-21 01:57:21
Spoilers!
An enjoyable sequence of drabbles concerning Eowyn's liking for the
sword and duals with her husband.Faramir is a brave man to take on
this lady!

Title: Heart of the Wood · Author: Kenaz · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 60
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-21 02:56:35
What a beautiful story--I scarcely know where to begin! Turin's
character ... the first thing that impressed me about this story was
how I think it might be the best representation of Turin's character
that I've read outside of Tolkien's own words. And--unlike Tolkien,
whose Turin is often difficult to like--Kenaz depicts a Man who is
resolute, proud, and largely cheerless (in other words, completely in
canon for Turin!), and yet she manages to evoke empathy for him at the
same time. I have frequently contemplated writing Turin and found
myself overwhelmed with the task of portraying such a difficult
character sympathetically. Kenaz, I commend you for doing a truly
excellent job of this.

The language of this story is simply gorgeous. The imagery is
evocative of the lands of Doriath: dark and lush and mysterious. The
style lends itself perfectly to Tolkien without being overwrought; the
dialogue is eloquent without being obscured and weighed down by some
of the common conventions used to make stories and characters "sound
like Tolkien." The Sindarin culture is wonderfully portrayed to
contrast with Turin's differences as one of the Edain. I have often
heard said that a great story is one that transports the reader to the
world of the author's imagining. This story transported me.

I highly recommend this story. In fact, it reminds me of why I get
involved with the MEFAs each year because, posted as it this story is
on LiveJournal, I probably never would have found it without a
recommendation, and that would have been a shame.

Thank you, Kenaz, for a half-hour escape through your beautiful writing!

Title: Nightfall · Author: Jael · Times: Second and Early Third Age ·
ID: 87
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-21 03:14:15
Spoilers!
This story is a stunning interpretation of cultural and political
differences among the elven forces within the Last Alliance, which, as
would be expected in any story written by Jael, gives special
attention to the new king of Greenwood the Great, Thranduil. No one
comes off as entirely perfect in this telling, but Thranduil is
handled with enormous sensitivity and his point of view is
sympathetically championed. Galion also shines in this sequel to the
earlier ["Rose in a Fisted Glove"] where I first personally
encountered Jael's interpretations of these characters. I have always
claimed that story was my absolute favorite of Jael's entire story
cycle based upon the life and times of Thranduil. Reading
["Nightfall"] I was drawn to reconsider my preference. Not sure which
I can say which is the more perfect story; they each have their
moments, certainly they rank number one and number two for me. If
anyone has not yet begun to read Jael's saga of Thranduil, I would
recommend they first read ["Rose in a Fisted Glove"] and the
immediately read ["Nightfall."]

When I initial began reading Tolkien fanfiction, one of the events
that I was first drawn to and wanted to write about was the Last
Alliance. I was appalled when I read of the tremendous losses of the
Silvan elves and wanted to hear their side of the story. Their losses
were usually presented as being largely the fault of Oropher for not
wanting to take the direction of Gil-galad, without any detailed
explanation except pure bull-headedness. I never did get around to
anything about it, but Jael has done such a marvelous job and I doubt
now that I ever will. I could not presume to be able to add anything
that she has not more carefully thought about. Jael forces the reader
to think about the hard questions. Also, she is most effective in
transmitting emotions and defining friendship. This is a great
addition to her exploration of the character and history of Thranduil.
I cannot recommend it strongly enough.


Title: Spaces in the Heart · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of
Elrond · ID: 251
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-21 04:16:28
Spoilers!
It's a shame that Tolkien didn't have an extra thirty years of life in
which to write more about Gondolin and its people, not to mention so
many neat bits in the Silmarillion that beg for further exploration.
Here, Keiliss takes a turn at a first meeting Tolkien never chronicled
but had to have happened - that of Glorfindel with the young Elrond,
grandson of Idril, who Glorfindel would have known in the hidden city.
It's a lovely, understated vignette; with Glorfindel so full of
memories and melancholy and Elrond lacking parents and seeking to
learn more about his family. Keiliss does a nice job in writing
Elrond, who we have seen in THE HOBBIT and LOTR as a mature Elf-lord
famed for his wisdom, as a youngster beginning his quest for knowledge.

Title: Vodka · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 714
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-21 04:28:01
Spoilers!
An ironic and rather bitter piece, like the vodka that Maglor has
taken from neighboring humans. Though I disagree with the notion, a
fairly popular one in Silm fanfic, that Fingon rescued Maedhros
because of a homosexual love either unrequited or returned, this story
works quite effectively as a quasi AU story. The last line is perfect
for the story, leaving the reader and perhaps Maglor or Maedhros with
a sardonic grin.

Title: Risk Assessment · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Elves · ID: 665
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-21 04:56:49
Spoilers!
I love the way this writer brings the intellectually stimulating
atmosphere of Ost-en-Edhil to life, she creates a city teeming with
interesting, intelligent people, who sadly do not realize that one of
the most revered of their teachers will eventually destroy their hopes
and their city, not to mention many of the people themselves. This is
a vignette from the viewpoint of a fairly young female Sinda, Midhel,
who, rather than a princess or great lady, is a baker, or rather, an
apprentice about to be initiated in the mysteries of Yavanna's
lembas-making art. Pandemonium writes a great conversation here, where
older and more intellectual women (Noldor, naturally) converse with
Midhel in a bathhouse and bring up an argument that is old in RL, that
of science versus faith, in the discussion of the physical nature of
lembas. The Noldor women reveal their wisdom not so much in their
knowledge but in the way they refuse to become vicious in their
argument, and their good-natured attempts to find common ground with
the somewhat intimidated Midhel.

Pandemonium has a wonderful capacity to surprise the reader. The
reader can tell, from the thoughts and words of Midhel, that she is
not some simple peasant, but she appears to be unequal, at least in
experience, to Melamirre, the Noldo master-smith. But in the course of
the story, we learn that Midhel is inventing cinnamon rolls, surely a
noteworthy achievement that still delights the palates of Arda today.
I just found that a very Neat Bit.

Title: A Midsummer Day's Dream · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 422
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-21 05:26:51
Spoilers!
A lovely, dreamlike ficlet in which Faramir goes gentle into that good
night, and who can blame him? Would that we all could have such happy
departures from this world...and yet the pain is there too, of those
left behind. The final quote ties everything together beautifully.

Title: A Sleep Over · Author: Phyncke · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 160
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-21 11:02:25
Spoilers!
I really adore this little piece written by Phyncke. The situation she
sketches feels so timeless: two girls - close friends at that - in a
bedroom. Then there is this terrific teenage action between the two
girls, you can see their character traits shining through, but yet
they are such utterly elflings, including their own dreams and
expectations. Aredhel's dreams of a future filled with luxury (a scene
I surely have experienced) and Galadriel's budding power regarding the
gift of foresight. What I so like about the scene portrayed is how
Phyncke balances her narrative with the details a reader needs:
nothing more, nothing less. For example Aredhel's room, the author
plays with this detail alone in a great way. When the girls retreat to
the bedroom, the room is light and white, the mood is cheerful and
pure. Then the curtains get shut and you bring in the black element:
the room is darkened, the fate Aredhel gets to hear simply completes
it. It reminds me of the future ahead of her where she will leave
Gondolin to live in an almost alike environment with a bossy Eöl. Her
reaction to Galadriel's works leaves me chuckling and Fingolfin's
reaction to that leaves me with a sad feeling, that knowing once dad
will be gone; none can protect Aredhel to what will come to pass.
Phyncke plays with words so skilfully, and builds up the tension so
smoothly, leaving it to the reader to either read the two girl's
together layer, or to enjoy those beneath it. I know that Phyncke has
more stories in the so called cousins-series planned and I am looking
forward to more!

Title: Dark Dreams · Author: Avon · Races: Men: Steward's Family · ID: 282
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-21 11:03:35
Spoilers!
Avon's story, "Dark Dreams", is one that I enjoy so much I re-read it
every few months. Young Faramir and Boromir are staying in Dol Amroth
with their uncle; Faramir has a troubling dream, and Imrahil responds.

The characterizations are spot-on. For example, it is easy to estimate
Faramir's and Boromir's ages, just from the way each behaves. It is
clear that the brothers love each other, and that Boromir is fiercely
protective of his younger brother. Furthermore, Imrahil's avuncular
instincts are very strong, honed by his experience as a parent.

Denethor is very effectively but indirectly characterized, without
even being present. The contrast between the warmth and nurturing that
Imrahil provides versus the stark coldness and indifference of
Denethor is striking... and also heartbreaking. I can't help but feel
empathy for the two boys (and Imrahil) as the story unfolds.

The intensity of the dream and the vivid detail that Avon includes
about the subject of the dream are fascinating. I also like the fact
that Faramir's gift of dreaming, which make him feel so vulnerable and
fearful about angering his father, are shared by Imrahil, as we see at
the end.

This is a well-crafted story that warms my heart.

Title: Sour Milk · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 521
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-21 11:03:37
This is a very cute, funny little tail um tale. So, Aragorn has the
ability to turn milk sour with just one glance. He scares me. Have you
read Laire's tale about the toys? Aragorn's glance alone can shush his
children up very quickly, as well as his soft voice, probably full of
menace-or else! So, the city was in turmoil because all the milk was
sour. That is funny. No milk? Oh, no! It's a catastrophe! Especially
for the cats. Poor kitties. Oh dear! The battle with the cats! Aragorn
deserved what he got. Even the spoiling of his fine clothes. I can
just see him livid throwing water on the cats and drawing his sword.
Down kitties!! Oh, dear, Aragorn was overpowered by a bunch of cats.
Oh, no, what is Middle Earth coming to? The King finally learned the
errors of his ways and became a good leader. He was ashamed of himself
as he should have been. And he wanted the leader tomcat to remain with
him and teach him humility. Which was very wise of him. Oh, this was
really a cute little fairy tale, Linda! I really liked it!

Title: Fulfilling Oaths · Author: Nieriel Raina · Times: Multi-Age ·
ID: 332
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-21 12:21:03
Spoilers!
I really enjoy stories that show the many ways that The Silmarillion
connects to The Lord of the Rings. Nieriel does a lovely job of
accomplishing this task by showing the Ring of Felagund (yes, I know
... it's really the Ring of Barahir, but I have to give a nod to my
namesake!) as it moves through history and how this single artifact
touched many lives through the inspiration it provided. In particular,
I like the parallelism between the first and second sections that
makes that continuity all the more palpable, as Aragorn ponders
passing the ring onto his son, much as Beren did millennia before.

Title: The Houseless · Author: Jael · Genres: Horror · ID: 178
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-21 12:38:30
Spoilers!
This story combines many wonderful elements: It is bittersweet,
heartwarming, and spooky, all at the same time. It shows Legolas's
kindness and Muiniel's longing to return to her parents and the life
that she knew. And I'll admit that I'm a sucker for stories with
houseless spirits! I am not convinced that they are inclined to evil,
as stated in L&C. I like that Jael has shown a convincing alternate
interpretation: That, sometimes, they linger for love of the lands and
people they have left behind.

Also, I really enjoyed the merging of Elven traditions with the
traditions celebrated as part of Samhain and Halloween. This was a
nice touch!

Title: Hearts Like the Sea · Author: Ignoble Bard · Times: First Age
and Prior · ID: 36
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-21 13:03:31
Spoilers!
This is a story full of both tenderness and the joy of discovery:
discovery of both love and of the ships for which the Teleri will soon
be renowned. I enjoy stories that give a realistic portrayal of life
at Cuivienen, and I think Ignoble Bard does an admirable job of this!

Regarding the romantic pairing, in my personal verse, I like to think
that before the Elves became more aware of laws via the Valar that
they were freer to love whom they chose. So, in that regard, the
ending--the arrival of Orome--is particularly bittersweet. And this
line--["He will take you. I can feel it!"]--uttered by Nowe as Elwe
prepares to approach Orome, gave me shivers. What great foreshadowing!

A lovely story--I'm glad I got a chance to read this!

Title: Star of Hope · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Mid Third Age:
Eriador · ID: 34
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-21 13:50:25
Linda, as I have said before, I really like Gilraen. And this is in
first person with Gilraen at the helm. That makes it even more
special. This is wonderful. It seems to me she is so seldom written
about in fandom. She really should be, she had such a huge part in
Aragorn's upbringing. She raised, with lots of Elrond's help I'm sure,
such a good child, and wonderful individual. Yet, she was still his
mother, so she probably had the greatest influence on him while he was
very, very young. But also with the Elven influence as well, how could
he possibly have helped being the person he turned out to be. I think
this is an interesting way of approaching Gilraen and Arathorn's
relationship. She did not love him, only respected him. How sad. But,
then the night that she begat Aragorn, she felt love for Arathorn for
the first time. That must have been special for her. She knew both his
begetting day and his birthday. That's really special. Perhaps there
was something in Elrond's wine? An aphrodesiac, maybe? No, probably
not. The scene you have of Arathorn and Gilraen walking along the
lakeshore felt so real. I could feel a light cool breeze and see and
hear the sounds of the water lapping gently up on the the shore. And
also the bright moon and lots of stars in the sky. The shooting stars
were perfect as was her wish. The star that she wished on, sort of
became that child she had so hoped for. A being that would one day
become the Star of Hope for all men. This story is absolutely lovely,
Linda. I really loved it.

Title: The Vase that was Broken · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres:
Humor: Gondor · ID: 417
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-21 14:43:21
This is a very good story, Linda. It's funny! The things Aragorn can
get himself into! It's so sweet that Aragorn so loves to play with his
son with stories, demonstrations, etc. He got a bit carried away here
though, acting as if he were a child himself. But I am sure Eldarion
brings that out in him. Children are so much fun. My nephews always
bring it out in me. I play with them a lot and so they are used to it
and expect it from me. Oh, the things we all get ourselves into. Both
Aragorn and Eldarion were responsible for what happened, actually.
Eldarion got lucky and got out of it, though. Help, Faramir, help!! I
love Aragorn's fear and guilt he feels every time he knows that Arwen
will be angry at him about something. She can make him feel like a
naughty child. Poor Aragorn. He just wants her to be happy and just
hates seeing her hurt over anything. Aragorn and Faramir hunted and
hunted desperately for a new, expensive vase. They found a beautiful
one. Then when Arwen got home, she loved the new vase, and gave him a
sweet reward. It made all his efforts more than worthwhile. His Arwen
was happy. And the guilt and fear melted away. Aragorn was saved! This
is darling, Linda

Title: Burdens · Author: Meril · Genres: Drama: General Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 219
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-21 17:37:28
The author manages to show the horror of the Kinslaying, of the
betrayal of Feanor and of the crossing of Helcaraxe through the
consequences on minor, unknown participants of these tragedies. That
she can do it in very short, very economical pieces adds to their
power and poignancy. Her original characters are [the footsoldiers of
history] (Arturo Perez Reverte's words - approximately- not mine) who
suffer the consequences of the decisions of their leaders, endure the
pain and in the long run are forgotten. The author has brought them to
the foreground in an unforgetable way.

Title: No Man's Land · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 726
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-21 17:38:45
After reading this drabble, the reader can't help wondering why not?
this was a very likely scenario considering the terrible waste of the
trenches. A very powerful reflection on the meaninglessness of war

Title: Five things that never happened to Nerdanel · Author: Meril ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 389
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-21 17:40:42
Spoilers!
Great alternatives to key moments in Nerdanel's life: what if she had
never married Feanor? what if she had died bearing the twins? The most
original (and chilling): what if she had taken the Oath, joined her
husband in Beleriand and become a monster? And the last one, ruling
over the dwarfs in Valinor. Very original take that shows how much
writing from original points of view can add to well-known characters
and events.

Title: Feelings of Superiority · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 362
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-21 17:41:25
Tolkien seems to have given all races and cultures across his
Secondary Universe the same inclination towards prejudice and bigotry
that we can easily recognize in our world. The author reflects on
these traits and how they are transmitted from fathers to sons in
short, powerful pieces that span all Ages and peoples. My favourite
one is the last one where the Avari who are so seldom given a voice in
fanfiction, look with horror at the returning Eldar.

Title: Hammer · Author: Aranel Took · Races: Dwarves: Drabbles · ID: 468
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-21 18:12:12
Oh, my! Bad pick-up lines abound even in Middle-earth! Aranel Took's
drabble is a very funny and delightful tete-a-tete setup. The
characterizations are wonderful, all "show, not tell"; the would-be
girlfriend's response to the narrator's invitation is priceless.

Title: Home · Author: Aranel Took · Races: Dwarves: Drabbles · ID: 533
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-21 18:12:36
I really enjoyed reading the contrasts between Gimli's past and
present homes. The bits of practical details and information about
expansion, etc., ground the drabble as true reflections of this
particular Dwarf, as well as feed my intense interest in how things
went for my beloved LotR characters in the Fourth Age.

Terrific thoughts on friendships, especially that last line: yes, home
is where the heart is!

Title: Surprise · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: First Age and Prior ·
ID: 131
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-21 21:27:36
Spoilers!
This story is such a fabulous piece concerning a father who has
postponed his career for an unplanned child. Well that would be a way
to describe the main plotline, there is however so much more to this.
We get an insight in Mahtan's thought who after siring and raising two
daughters, suddenly becomes a father again. There is so much regret in
Mahtan's voice, expectations & ambition being put on hold. It nearly
feels the theme of every parent who finds him or herself with the
immense responsibility of raising a child, but also knowing it has an
effect on your own ambitions. What can one do, holding a grudge or
enfolding this child with all the love you have to offer? This story
just shows that he loves her, but his struggle with what he wants is
so tangible: brutally honest, his love for Nerdanel is just so
precious as well. Dawn does not hold back on both accounts, but even
portrays a bond between father and daughter, bringing the story to a
wonderfully metaphysical level. Now this master move is so immensely
well done that at the end you just wonder at the end what has been
thoughts of feelings of foresight and what not. Then the author weaves
in a mother's foresight simply gives me the chill: ["She will," said
Istarnië. "For a spell."] Just as the rain and thunder appears like a
spell, the ending is so darkly, yet not, the vision and foreshadowing,
his bond with her, I so can imagine that he will protect her as much
as he can, and when she sheds tears as an adult, I can't help to think
Mahtan will hear them in his heart as well. Those two have a deep
connection and it I somehow feel Mahtan will always feel he never gave
her enough compared to the others. What an immensely well written
story to cover so much from the title with the surprising twists and
layers, leaving you as a reader with many riches and thoughts to
explore. Thank you Dawn!

Title: The Consuming Darkness · Author: Isil Elensar · Genres: Drama ·
ID: 467
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-21 22:38:13
Spoilers!
I have known Isil for some years now, written stories for her and
beta'ed her stories, and she has always insisted that she needs a
happy ending. Isil, where did this story come from? There aren't many
episodes more depressing than Tar-Miriel's death in the drowning of
Numenor! ;) Despite her love of stories with happy endings, this is a
fine story, full of suspense and heartbreak. Isil does not shy from
the emotions in this piece, and they are, at points, raw. I had tears
in my eyes as Tar-Miriel bade her children farewell, and the scene
where the wave overcomes the island is terrifying.

I don't generally like stories that driven by intense action because
few writers can maintain the plot at a decent pace while keeping the
imagery and characterization that brings writing to life for me. "The
Consuming Darkness" does a really admirable job of this and was a
riveting read.

Title: A Great Evil Unmade · Author: Linaewen · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 267
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-22 02:35:17
Spoilers!
There are so many lines in this tale that just grab the reader and
makes one ponder the path the Steward's son is now taking in this
delightful AU.

One such line shows that Boromir, even in his youth, was cognizant of
Gondor's needs, and had the gumption to start to prepare himself by
exploring parts of his land that were dangerous.

After a terrible mishap, Frodo is not able to take the Ring any
further. I love the reasoning behind it being Boromir who must take it
- I think Frodo was right. The author makes the reason seem most
sensible. I loved it. I loved Boromir's vow, as a youth, and his using
this opportunity now to fulfill it - his mother's death must still
have weighed heavy upon his mind and the Enemy's part in her death -
the slow sadness of Mt. Doom....

Though it seems highly unlikely that Boromir, of all the Fellowship,
would be the one to take the Ring, the author defends the reason
easily and makes it seem quite logical. That this honorable man would
fail would really be unbearable... so now he has the chance to make up
for that failure....

['Come. Let us be done with it. My people, my friends are waiting..."]
I love the commitment that Linaewen makes when she writes a tale.
Every word counts, every nuance is put through a tough 'vetting'
process. And her endings are always perfect. This ending, as always,
was perfect! Pure Boromir!

Title: The Best Sword Ever · Author: Linaewen · Times: Mid Third Age ·
ID: 290
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-22 02:53:51
Spoilers!
Oh my goodness, bring out your handkerchief when you read this one -
it had me in tears. Especially the last lines of Aragorn's.

We see a Council meeting and ponder which one - and suddenly we are
transported to Minas Tirith and a meeting between Boromir and Aragorn
that is just precious. Many words in this part allude to future
events, so much so that one hopes the time together will be
remembered. What shines through though is the innocence of young
Boromir and the kindness of a young Aragorn. I love the 'cameo' by
Denethor.

Next we see a Council meeting and another meeting between Boromir and
Aragorn. Sadly, the first meeting is forgotten by Boromir, but not by
Aragorn. The words each spoke at the first meeting come back to both
of them - vivid for Aragorn - lost for Boromir.

I like that both men's views are shown... it seems, at first, that it
will be all Aragorn concentric, but we have some time with Boromir and
the funny tricks that a mind will spin... we see Boromir trying to
'catch' a memory, but it is lost.

It is a bitter-sweet tale of forgetfulness. Having a grandchild now -
I look at her and remember all the wonderful times with her mother
when she was growing up.... and I pray that her mother, my daughter,
remembers them too.

A beautiful telling. A poignant tale.

Title: The Making of Werewolves · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races:
Villains · ID: 42
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-22 02:58:28
Spoilers!
With the opening sentence of this delectably dark confection -- [The
song was magnetic, with intricate shadings of meaning, and the singer
imbued each word with the power of his malevolent heart] -- and the
touch of alchemy [brazier of selenium and tin], I could no more resist
devouring this story than [those corrupted sleepless souls] could
resist Sauron's summoning. Using an elegant archaic cadence (but never
forced or self-conscious), Ignoble Bard crafts a stygian "just-so"
fable of how Sauron created the werewolves.

I especially liked IgnobleBard's vision that the werewolves' genesis
was not achieved by clichéd lycanthropic transformation but was
instead derived by grafting human sentience (corrupt
spirits/souls/fëar) onto the lupine form.

This is a toothsome fic, IgnobleBard. Very toothsome.

Title: Fait Accompli · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Mystery · ID: 381
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-22 03:22:44
Ignoble Bard is an author of extraordinary breadth. His storytelling
leaves me hooting with laughter one minute (I still chortle when I
think of Melkor calling Fëanor an @sshat when those two icons are
stuck in the Void with one another in [The Unbearable Smugness of
Being Fëanor]) and then spellbound the nest. [Fait Accompli] is one
that ensorcelled me. The author builds and builds this dark-as-ink
mystery, compelling the reader to seek the answers to the burning
questions: Who has taken Legolas captive? Who is his tormenter? The
ending is a sizzling jolt that tears at the reader, a discovery that
creates deep unease yet is satisfying and even fitting. Ignoble Bard's
talents as wordsmith and storyteller shine in this wonderfully
sinister tale.

Msg# 9561

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 22, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 22, 2008 - 19:20:22 Topic ID# 9561
Title: Brotherhood · Author: Violin Ghost · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 261
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-22 03:46:02
Spoilers!
This was a delightful, yet poignant, tale of the memory of brothers' love.

The best and most unique part for me was the use of a warsong! It was
a perfect vehicle for the tale that it bore.

We have three parts to this tale - all remembrances and all with the
warsong weaving through each part. First, we see the young boys before
their mother's death - their father's pride, their mother's sorrow. It
would make one weep - Boromir's joy and Faramir's sudden concern.

The moment when the brothers must bid each other farewell as Boromir
is off to a soldier's life. I agree fully with the author's assessment
of Boromir's love - for his City. It is beautiful explained in this
portion of the tale... as the warsong hums along.

Then the author writes about the Battle of the Bridge! That is my all
time favorite part of LOTR - which is so odd because it is almost a
footnote in the book... a mention... yet such a profound moment. The
whole scene was incredibly poignant. Another tear-jerking portion.

We are with Faramir in Edoras and the warsong springs from his lips as
he pays silent homage to his fallen brother; yet the singing of the
song brings him another brother.

The ending was perfect.

A truly beautiful tribute to Boromir and a wondrous telling of the
'quality' of Faramir! Well done indeed!

Title: A New Day · Author: Oshun · Genres: Longer Works · ID: 35
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-22 12:48:21
Spoilers!
Oh what to do with these two characters. I started to follow this
story a while ago, but could not keep up with it. So after starting
all over again ánd noting the difference Oshun infused in the story
ever since, I felt like smacking her pairing quite a lot. The story
starts with Maedhros being rescued by Fingon, while at the same time
the Noldor faces a new beginning as well. Much is pushed aside and a
sigh of relief escaped me when Finrod pointed out what I as a reader
was feeling all along. At that point I also realised how much
engrossed I was in the story itself, wishing to break out of the
background and saying: guys, it's great that you have sex so much, but
start to deal with what really happened before this goes so wrong and
this relationship can't be repaired! The political complications
involving reuniting the Noldor (however the events regarding Melkor's
division of the Aman elves also did influence their budding
relationship greatly in Oshun!verse, yet they simply could not see it
happening again) also pushed the true healing of Maedhros to the
background (it felt as if the characters used it as an excuse to
postpone really talking to another, a pitfall many veterans do
encounter) and Oshun slowly started to reveal in her story how matters
would never be set right with her beloved elf if they both never faced
what happened at Angband. And hurrah! At the end both see the light,
at the cost of poor Finrod (I really do feel for him). I do hope
things will be set right for him as Oshun continues to write her
storyline, he most certainly deserves it! ;)

Title: The Consuming Darkness · Author: Isil Elensar · Genres: Drama ·
ID: 467
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-22 13:46:25
Spoilers!
Gah Isil, it doesn't matter how often I read this piece, but it so
packed with action that every time I am amazed how much you tell in
such a short time. This is a story that works extremely well because
it captures the utmost chaos of Númenor's downfall, the choices made
by so many to either stay or flee. As the wrath of Eru is upon them
and Tar-Miriel the gracious queen tries to warn her people as much as
she can, we witness her final hours on Arda. But as the tremors start
to wreck and shake the island on his foundations, so is her life torn
asunder and all normal registration of time and distances fade to the
background. You just can feel the adrenaline rushing through her
veins. Instead of focusing on her own survival, Tar-Miriel is more
concerned with the survival of her offspring, seeing them to leave the
island in safety. Only then she can surrender herself to her fate,
knowing all to well in the end it was partly of her own making and yet
Isil gives this story a hopeful (and to me an exciting) twist, with
two young survivors and heirs to the throne sailing for Middle-earth.
This story is packed with the necessary detail, from tumbling debris
to the people of Númenor slowly awaking to their downfall. The main
character's despair and anger just jumps off the screen as she rails
against her husband's mistreatment of her and her regrets. I do hope
those bunnies have been nibbling again, because I am so curious how
this will continue and knowing Isil's writing it will be an exciting
and romantic ride, just like this story which is just quite a ride
itself. Great writing!

Title: Free To Live · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races: Elves: Mirkwood
Elves · ID: 701
Reviewer: Jael · 2008-11-22 18:29:50
This story is a lovely piece that shows a more 'human' side to one of
my favorite characters at the end of a long battle. Little does he
know that another, different, long defeat is beginning for him, but
for the moment, Thranduil Oropherion, Elvenking of Eryn Lasgalen feels
joy, and we feel it along with him.

Good job!

Title: Some Confusion in Accounts · Author: viv · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 276
Reviewer: Jael · 2008-11-22 18:38:11
This little tale is a serious and scholarly (if you believe that, I
have three shiny gems I can sell you, cheap) attempt to explain one of
the Professor's numerous discrepancies -- in this case a difference in
implication between the Laws and Customs and the wording in the
history of Galadriel and Celeborn. Like the original works, the ending
of this story is delightlfully ambiguous.

I know how I interpret it, and . . . I'm with you, Artanis!

Title: Sing All Ye People! · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Late
Third Age: Gondor · ID: 249
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-22 19:22:06
The writing beautifully reflects this bright, triumphant and glorious
moment - I can feel Faramir's joy and excitement. What a wonderful,
wonderful idea to assign each verse to a specific person who has been
important to Faramir.

To see Faramir's take on this moment was really moving, and I thought
completely in-character. I just love how he can be moved so intimately
by things and at the same time is able to see it or set it in a wider
context.

The description of the eagle, every detail of his appearance, manner
and meaning was poignant, and the glory of it all infused the story
from start to finish like a bright golden thread.

I also like the perhaps minor fact that the musical underpinning, so
to speak, is also present throughout the story in a subtle way. IMO,
it gives this moment (in the book and here) the right "hightened"
context to "justify" the excultation which might otherwise risk being
over-the-top in a straight narrative.

Title: The Importance of Being Bilbo · Author: Dreamflower · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 686
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 20:03:14
I had never seen this essay before and was pleased to come upon it
here. I for one am so glad that Bilbo went on that quest and came back
alive from it and was able to take Frodo as an heir! Bilbo is very
important indeed!

Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 20:05:46
Spoilers!
Wow, this is a stunningly beautiful ficlet! I especially loved the
Eowyn part and it seemed incredibly in character and very like baby
Eowyn to be so hearty! :))

Title: Pirates Ye Be Warned · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Men: Gondor
Drabbles · ID: 353
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 20:07:27
Very nice characterization of pirates! I also like how in character
Imrahil is!

Title: Tolo Dan Na Ngalad · Author: Elwen · Races: Hobbits · ID: 735
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 20:09:55
Spoilers!
This was such a vividly described story of the healing in Rivendell. I
know this author has a special love for Elrond healing Frodo and she
does such a masterful job at it. I am always in awe of her vivid
language and emotion that she brings to this scenario/part of the book!

Title: The Dancing Lesson · Author: Lindelea · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 664
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 20:11:52
An adorable story! :)

Title: The Six-Fingered Glove Mystery · Author: shirebound · Genres:
Mystery · ID: 522
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 20:13:52
Nice bit o' silliness! :)

Title: Faeries · Author: Pearl Took · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond ·
ID: 304
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 21:18:49
Spoilers!
ooh, I love anything having to do with faeries, and what a neat angle
to bring in Faramir's faery ancestry! :)

Title: At Cormallen · Author: Mews1945 · Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 730
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 21:21:08
oh, I remember this. Such a sweet and gentle and healing fic. It would
make sense that poor Merry would be worrying so about all three of his
hobbit friends at that time!

Title: Dispelling the Fog · Author: fantasyfan · Races: Other Beings ·
ID: 642
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 21:23:04
Spoilers!
Tom Bombodil is such a mystery and I love how Frodo as smart and
curious as he is still can't figure him out and how Tom evades their
questions no matter what! This is such a wonderful gapfiller!

Title: For the Want of ... · Author: Larner · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor · ID: 681
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 21:27:38
Spoilers!
Very nice tale of learning and friendship between Faramir and Pippin.
It brings to life for me the way they've bonded and makes sense later
why Pippin would name one of his children after him!

Title: The Ribbon · Author: Gentle Hobbit · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 336
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 21:29:45
Spoilers!
oh, such a beautiful gentle story about Frodo using his hands after
his finger has been gone. That missing finger was always such a source
of mental anguish for Frodo, a reminder of what he could have done
better (in his mind) and it is nice that he was using his skills for
something so innocent as tying a hobbit lass' hair!

Title: On Canon and Fanfic · Author: Marta · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 123
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-22 21:33:05
This was a very interesting essay! From the view point of a person
(me!) who writes both very wild AUs and very canonical, serious
pieces, I don't think AU needs to have a negative connotation. I think
that there is plenty of fan fiction to go around for everyone's tastes
and that we should be grateful to Tolkien for providing such a rich,
diverse playground for us to play in!

Title: Two Prisoners · Author: Lord Branwyn · Genres: Alternate
Universe · ID: 724
Reviewer: Súlriel · 2008-11-22 22:54:34
I have seen variations on this take and while I almost always enjoy
them, I found this one to be especially well done. It's certainly easy
to imagine that two who have lived so long by the sword would continue
to do so.

Title: Trinity · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Modern Times · ID: 51
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-22 22:57:05
From the opening John Donne poem to the chilling closing quote by
Robert Oppenheimer ["Now, I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds."
I suppose we all thought that one way or another.] Pandemonium takes
us on a journey into the mind of the man who ushered in the nuclear
age. Before our world was profoundly changed by the Manhattan Project,
before the prospect existed of mankind's ability to extinguish itself
in a matter of minutes, there was another vision, a vision of two
strange men who once conceived and wielded power that irrevocably
changed their own world, their own history, and almost caused its
destruction. Who these me are, and what they share with Oppenheimer,
forms the basis of this thought-provoking look at how the exhilaration
of discovery must be tempered with the possibilities and consequences
of these discoveries.

The story is sprinkled throughout with the details [Oppenheimer took
the cup and saucer, incautiously gulped the liquid, and scalded the
roof of his mouth.], descriptions [An opaque silver mist swirled
around Fionn and Saunders, obscuring them. When the mist cleared, the
two men were clad in short sleeved button down shirts, khakis and
loafers, just like the physicists, chemists and engineers at the
labs.], and engaging characterizations ["I can see that," said
Oppenheimer. "It's just your eyes. You both must have unusual
refractive proteins in your irises. . ." Fionn beamed. "Excellent! You
didn't yammer about orbs of starlight and all that gossamer faerie
bullshit. That is a perfectly rational -- and accurate -- explanation.
I'm telling you, Saunders, he belongs to us!"] we've come to expect
and love in Pandemonium's writing. It is a rare author who can bring a
modern sensibility to Tolkien without losing the charm that continues
to enchant legions of fans around the globe, but Pandemonium is just
such an author. If one was to check out the latest fantasy/science
fiction anthology from the local bookstore one would be hard-pressed
to find even one story in the collection to match what Pandemonium
does with each of her tales.

An author far too modest in assessing her abilities, Pandemonium
creates masterworks with an effortless grace and professional tone
that makes the reader identify with her characters, even the wicked
Saruon, and see beneath their Tolkiened patina into the qualities that
lie within.


Title: Philosophia to Philomythus and Misomythus · Author:
pandemonium_213 · Genres: Poetry · ID: 50
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-22 23:46:19
This pair of poems encompasses the arguments for and against the uses
and meaning of myth in a world of science. I knew as soon as I read
them I had to nominate them for consideration this year. Capturing the
essence of an idea in a poem is terrifically difficult (believe me, I
know) and taking on a debate of this magnitude is a herculean task.
But Pandemonium does so beautifully. I admit to being out of my depth
when it comes to critiquing poetry but, like those of us who look at
any form of art and give it a rousing thumbs up or a disgusted thumbs
down, we know what we like. These poems are the two halves of a whole
that bring together the worlds of science and fantasy and show there
is not always room for both but that both are essential for the growth
and evolution of humanity.

Stylistically, one poem reads like the best of Shakespeare or Milton
while the other reads like William Blake. Both bring us to a place
where we must examine our relationship to and between knowledge and
fantasy. We must choose to "see the world in a grain of sand" or
simply pick the offending, abrasive object from our swimsuits and go
about our business, forever shut off from the possibilities beyond the
realm of our perceptions and objectivity.

Msg# 9562

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 23, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 23, 2008 - 18:26:28 Topic ID# 9562
Title: The Language of Waves · Author: Claudia · Races: Hobbits · ID: 193
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-23 04:27:39
Spoilers!
A lovely vignette about a day by, and in the sea, in Paradise, for
Frodo and Gildor - not slashy, just friends savoring the pleasures of
the ocean and new experiences in Valinor. The descriptions of the
coral reef, and Frodo's delight in the waves, are wonderful.

Title: Lost · Author: Claudia · Genres: Adventure · ID: 226
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-23 04:35:19
Spoilers!
A very normal thing to have happened on a fantastic quest, to lose a
powerful sorcerous object out of sheer normal weariness or foolishness
- I love the notion, and it is very effectively explored here.
Gandalf's line about the fragility of the fate of Middle-earth is just
wonderful, very Tolkienesque.

Title: Forsaken · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 369
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-23 07:38:11
I think most of us who read the Silmarillion feel a strong affinity
for Finrod, "Friend of Men". More than any other of the mighty Eldar,
Finrod seems to have that unique ability to reach across great divides
and make connections with the strange beings that Elves start
stumbling over in Middle-earth. Never in my readings of the various
"canon" and "extracanonical" sources have I encountered him being
condescending, exploitative or dismissive; he had that lovely and rare
quality of being able to see value in the unfamiliar and sometimes
incomprehensible.

All that is a long way of explaining why this list hits me harder than
any similar list would for another character: I absolutely love the
guy. The point-by-point format is extremely effective; even though
each is but a single sentence, it feels as though an entire paragraph
of information has been packed into it - smoothly and gracefully.
Every one delivers a powerful punch.

Excellent climax, highlighted well by its being set apart from the
rest of the list, and an artful touch in using a particular time and
querying individual to bring forth the remembrances.

Title: Return of the King · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Men: General
Drabbles · ID: 355
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-23 07:38:36
["Return of the King"] gives us a very human moment, plucked out of
the huge and turmoil-filled epic that is the Kin-Strife. Tolkien's
vision of this very dark episode in Gondor's history has always
fascinated me. In many ways, it has all the angst, horror and
inspirational underdogs of his LotR trilogy. (Something definitely
highlighted by Imhiriel's deft title-borrowing.) Yet it's relegated to
the Appendices and doesn't seem to be get a lot of attention in
fanfiction, certain authors notwithstanding.

Imhiriel's addition to the time period pivots away from Gondor itself
to the place where "rebellion" is brewing: Rhovanion. The irony, of
course, is that this is the rightful King contemplating his next
action. In stark contrast to the decadent, violent and more
"pure"-blooded holder of the throne, we are given a shining image of
Eldacar's wise advisor. The reader can see intimately at least one
reason why this roaming son of Gondor loved his mother's people so
much. Eldacar's reaction to prompting shows rather clearly why he is
so well suited to become King, too.

I admit, I also got a grin from a flashback to movie!Aragorn, from the
title and some of the attitude.

Title: The Work of Small Hands · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres:
Longer Works · ID: 352
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-23 08:33:12
Spoilers!
Ah--how it was that in the wake of the destruction of the Trees and
the departure of the Noldor who followed Feanor first to Alqualonde
and then across the sea and ice to Middle Earth those remaining in
Tirion were saved from the devastation of the new darkness. Told from
the POV of Earwen, this depicts in all its starkness the agonizing
grief she feels as children and husband leave her to follow Feanor.
The joy of Arafinwe's return, however, falls to ashes as he refuses to
accept the crown or even thrive. So it falls to the surviving royal
ladies to decide what shall be done to succor their people, and to see
it done. The grief of all, the strength of Anaire, the careful thought
Nerdanel, and the courage of Earwen in the end allow those of the
Noldor who remained to survive. But imagining how Anaire might have
convinced Arafinwe to rise from his intended deathbed is
perhaps--disturbing.

Excellently crafted and thought out. The kings might have been men,
but it was their womenfolk who saw what needed to be done and saw it
accomplished.

Title: Answering the Call · Author: docmon · Genres: Drama · ID: 340
Reviewer: Michelle · 2008-11-23 13:26:00
Docmon`s stories are a feast for everyone who has a soft spot for AUs.
Many authors have written how one of Tolkien`s characters might have
succumbed to the Ring`s whisperings. Docmon, however, takes the
concept much further insofar as all members of the fellowship will
eventually take the rings for their own gain. This leaves the reader
with a prologue and nine following vignettes (of varying length) of
concentrated drama, tragedy and apocalypse – a thing which might be
hard to stomach. To me, the most surprising of these vignettes was
Gimli. Personally, I would have struggled to come up with a scenario
in which he takes the ring – he is loyal, realistic and down to earth
while missing the innocence and naivety of the hobbits. But the
situation Docmon puts him in is original and thought-provoking. I
actually would have wanted this part to go on to see how and whether
Gimli completes his mission.

All in all a depressing and dark collection of what-ifs that are well
worth the read!

Title: Out of Memory and Time · Author: Shireling · Genres: Drama:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 136
Reviewer: Michelle · 2008-11-23 13:37:33
Spoilers!
Shireling`s "Out of Memory and Time" is a wonderful, almost epic AU
set in the Fourth Age. We start off with the crew of a trading ship
who rescues a wounded men from the water. They nurse him back to
health and call him Min, because he can remember neither his name nor
his past. Min makes himself useful on the ship and the crew all but
"adopts" him. But Min seems reluctant to delve too deep into his
memory. His does not want to know his true identity, because he fears
he betrayed his lord and his men – even if he does not know how.

At the same time we learn that Faramir and his men rode into and
ambush. All soldiers are dead and even though Faramir`s body is never
found, Aragorn – with a heavy heart – declares him dead. We follow
Shireling`s account of life went on in Gondor while Faramir`s friends
mourn his loss. Of course it soon becomes obvious to the reader that
Min and Faramir are one and the same, but it takes eleven chapters
until Shireling takes pity and reunites both plots and characters.
Repeatedly, Faramir is almost found out, but even when is identity is
finally revealed to him, he is reluctant to return to his former life.

A wonderful story with everything I like in fanfic: intrigue, drama,
hurt/comfort and a fair number of characters – canon and original alike.

Title: Loudwater · Author: Adaneth · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 63
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-23 15:15:27
I love your descriptions of the water; drifting, trickling, seeping,
welling, babbling, placid and rushing the river down to the sea. The
water and river as first person. I really like that. It took me a
moment to realize this was the river at the Ford. (The name of the
river escapes me for the moment.) The second paragraph was wonderful.
The idea of the black horse's hooves cleaving 'him,' and his white
maned waves clearing the filth of the Nazgul's touch away. I think
this is a very clever and beautiful ficlet, Adaneth. I like it very much!

Title: Cuts Gone Wrong · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Mid Third Age:
Eriador · ID: 156
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-23 15:31:58
The story shows the grueling reality of being a Ranger in a world
where they are looked down on, where nobody knows of and acknowledges
the Rangers' work on behalf of them, where little comfort and peace
and thanks await. It must have been especially hard for a young
Aragorn after being raised in sheltered Imladris where he was
certainly more well-regarded than now as one anonymous Ranger among so
many others.

I like the "everyday feel" to it; this and many episodes of small
importance may likely have happened for generations, with no great
consequences for anyone, and yet providing one teaching moment of no
doubt many to young Rangers on their way to maturity.

The original characters are well-written and give the story a very
rich feel, as well as Aragorn's messages which give a very complex
picture of the concerns of the Rangers, and how events beyond their
immediate sphere of influence (I especially liked the references to
King Fengel) influence their plans.

Title: Lost and Found · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 23
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-23 15:32:18
The characterisation of wee!Faramir is sweet without being cloying; I
love how his earnestness and eagerness to help mingles with his pride
and excitement about being "in charge" of this important visitor. I
can really feel how Gandalf recognises in Faramir a curious soul
worthy of befriending, teaching, of becoming a "wizard's pupil".

The description of the library in all its chaos and vastness and
intricate hallways is fascinating (and tempting to every book-lover,
especially at Faramir's words, ["It smells like words here"]).

I like how the different fragments of old and not so old history are
woven into the narrative. In addition, the allusions to the importance
of Gandalf's mission, and his compassionate musings about Denethor
give the story a very appealing "gravitas" to contrast the overall
light tone.

Title: I Stand No Longer Alone · Author: Larner · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 62
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-23 18:09:06
Spoilers!
This piece has some really lovely moments, how the chair compares
itself to the sword, how it senses Aragorn's approach, and its
prescience: ["I sense he has as many questions about me as I have of
him"]. I always like it when we get to hear something otherwise voiceless.

Title: Not Quite Any Other Day · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 631
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-23 18:15:40
This is a charming story, most uniquely resolved!

Title: Rekindling · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 255
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-23 19:32:38
Spoilers!
I highly recommend this story. It is beautifully constructed and
written. Love the way she begins, with Nerdanel's growing sense that
Fëanor, who she has tried to become accustomed to living without, is
indeed alive. The end of the world/apocalypse is also awesomely
described. The entire story is filled with wonderful action and visual
sequences. I'm truly impressed with the author's skill. Fëanor,
rightfully so, is still Fëanor, not a watered down, cleaned up
version, still thinking, still complaining at the Valar. I absolutely
adore him. He truly is the greatest of the Firstborn, with no close
candidate for second place. On a good day, when he is in a benevolent
mood, he might even be willing to admit that some of the Valar are
nearly his peers. I love that about him. The scene with him and
Nerdanel is probably one of the most moving love scenes I have ever
read in fanfiction. (I said this before, and I will say it again, to
be loved by Fëanor, would pricey, but definitely be worth the cost.)

The quotation that upon which she bases this story (often called the
Second Prophecy of Mandos), however, is sitting on my harddrive
waiting for me to use it at some point near the end of my own epic of
the Noldor so that I may write a similar, but totally different story.
Given my own unquenchable optimism and believe in redemptive growth
and change, I naturally read the prophecy as proof positive that
Feanor and Nerdanel would at the end get their happy ending. I forgave
Professor Tolkien a thousand sins when I read this piece. Fëanor,
unlike the fallen angels of Milton's [Paradise lost], would finally be
allowed to become part of the solution. He would realize that, in
fact, the breaking of his Simarils under those conditions, would not
after all break him and destroy him, but enhance him, give him the
peace that was always beyond his reach. The writer killed me with her
interpretation of it. This is part of the review where I get to
shallowly complain that seeing so much beauty in pain and loss is the
prerogative of the young. By the time one is my age, real life has
given one enough hard knocks that the charm of it in fiction is
greatly lessened. That said, I must admit I very much admire this
wonderful story; it is completely coherent and believable in the way
in which it is told it.


Title: Not Quite Any Other Day · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 631
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-23 19:36:56
OH, this was priceless! I love stories about the previous generation
to our Travellers, when they were younger. This one was adorable.

Title: The Wrong Path · Author: Erviniae · Genres: Drama: Incomplete ·
ID: 538
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-23 19:58:56
Spoilers!
This is quite the story: romance, intrigue, (sex!), war, and
friendship, so far spanning the First Age through the Third. The
underlying cultural taboos are sadly close to many still remaining in
our own, and "The Wrong Path" is an intriguing look at what two lovers
must do to love as they wish within an extremely conservative society.

Lothwen's character was fairly, realistically, and beautifully
portrayed; the wedding night scene, in particular, was very well done:
uncomfortable and heartbreaking. The tender, friendly love that
evolves over the course of their marriages was tenderly and
realistically portrayed, though it came with difficult consequences.

I look forward to seeing this story continue!

Title: The Westering Fire · Author: Aprilkat · Races: Hobbits · ID: 200
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-23 20:08:28
Spoilers!
Oh, this was nicely done! Too often we forget what it must have been
like for the hobbits left behind in the Shire, to deal with the nasty
ruffians. How glad Rosie must have been to see her Samwise return!

Well done!

Title: Aulë the Smith · Author: Oshun · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character
Studies · ID: 530
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-23 20:15:24
Every month, Oshun writes a biography of a character for the SWG
newsletter and Reference section. Every month, I say, "It doesn't have
to be extensive! Just a summary! You don't need to do any analysis!"
and, every month, I have returned to me a biography full of insightful
analysis. "Aule the Smith" is doubtlessly one of Oshun's finest pieces
as part of this series (and that is saying something). Not only does
she provide the summary of Aule's role in The Silmarillion but she
ties the canon in to some of the important ideas in Tolkien's writings
that are under frequent discussion by fans and students of his work.

Here, she connects Aule's role as a creator to Tolkien's own attitudes
towards science/technology and, perhaps most importantly, possession
of the objects that come of such labor. Many Tolkien fans have noticed
that Aule's students seem to "go bad" at a pretty alarming
rate--Sauron, Feanor, Saruman; though Eol and Maeglin never met Aule,
one can easily imagined that they too would have been his students had
they been born in Valinor--but Oshun takes this "coincidence" to show
how those who study science and create based on what they learn are
next to Melkor only by their ability to freely share their creations.
Whether readers find this to be a truthful assessment of
scientists/technologists or alarming will, of course, depend on the
reader.

But, through this, Oshun's biography becomes much more than a listing
of facts about Aule: It connects Aule to some of the broader ideas in
Tolkien's writing and shows how he fits into any attempt to unravel
how Tolkien felt about science and technology. It is an insightful
summary of Aule's character and of his role in the larger mythology we
study.

Title: Pippin's Secret · Author: shirebound · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 599
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-23 20:29:11
How delightful, that Pippin as well as Merry knew Bilbo's secret! I
can also see him keeping this secret too... for a little one, it's a
great thing to think one knows something that no one else does! Very
believable. Well done, as always, shirebound!

Title: DISGUISE: Emissaries · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor: Valar &
Maiar · ID: 56
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-23 20:29:24
Spoilers!
I enjoyed this piece, a look at how the Valar decided to send the
Istari to Middle-earth, how they chose from among the Maiar, and how
the Istari came to take their familiar forms from LotR. Lightly
humorous, it hints at many of the conflicts to come and establishes
especially the character of Curumo and Olorin. Olorin's analysis of
why the emissaries must go as they do--in the shape of old men subject
to the same hurts and hungers of Incarnates--was of particular
interest, as was Namo's understanding of why Isildur could not give up
the Ring. Very nice!

Title: Renewal · Author: Elena Tiriel · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 208
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-23 20:33:54
An interesting little poem about Anduril from the POV of the sword
itself - well done!

Title: BRIDGE: Pá Valaraucar ar Námier · Author: Fiondil · Races:
Other Beings · ID: 415
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-23 20:44:16
Spoilers!
I am fascinated by the halls of Mandos and Namo in particular, and
Fiondil always writes such a marvelous character of him. This story is
no exception, where Olorin awakens, having "died" as Gandalf, to face
the judgment of the Namo. It is much as I imagine such a judgment
would be: shock and flummox followed by shame and regret ... and then
mercy.

The idea that Gandalf put Frodo's quest into jeopardy by turning his
back on his "fallen brother" the Balrog is an uncomfortable one, both
for a reader who loves Gandalf's character as for Olorin himself. I
took this in the figurative as well as the literal sense: that
Gandalf, in his pride, had abandoned appreciation for the strength of
his equals, like the Balrog, which resulted in the literal "turning of
his back." This is an intriguing idea. But Olorin is given the chance
to rise above his mistakes and to have a second chance to save
Middle-earth ... and that is comforting.

Title: Tarnished Ivory · Author: Yavie Feels Pretty · Genres:
Adventure: Incomplete · ID: 464
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-23 20:52:25
Wonderful to hear Frodo laugh! I would think he and his Sam would be
another two who would never hurt each other on purpose either, but
certainly agree Merry and Pippin wouldn't. Frodo has made his choice
for good or evil - I like the way Aragorn said that, so much like in
the books, when no one knows the consequences of their choices or sees
far along the Road, just like it really is, a choice between evils at
times is the only choice or what seems evil. I do wonder what is
coming next!


Title: O Merry Mine · Author: Larner · Races: Hobbits: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 636
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-23 20:57:32
I really enjoyed this story, with little glimpses of Frodo and Merry's
relationship through the years. How tender and loving Frodo is towards
Merry, and how protective Merry is towards Frodo! Well done.

Title: Promises Broken and Kept · Author: periantari · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Frodo or Sam · ID: 144
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-23 21:21:18
A sweet story of the love between those brother-cousins, Frodo and
Merry, shortly after Frodo has left for Bag End. Frodo returns to
Brandy Hall to give a very sick Merry a lot of TLC. Bilbo says they
can visit each other more often, sometimes cutting through the Woody
End which is cute. The quote from the Red Book at the end is one of my
favorites. May hobbity love live forever! We need it!

Title: In Dreams · Author: Phyncke · Genres: Romance: Elven Lands ·
ID: 609
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-23 21:30:25
Spoilers!
This is such a sweet story that brings new meaning to the term "divine
intervention." At the risk of taking too deeply a story meant to be
light and lovely, I found intriguing the idea that the Valar, in the
Fourth Age with Melkor and Sauron off their hands, turn their
attentions to the happiness of the Elves. This is a cool idea and one
that I can believe. And I loved this line, ["I believe they need a
challenge, so why not in love?"] which makes the point that what has
concerned these characters to this point--war, lordship, quests--no
longer concern them; with all four characters having experienced all
of the above in Middle-earth, it is a nice thought that they can now
turn their talents and attentions to their own happiness and love.

Msg# 9563

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 23, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 23, 2008 - 18:28:09 Topic ID# 9563
Title: Put Aside Your Doubt · Author: sophinisba solis · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Frodo and Faramir · ID: 187
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-23 21:32:03
Elrond had said there may find friends unlooked for and indeed they
did. I think Faramir is a hobbit in a man's skin since he is so gentle
and loving as they are, he has a scholar's heart, not a warrior's and
this is why he and Frodo are kindred spirits and can find comfort with
each other. No wonder Frodo slept so well!

Title: If I Had One Wish · Author: Ellie · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 658
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-23 21:40:09
Spoilers!
As I read Ellie's story, I wondered if it was set after the Fourth
Age, perhaps in Arda Healed. I even checked the MEFA summary ... nope,
First Age. I know Ellie well enough to know that she knows her canon
as well as any Silmarillion author. So I shut off the part of my brain
that seeks to match fanfic to Tolkien and decided to go with it and
see what Ellie did with the story.

I'm glad that I did. The warmth and loveliness of the majority of this
story is fully realized, and I was happily immersed in the fantasy of
it and eager to see how Ellie would make it work. Most of all, though,
I enjoyed the visions that she presented of the Finwions for once in
happy accord. We don't get many happy Silmarillion stories.

The ending had its intended effect. The contrast between the two
sections was immediate, and I finally put the pieces together to
understand what this story was about. The brevity of that final
section is effective, almost like a punch in the gut after the gentle
and whimsical first part of the story. My heart ached for Indis.

Great story, Ellie!

Title: Weathertop · Author: Primsong · Genres: Poetry: Late Third Age
· ID: 597
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-23 21:42:13
A well done series of poems, mostly from Frodo's POV, of Weathertop
and its immediate aftermath. His struggle against the terrible mental
assault of five Nazgul is there and his knowledge that more and more
he is in danger of becoming a wraith. There is also a little of Sam's
worry which makes reference to one of the parts in the Red Book that I
like during this time - that Frodo liked the night better because he
wasn't bothered so much by the mist coming between him and his world.
I liked these.

Title: Forsaken · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 369
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-23 21:46:18
Spoilers!
Imhiriel is a master of the short form, and I think this piece
demonstrates that. It not only recounts (in 100 words!) the tragic
moments of Finrod's life but, in the midst of this, even
characterizes. Eight words depict Finarfin beautifully: ["Seeing my
father's sorrowful eyes, devoid of reproach"] ... the forgiveness and
wisdom that sets him apart from his brothers.

But that last line--and the key idea of the drabble--is heartbreaking.
I hadn't given much thought to this, but that it signifies Finrod's
greatest failure--the inability to keep and convince the one closest
to him--is sad and compelling. Lovely work, Imhiriel!

Title: A Warm Sun Shining · Author: shirebound · Races: Hobbits:
Post-Ring War · ID: 727
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-23 21:49:59
Spoilers!
Lovely ending - Frodo and Sam wrapped up in each other and that kiss
to both of them from Aragorn. I remember that scene in the movie when
he approaches Frodo's room so shyly and hesitantly, like he's
wondering if it's proper that he be there when everyone is there, but
then that lovely smile of smiles and look of love they give each
other. I think Sam would be concerned about his 'place' when others
could see, but they both know his place is right where Frodo - and God
- placed him, right beside his treasure. Indeed that is how Frodo
found comfort on the Quest, in the only safe place there was, in Sam's
arms. Nice touch that Frodo is attuned to Sam's feelings like Sam is
to Frodo's.

Title: Burden · Author: Ancalime8301 · Genres: Drama: Featuring Frodo
or Sam · ID: 734
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-23 21:55:28
I'm so happy to see an mpreg here and am amused by previous reviews.
This is the famous fic that got you thrown off a certain archive, I
think. :) Anyway, I loved how drawn out and angsty and full of
hurt/comfort this fic is, and of course I'll never get tired of Ranger
and hobbit interaction!

Title: Some Confusion in Accounts · Author: viv · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 276
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-23 21:57:32
Spoilers!
Some stories are said to need "beverage warnings." At the conclusion
of Viv's "Some Confusion in Accounts," I made a sound that would be
rather embarrassing to describe (so I won't); suffice to say that, had
I had that infamous beverage in hand, Pengolodh Lord of Gondolin (my
laptop) would now be wearing it.

But this double-drabble has more than a punch at the end. Viv has a
knack for poking fun at the the high-mindedness of Tolkien's
characters and at the Tolkien fan culture itself, and this piece is a
demonstration of that. Phrases like ["arctic eyebrow"] and the easy,
valley-girl voice of the narrator make this story one
snort-inducing-effective piece of humor.

Title: Trouble at Bag End · Author: Angiet · Races: Hobbits: Childhood
· ID: 728
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-23 21:58:12
I think if it is possible to die of a sugar overload on a fic, this
would be the fic! Delightful fluff of the highest order!

Title: Labour of Love · Author: Aprilkat · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Frodo and Faramir · ID: 733
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-23 22:03:13
oooh, I love that you wrote mpreg and I love how spunky Frodo is in
this one! Frodo and Faramir forever! :)

Title: Regarding Ents · Author: PipMer · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring War
· ID: 525
Reviewer: Antane · 2008-11-23 22:03:24
I've wondered myself how I would describe Ents to someone who doesn't
know. Talking, intelligent trees seems to be the only thing I can come
up with but I know that sounds just too strange and not really true
either. I like this attempt of Merry and Pippin's to explain it all.

Title: National Treasure · Author: Baranduin · Times: Modern Times ·
ID: 201
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-23 22:06:18
Isn't this the story I once called "cute" :) Naw, I was glad to see
this here. It's not cute, it's delightful!

Title: A Matter of Ill Reputation · Author: Lily · Races: Hobbits:
Childhood · ID: 210
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-23 22:28:31
Spoilers!
*snort* Oh my, this was delightful and hilarious! Young Maseric surely
got his comeuppence, didn't he? And well-deserved, too, I must say.
Merimac played the situation perfectly, so as not to seem to have
helped Frodo in his revenge.

Well done.

Title: Good King Elessar · Author: Dreamflower · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Friendship · ID: 2
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-23 22:28:45
This is a delightful interaction between hobbits and men in teh
future. I love these gaps being filled in about what it must have been
like in the north kingdom! :)

Title: Leaving Home · Author: annmarwalk · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 39
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-23 22:32:05
This story was sheer delight.Little Elboron was so real I felt he was
in the room!I also loved your Faramir and Eowyn.It is not often one
reads a story told from a child's point of view and this worked
beautifully.A perfect gem!

Title: Put Aside Your Doubt · Author: sophinisba solis · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Frodo and Faramir · ID: 187
Reviewer: Claudia · 2008-11-23 22:33:44
yay, I love this fic so much. I love that scene between Frodo and
Faramir and how tense it was and yet how Faramir turns out to be such
high quality. *happy sigh* And I can see the slash there if I want to,
even though it isn't there. Or I could just be less obnoxious and see
the deep friendship that is meant to be there! :)

Title: The Edge of the Knife · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 274
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-23 22:53:19
Spoilers!
I have always had a soft spot for Isildur and wish more writers took
notice of his heroic deeds rather than his one moment of weakness.In
the society of that time,wergilt was an accepted concept and the Ring
did not turn Isildur into a mad tyrant.

These beautifully written drabbles explore the key moments that
Tolkien tells us about in Isildur's life and capture the character
brilliantly.

Title: Pip-napped! · Author: Dreamflower/Lindelea CoAuthors · Genres:
Adventure · ID: 669
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-23 23:27:50
Spoilers!
Another delightful MEFA discovery! I loved this delightful story in
which Pippin is kidnapped but shows his usual Hobbit resourcefulness.
I especially enjoyed Merry and Pippin's obvious deep bond with Aragorn
and the keen insights into relationships between the sexes.

Title: I Give You a Rainbow · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 571
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-23 23:35:15
Spoilers!
A delightful warm hearted story in which Pippin attempts to explain
colours to a blind girl.The feel of the colours was spot on and
created a truly multi sensory experience.As a child I used to refer to
grass as "echoing green" in colour. I think most children have the
ability to hear or smell colours,which alas is often lost in later life.

Title: Seaworthy · Author: Thundera Tiger · Races: Elves: Mirkwood
Elves · ID: 349
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-24 00:14:29
Spoilers!
A worthy sequel to [Sea of Fate]! Thundera started out as a fan of
Gimli and Legolas, and though that has not changed, her depiction of
the two has gained in depth and complexity. This is a terrific
psychological portrait that turns not on any external action, but on
the internal claiming of Legolas's heart: this is, in a sense, a
reprise of the warning contained in the tale of Aldarion and Erendis,
but with an immortal perspective. Patience will allow Legolas to serve
two masters in turns, rather than be forced to try to juggle them all
at the same time.

Imrahil shows himself to be wise as Tolkien suggested in his brief
portrayal of him, and a good teacher. His use of Amroth is both
natural and inspired, touching on one of those flashpoints in mortal
history, where Elves and Men cross and mark each other's memories.

I do wonder, though, given that Legolas is finally moved to bring
Gimli with him, it seems doubtful that Legolas will ever be wholly at
peace and in one piece. Something in him will always serve another
master. It would be very interesting to see Legolas's thoughts when he
finally prepares to leave Middle-earth with Gimli: does he think of
Imrahil? What does he think of the lesson Imrahil imparted? *flings
nuzgul* Perhaps one day we'll find out...

Msg# 9564

TECH SUPPORT: Problems Accessing Site? Posted by araneltook November 24, 2008 - 11:02:46 Topic ID# 9564
Hey all,

There's been a problem reported with accessing the MEFA site, where the site is "freezing"
and buttons/links not responding. Has anyone else had this problem?

If you've had this problem, please respond here or email techsupport@mefawards.net. Let us
know what problems you've had, if you've gotten any error pages, and also your computer
specs, including OS version, browser version and whether you're on dial-up or broadband.

There's no need to respond if everything is working fine.

Thanks!

Aranel

Msg# 9565

Re: TECH SUPPORT: Problems Accessing Site? Posted by dwimmer\_laik November 24, 2008 - 16:45:18 Topic ID# 9564
I don't know if this is part of the same problem, but yesterday, I got
an error message that said something like "user account full, user has
exceeded hosting limit" - or some such thing.

But it went away almost immediately, so I assumed it was related to me
rather than to the MEFA site.

Haven't had any problems otherwise.

Dwim

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "araneltook" <araneltook@...> wrote:
>
> Hey all,
>
> There's been a problem reported with accessing the MEFA site, where
the site is "freezing"
> and buttons/links not responding. Has anyone else had this problem?
>
> If you've had this problem, please respond here or email
techsupport@... Let us
> know what problems you've had, if you've gotten any error pages, and
also your computer
> specs, including OS version, browser version and whether you're on
dial-up or broadband.
>
> There's no need to respond if everything is working fine.
>
> Thanks!
>
> Aranel
>

Msg# 9566

Re: TECH SUPPORT: Problems Accessing Site? Posted by Aranel Took November 24, 2008 - 17:42:38 Topic ID# 9564
Hi Dwim,
That's a different issue. That wasn't your problem, though. I think that was
just too many users accessing the database at one time (the "user" in the
error message is the MEFA site on the server, not individual users).

Thanks!
Aranel

On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 4:45 PM, dwimmer_laik <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com>wrote:

> I don't know if this is part of the same problem, but yesterday, I got
> an error message that said something like "user account full, user has
> exceeded hosting limit" - or some such thing.
>
> But it went away almost immediately, so I assumed it was related to me
> rather than to the MEFA site.
>
> Haven't had any problems otherwise.
>
> Dwim
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "araneltook" <araneltook@...> wrote:
> >
> > Hey all,
> >
> > There's been a problem reported with accessing the MEFA site, where
> the site is "freezing"
> > and buttons/links not responding. Has anyone else had this problem?
> >
> > If you've had this problem, please respond here or email
> techsupport@... Let us
> > know what problems you've had, if you've gotten any error pages, and
> also your computer
> > specs, including OS version, browser version and whether you're on
> dial-up or broadband.
> >
> > There's no need to respond if everything is working fine.
> >
> > Thanks!
> >
> > Aranel
> >
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Visit our website: http://www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 9567

MEFA Reviews for Monday, November 24, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 24, 2008 - 19:29:51 Topic ID# 9567
Title: The Dooming of Small Hands · Author: Thundera Tiger · Times:
Late Third Age · ID: 639
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-24 00:29:12
Spoilers!
Another fantastic psychological and political study from Thundera
Tiger. Thundera has always been able marvelously to exploit the gaps
she finds, and she finds some excellent ones. As this one, where
Gandalf and Elrond have a pre-Conciliar discussion of just who must
bear the Ring... and how.

It's a truism in certain strands of philosophy that consciousness and
understanding are aimed at determinate realities. Their task is
determination; they cannot function outside of those bounds. What
passes determination, what comes from beyond the 'light' that is the
metaphor for consciousness and transparency, knowing and owning,
cannot show up for consciousness. Which, if you take the idea of estel
seriously, means that hope is inadmissible to conscious life. Which
suggests that consciousness is always in danger of despair: Pandora's
box held back the one 'gift' that would've undone us: perfect
foresight of what must be.

Gandalf here acts as a kind of Pandora's box, holding the 'gift'/curse
of too much knowledge, too perfect a degree of information back from
Frodo, though he feels the injustice of his own manipulations. But
Gandalf and Elrond both are feeling the burden that comes of too much
knowledge, and they know the thinness of the line they are walking.
Their choice is, in some sense, unjustifiable, but also unarguable -
they've hit the limits of what reason can do for them, and
unfortunately, that limit draws a line between themselves and the
friend on whom the fate of the world devolves.

Excellent work, Thundera, highly recommended to any fans of Middle-earth.

Title: Renewal · Author: Elena Tiriel · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 208
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-24 00:41:11
Spoilers!
Adopting the perspective of things often brings such a wonderful
expansion of a world. Elena Tiriel gives us an incantatory evocation
of Narsil's reforging. It's a perfect match: from the perspective of
Narsil-Anduril, the reforging is a rite of purification. Rites are set
and patterned, highly orchestrated and choreographed, even the
simplest. The symbolization of different ideas in actions are
important, and incantation and repetition of words can help to
establish correspondences.

I like the tempo of this piece. The italicized sections do their job
of opening and blocking out the rest of the lines, and provide a
certain martial rhythm - a pattern of precise stops, and also a series
of steps and stages.

A lovely drabble, Elena Tiriel!

Title: Of First Impressions and Old Friends · Author: Dreamflower ·
Races: Cross-Cultural: Frodo and Faramir · ID: 146
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-24 00:46:34
Spoilers!
Yet another delightful story I might have missed were it not for MEFA!
I loved Faramir's compassion for Frodo and Sam here and the way
friendship with Gandalf links both Man and Hobbit.I'm glad I know
Gandalf is still alive or the memories of him would have made me sad.

Title: Men of the Twilight · Author: Elena Tiriel · Genres: Romance:
Drabbles · ID: 209
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-24 00:46:57
Spoilers!
One of the things that I found amazing about LOTR was that we get so
little of Eomer and Eowyn after she is healed by Aragorn. Given that
Eomer nearly lost all his remaining close family in the space of a
week or so, I've always imagined him as sneaking away at every moment
to check in on Eowyn.

I love the way that Elena Tiriel writes that brother-sister
relationship into deserved prominence in order to highlight the shift
in Faramir's perspective: from "Twilight" being a predicate of an
entire people that renders them lower than the Numenoreans to being a
personal darkness of Éowyn that he wishes to lift.

Even those accounted wise have something to learn - or maybe
especially the wise have something to learn, or else they don't
deserve to be called wise! Well done, E.T.!

Title: Seeking the Sun · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men · ID: 488
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-24 00:47:39
Hi Linda! This is a second try. I lost the first one. This is a very
good yet sad tale. I feel very badly for this poor woman, having lost
her husband, her child, her whole family, home, belongings, and just
basic neccessities for life. She has no money, no one to employ her
and she is living out in the streets. I can really feel her need to
blame someone for her trials in life. She blames Aragorn for the loss
of her husband, believing it his fault that her husband went and was
killed because he followed the King. I'm sure Aragorn mourned for
every lost soul in that battle, and if he had had his way, no one
would have had to go and fight. Her husband, I'm sure, just fought for
his King, wanting to help Middle Earth in her fight for freedom and
light. I'm sure her husband went willingly, never believing he would
die and leave his wife a widow. Arwen an Elven Witch? This lady has
lots to learn. I love when she slowly learns her King and Queen really
are very kind and compassionate people. They take her in, care for
her, inform her she is still with child, and then offer her
employment. How wonderful they are to her. She went from indignity and
hatred of the King and Queen to understanding and loving them. It is
very nice to see the viewpoint of a common 'anywoman' in a situation
like this. For this is not just about the royals and friends, but
about the commoners and subjects of the Kingdom as well. This is
another wonderful story, Linda. I liked it very, very much.

Title: Rose, Rose, Rose · Author: White Gull · Genres: Romance · ID: 619
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-24 00:52:25
Spoilers!
I hope that Rosie's dream was but a dream yet I can imagine her having
thoughts like this while hoping she did not.One does wonder what
tensions might have arisen for these three sharing a home.An
atmospheric and well written story.

Title: Giving Gifts · Author: Marta · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 426
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-24 00:57:19
Spoilers!
A delightfully amusing ficlet which shows Imrahil with an unexpected
sense of humour.He cannot much like his brother in law! I can almost
feel sorry for Denethor if he has to listen to his sons trying out
their gifts!

Title: Sharing Good News · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Humor: Drabbles
· ID: 216
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-24 01:05:03
Spoilers!
The grim, dour Ranger, on guard against every danger: that's the
individual we are introduced to in the trilogy - and for good reason.
At this point in his life, Aragorn has journeyed and served in Rohan
and Gondor, witnessed the forces and abilities of their enemies up
close... all the way to entering Mordor. He knows intimately the great
burden of his heritage and how seemingly hopeless is his destiny, and
has no illusions as to what he faces.

Acknowledging all that makes this drabble glimmer with the same
brightness as Aragorn's gobsmacked grin. How much did it mean to him,
to have Arwen's love returned? This much. To forget all the secrecy,
the weight of travail. To seek out and find a friend who could, in
hobbity simplicity refined by his own long travels and struggles,
rejoice in his outrageous joy. No doubt Aragorn confided this wondrous
news to others close to him. But I don't think the beautiful, grounded
and open heart of a Hobbit should be underestimated: I've always felt
that there's something about them that makes even the tiniest
happiness super-magnified, a sort of bubbly irrepressibly that can't
be resisted.

["Sharing Good News"] makes me think of all that and grin ridiculously
myself!

Title: Estel I Was Called · Author: Marta · Genres: Drama: Featuring
Aragorn · ID: 351
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-24 01:05:34
Spoilers!
I liked this story very much,especially Aragorn's yearning to know his
father and loneliness in his new home.It is one of the few stories
which details how Aragorn continued to keep his identity secret,a
detail I especially liked. I almost felt I was there where Aragorn was
looking around his old home and picking up the pelts.An outstanding
and well written story.

Title: An Autumn Fair in Halabor · Author: Soledad · Times: Mid Third
Age · ID: 165
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-24 01:09:49
Oh, what a pleasure it is to slip into Soledad's magnificently
conjured creation again! Halabor is one of those fantasy constructs
that feel as real as any place I've physically visited; the people are
multi-layered and complex, realistic and believable. Anyone who's read
stories set in this little Middle-earth village knows that the author
has a vast knowledge of medieval times and puts it to enjoyable and
entertaining use. Not that the lives here are romanticized! No,
there's joy and sadness, wholeness and brokenness, all explored with
the same careful richness.

["An Autumn Fair in Halabor"] is a slightly different spin on past
works in that we get interactions between the common folk and some
visiting Elves. (I had a happy moment when I realized that I wanted to
go back and reread ["The Shoemaker's Daughter"] to fully appreciate
the segue into this story. Definitely NOT necessary to enjoy AAFiH,
but I liked having the excuse!)

One of the best parts of Halabor is the diverse community and complex
mix of cultures that Soledad has invented. The variety adds tremendous
depth and realism to all the interactions and plots. Every individual
gets meticulous attention from this author and feels delightfully
three-dimensional, no matter how small the part they play. (It's quite
enlightening and impressive to visit Soledad's character lists.)

All the roles that nobles and craftsmen fill to keep a small village
running and self-supporting are touched on to varying degrees; each
time I "visit" Halabor, I come away with a yet greater appreciation
for what it takes to live in a place and time like Gondor. Although I
dearly love seeing the same great and mighty heroes that Tolkien fans
typically adore, the behind-the-scenes looks that this author offers
serve to increase my awareness of all the "little people" that make
the noble lifestyle even possible.

Another wonderful addition to the Halabor Chronicles! Please keep
inviting us back, Soledad.

Title: Before the Black Gate · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Late
Third Age · ID: 45
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-24 01:33:28
Spoilers!
For me, the interaction between Pippin and Beregond has always been
one of the better human elements in Tolkien's writings, and here
Raksha expands on it. She captures Pippin's hobbit sensibilities: he
dreams of food. Yet this is not trivialized and in fact, the way I
read this ficlet, there are complex layers here: Pippin's thoughts
return to his homeland in contrast to his grim situation. A shadow
hovers over Pippin and Beregond, just like the darkness that looms
over the Morannon. The sub-text, which Raksha captures so well here is
the real possibility that this is the last meal shared between
comrades-in-arms and friends.

Raksha's prose is well-chosen, e.g.,
[A Man's booted feet appeared. Pippin looked up into the face of his
friend Beregond.] conjures an immediate image. She nicely crafts
Pippin's irrepressible personality yet also gives him sobriety, too,
which is just how I've imagined one of my two (Meriadoc is the other
one) favorite hobbit-types.

A nice ficlet, and I would like to think that Pippin eventually got
that breakfast of [bacon, poached eggs, toast drowning in butter and
strawberry jam], a man after my own heart!




Title: Tying Notes · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Late Third Age: Gondor
Drabbles · ID: 378
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-24 01:49:16
I'm intrigued by the South and the East of Middle-earth (and hope to
write a story or two pertaining to such in the future) so Imrihiel's
drabble about Faramir was like eating a delicious ripe date. With the
opening sentence, Imhiriel creates a sensual exotic atmosphere. Using
these beautifully chosen words, Imhiriel lets the reader know that
there are undulating odalisques about in the tent. In the next
sentence, we find Faramir, immersed in an apparent cultural exchange
with the Haradrim. I admire Faramir's diplomacy and intellectual
discipline!



Title: I Ain't Got Nobody · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 568
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-24 01:59:49
Spoilers!
LOL!

Sorry, that wasn't very articulate, but it really is the best response
I am capable of offering this work of art. Poor, accident-prone,
desperately unfortunate Glorfindel, and equally poor, exasperated,
over-worked Námo. Finally all is made clear; that really bad ending to
Glorfindel's encounter with the Balrog was nothing more than one
amongst many episodes of just really bad luck. Would have liked to be
a fly on the wall when he explained that one to the Lord of Mandos.

This fic should at least come with a beverage warning and was a really
good laugh. My favourite line? Too many to mention them all, but this
one might be near the top of the list: ["You do this one more time and
I'm putting you in a Troll!"]

Msg# 9568

MEFA Reviews for Monday, November 24, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 24, 2008 - 19:31:13 Topic ID# 9568
Title: Alqualondë · Author: Moreth · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 220
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-24 02:26:05
Spoilers!
Incredibly visceral. The first part made a very deep impression on me,
to the extend that I was actually close to tears while I read it. I
keep thinking that death was almost a new concept back then, that he
was so unprepared, that he seemed so young, too young to die without
even understanding what was happening to him. The second part just
made me angry.

This is Alqualondë, but it is also every war that has ever been fought
where one side is better armed and better prepared than the other,
where young people fight and die without really understanding the
reasons and other young people do the killing and only pay the
emotional price later.

Very well done.


Title: The Lowest Circle · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Elves: Drabbles ·
ID: 449
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-24 02:28:24
Spoilers!
Eerie, dark, distressing are the words this brings to mind. A soul
that once knew freedom, open air, the lights in the sky, broken down
to where memory fails and the only reality is the brutal here and now.
I think it must have been very like this, the making of orcs.

Title: Upon the Pebbled Shore · Author: aranelgoldenflower · Genres:
Drama: Final Partings · ID: 171
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-24 02:29:07
Spoilers!
Elrond and Elros chose to join themselves to different kindreds, it is
part of canon, I have known it for years, and yet the suggestion that
Elrond's sons might make the same choice feels somehow shocking. Very
sad, but also in a way it does them far more honour than all those
stories that refuse to allow they might have been individual enough to
have chosen separately and have sufficient respect for one another to
accept the final divide.

Title: The Tower Hills · Author: DrummerWench · Genres: Drama: Final
Partings · ID: 608
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-24 02:29:34
Spoilers!
Drummerwench's [The Tower Hills] reads as a seamless extension of the
final chapter of [The Return of the King]. She captures the Tolkienian
"voice" so well here yet it is not a self-conscious imitation, but
instead flows in a natural style which stands in great contrast to
those stories that attempt to be so canon-compliant and
Tolkienomimetic that they become stiff and uninteresting. This is not
the case here.

DW creates a pensive atmosphere, a time of transition and melancholy.
This is a journey of farewell as the elves look out from the height of
the tower east over the lands of Middle-earth which they will soon
depart. DW emphasizes this further with the use of her poetry. That
melancholy song (and a well done poem, it is) strikes the chord of
[The Tower Hills].

I also liked the fact that DW gave Sam those dark discomfited feelings
while he was inside the tower. That adds a sense of reality -- that
Sam would be affected by his experiences on the journey to Orodruin
and might translate these to other situations. DW captures Sam's real
and abiding fear, but then Frodo reaches out and reassures his boon
friend within the darkness of Elostirion. The haunting voice of the
sea - a mysteriously anthropomorphized chant -- is also an excellent
touch to add to the atmosphere. Finally, I relished each and every
detail of the architectural features of Elostirion, from the metal
bound doors and arrow-slit windows to the stairs to the stone walkway
to copper half-dome and the contraption of metal and gears.

An excellent gap filler!

Title: Miquan Melave · Author: Marta · Genres: Romance · ID: 319
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-24 03:09:31
I am picky when it comes to slash although I think the term for the
genre is about as misused as "AU." Sometimes, it can be rather forced,
but the type I favor rings with authenticity. That is the case for
Marta's vision of Boromir and Theodred, who are now OTP in my mind
thanks to her stories about these two men. In [Míquan Mélavë], we
first find Boromir ruminating on the implications of an ancient
Rohirric (Anglo-Saxon) expletive, one that is identical to that used
as vulgar and vocal equivalent of a comma in New York, Boston and much
of the Northeastern seaboard of the US.

There are any number of things I appreciated about Marta's depiction
of Théodred and Boromir's relationship depicted here: that they must
keep it clandestine within Gondorian society, the nature of their
feelings beyond physical attraction, and her well-written eroticism.

Boromir's yearning sears in this story. He wants more than the
intensity of the physical with Théodred, and the melancholy song,
[Miquan Mélavë] acts as the touchstone for Boromir to try to
illustrate the need for love, the search for the loving kiss along
with those that burn with physical passion.

As an aside, Marta's vision of the tale of Imrazór and Mithrellas is
an interesting touch, a seed crystal for a story in and of itself.

Title: A Dainty Dish · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 722
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 03:12:52
As a mushroom lover myself, especially on pizza or in soup or Italian
dishes, and of course stuffed with delicious fillings and baked, I can
appreciate this story, and those hobbity hobbits Meriadoc and Peregrin
wanting to show Gondor how wonderful mushroom dishes can be. Nobles
and common alike cannot turn up their noses at this delicacy! I had a
soup once that was made of various mushrooms, onions, and other good
things that is one of the best soups I have ever eaten, and the
mushroom lovers in this story would surely enjoy it. I also like the
idea of the recipe-sharing. One imagines how wonderful it would be to
own a copy of a Middle-Earth cookbook. I'd probably try all the
recipes at least once. I would hope that Mrs Maggot's recipe for
mushrooms cooked with bacon would included, as well as Mr Butterbur's
for his blackberry tart, Elvish concoctions from Arwen, and all of
Aragorn and Farmir's best recipes for cooking wild game. That would
truly make a wonderful cookbook! One can imagine people using it to
throw dinner parties and for other special occasions. You could
prepare a whole feast of just mushroomed themed dishes. But please, no
recipes from the orcs, as we already know what their favorite food is,
and we do not want to eat it, or be it, for that matters. One wonders
if any recipes Sauron contributed would be for barbecue, since he
loves flames so much! Loved this story, mushrooms for all!

Title: Star of Hope · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Mid Third Age:
Eriador · ID: 34
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 03:20:24
Spoilers!
Happy Birthday to you, Happy Birthday to you, Happy Birthday dear
Aragorn-Estel-Strider-Wingfoot-Thorongil and all the rest of your
names! This was a very nice birthday fic for you, telling a nice
romantic story of Arathorn and Gilraen and how she told him that she
was expecting their child. I also liked this story because it showed
how Gilraen made sure some human customs were preserved for her son
when he was growing up in Rivendell, such as celebrating his birthday,
since the Elves did not do that, but rather celebrated their
begettting day. It was nice that Elrond was understanding, but then he
might have been used to it from the other heirs to Gondor that he had
fostered, It is nice to think of Aragorn celebrating his birthday and
enjoying himself as a child, considering all that he had to face in
his life.

Title: Sour Milk · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 521
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 03:28:48
Spoilers!
This fanciful, humorous Alternative Universe story never fails to
charm me each time I read it. It reminds me very much of fairy tails,
in particular, the Emperor's New Clothes, one of my favorites as a
child. I also love the pictures and the idea of the cats teaching
Arrogant Aragorn humility. Good touch also adding Eomer's army of
Rohirrim as strongmen there to stop any resistance the people of
Gondor might have showed. The ginger tom in particular looks very
familiar. This story also reminds me of a much darker tale by Neil
Gaiman, in which the cats of the world plot to take over from the
humans and be masters of the earth. Good of the cats to want to bring
back the Steward Faramir too, as that can only bode good for the King,
the cats, the milk, and all of Gondor. This is, overall, a very clever
and entertaining piece of fiction.

Title: No Regrets · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 490
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 03:35:52
This is a great little drabble. You figure Aragorn must have wondered
about this question sometimes, given Denethor's attitude about the
Ruling Stewards. Not like I think Aragorn doubted Faramir's loyalty.
Faramir gave a very honest and heartfelt answer that perfectly suits
his character. You know that he would rather have had the King come
back and restore Gondor to her glory than to be ruling Steward over a
failing country threatened by the Shadow. Aragorn's return not only
freed Gondor, Arnor, and the rest of Middle Earth, it freed Faramir to
find a real and lasting love and to have a much happier life than he
would have had if Aragorn had chosen not to take the throne of Gondor
and Arnor.

Title: The Vase that was Broken · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres:
Humor: Gondor · ID: 417
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 03:47:25
Spoilers!
Oh poor Aragorn, he can never seem to get a break! This is a
delightful and humorous tale of one of the perils of fatherhood that
all father's face, no matter if they are king or not, where something
of their wives gets broken and they must either replace it before it
is noticed or risk the displeasure of their loved one. This story is a
wonderful little snapshot of how Aragorn and Arwen's life might really
have gone in the Fourth Age. One can easily imagine Aragorn being the
sort of warm and involved parent he is shown to be in this fic, taking
time from all the pressing duties of the kingdom to play with his
beloved firstborn son. I love picturing him looking at all the
different vases and trying to decide which was the best replacement
for the broken one. Arwen was just perfect in this too, she was her
sensible self who, of course, would put the priceless vase up as soon
as her son started walking, which of course meant he was old enough to
romp and play. Nice kiss at the end too, and a good conclusion drawn
by Aragorn. I also liked the title of this story's play on words, from
the sword that was broken, very familiar to all of us who so loved the
books. I think that Arwen was also clever enough to safely put away
any other heirlooms too, but just to be sure, Aragorn should probably
ask her!

Title: Home is where the heart is · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres:
Romance: Drabbles · ID: 505
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 03:59:39
Spoilers!
A very sweet little Arwen and Aragorn drabble that I really enjoyed
reading. I love Arwen and Aragorn, they are my favorite Middle Earth
couple and always have been.This is a lovely little outake from what
feels like fairly early on in the Fourth Age, as one senses that that
was when Arwen might be most likely to experience a moment of doubt
and a longing for the soft flowers of her home at Rivendell or her
grandmother Galadriel's refuge of Lothlorien,where Arwen spent so many
happy visits. She's feeling this, standing in a ballroom in Minas
Tirith, probably all dressed up in a wonderful gown and wearing
beautiful jewels. But when the reassurance comes, when her love sweeps
her into the dance and she realizes that everything she gave up is
nothing to what she gained, it is a perfectly wonderful moment. Arwen
has the love of her very long life, and how can she ever regret that?
Very lovely story!

Title: Deliverance · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 285
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-24 10:00:15
Spoilers!
Imhiriel's drabble, "Deliverance", is a prime example of just how much
can be said in the one hundred words of the true drabble form. It was
a gift for my birthday, and I savor it, re-reading it frequently.

Imhiriel does a wonderful job of setting the scene in just a few,
powerful words. I feel so much sympathy for the mariner, shipwrecked
on an island... formerly hallowed by his people, and long sought-for,
but now barren... and feeling beaten up and completely abandoned.

You can feel the reverence and fascination he has held for downfallen
Numenor, and how much he hoped for a glimpse of his people's land...
but there is none. Poignantly, he thinks he is going to die because of
his failed quest.

And the ending is so hopeful! A sign from the Valar, and help
unlooked-for shows up from a direction unwatched.... As I've said
before, sailors are supposed to be superstitious, and I'm sure this
mariner is just superstitious enough to treasure the lucky eagle
feather and keep it with him forever.

This is a multi-layered vignette, beautifully written and enchanting.


Title: Cold Be Hand and Heart and Bone · Author: Imhiriel · Races:
Villains: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 286
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-24 12:03:45
Spoilers!
This drabble truly gives me the creeps. *shivers*

I mean that in only the most admiring and complimentary way, of
course! The spooky atmosphere is well-wrought and chillingly successful.

Something that I especially appreciate here is that Imhiriel digs up
an obscure, forgotten quote buried in the middle of the Appendices,
dusts it off and illuminates it so deftly that you look at the
original quote in a completely different way.

Oh, and I really liked the mention of the blue jewelery that sent Tom
Bombadil into quiet remembrance when he unearthed it after freeing the
Hobbits from their captivity... score one for yet another quirky and
often-overlooked corner of canon.

The tone of this vignette is especially effective. It begins as a
dispassionate description of the tomb and of the finery with which the
prince was buried, as befits his station.

Then the reader begins to get uneasy at the spooky description of the
unearthly illumination, and then alarmed at the vivid description of
the words spoken by the presence.

And the vision of the [groping hand] evokes the sensation of the
prince being violated... until the last, short sentence leaves the
reader gasping in shock.

This is a terribly disturbing scene... I do not recommend that you
read it in the dark!


Title: The Waker · Author: Nancy Brooke · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 287
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-24 12:35:19
Spoilers!
It is an rare and extraordinary challenge to write a drabble - so
dependent upon evocative language - about a creature without language;
but NancyBrooke rises to that challenge, and far exceeds all expectations.

I really enjoy how the vignette is told from the point of view of the
Watcher in the Water, who is unable to explain in words what is
happening or why he responds as he does. It is almost as if we are
watching this creature learn how to perceive, how to think, how to
express itself in its own inimitable, and verbally limited, way.

It certainly knows concepts like [hunger] and [prey], but its poor
mind is being stretched by concepts, by longings, that it cannot quite
fathom.

Nancy's way of describing things that the Watcher cannot describe for
himself is compelling, and the last two paragraphs left me in a
thoughtful mood, trying to figure out just how the world would look -
or smell or taste or sound or feel - to a non-verbal creature that
bears far more resemblance to a squid or an octopus than to our
big-brained, awkwardly bipedal, land-dwelling, lumbering selves.

This is an extraordinarily perceptive view of a creature that is far
beyond our knowledge or experience. It gave me food for thought. Very
nicely done!


Title: Epiphany · Author: Larner · Races: Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 293
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-24 13:04:34
Spoilers!
Elladan and Elrohir are seeing Aragorn in a new light on the day of
his crowning, and are finding it a shock that he has grown into the
fine example of nobility that he is. I can't help but wonder if they
see a crown of flame over his head, as Legolas did when the Three
Hunters met Eomer?

Larner beautifully captures the moment when the brothers realize that
Estel has grown far beyond their little brother who needed their
support, training, and protection... and that he is not just
full-grown, but mature, accomplished, and kingly in his own right.

I imagine the surprise at seeing what was in front of them for a while
is similar to the shock of discovering that their younger sister was
going to give up her immortality to marry this man.

This drabble gave me a strong emotional response, especially empathy
for Elladan and Elrohir, who are losing their younger brother (and
their sister) at the same time as Aragorn is gaining the reunited
kingdom and a marriage.


Title: Reflections in the Smoke · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times:
Late Third Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 294
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-24 14:43:59
Spoilers!
The tremendous relief and weariness that Gandalf must have felt at the
end of his two-millennia-long mission is very nicely depicted in this
vignette.

I was especially taken by the evocative description of [the flick of a
wrist, the spinning of a small circlet of unholy metal into the fire];
so few words, but such a clear image wrought in my mind. And it refers
to a small, almost insignificant act, yet one that is the culmination
of thousands of years of preparatory work by Gandalf - despite not
having the knowledge or powers that he could take for granted as one
of the Maia in Valinor.

I cannot help but feel empathy for Gandalf, a tired old man, sitting
by the fire and puffing on his pipe. And perhaps he can't help but
wonder what it was that was so different between him and his brother
Maia, Sauron, that they took two such diverging paths.

Very nicely done!


Title: Possessing the greatest powers · Author: Tanaqui · Times:
Multi-Age: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 387
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-24 17:47:05
This drabble series combines lush, poetic prose, emotionally-engaging
snap shots, and deeply insightful philosophical allusions. I love the
tight bond between metaphors and actual physical realities - water for
Galadriel, air for Elrond, and fire and flame for Gandalf.

The fragile and fluid balance between one's own power of sub-creation
and the spark of true divine creation is explored in thought-provoking
ways and yet - rightly - left an unfathomable mystery.

Tanaqui's take on the origin on what the the Rings represent is very
convincing. The way she ties each Ring's individual name and
properties to their respective wearer's personal history and
disposition is brilliant and deeply moving, setting the loss of power
by the destruction of the One Ring in the right context of victory
over evil and triumph after a long, hard-fought struggle in body and mind.

I'm hard put to name a favourite, but I think my choice would be the
lovely portrait of Galadriel in ["Not Waving But Drowning"], and I'm
also partial to this line: ["Elrond grasped Glorfindel's shoulder,
anchoring himself down"] in ["Air Pressure"] which is shows the
meaning of their friendship in such a subtle way.

Title: Faithful · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Second and Early Third
Age · ID: 105
Reviewer: Imhiriel · 2008-11-24 17:53:49
Intriguing look on what might have occured on the eve of the Gondorian
Kin-Strife. I can feel how difficult it must have been for this Prince
of Dol Amroth to weigh between the conflicting loyalities, when a
decision either way might put the people he is in charge of in peril.

We know his decision will put him on "the wrong side of history", but
as we see here, it certainly wasn't a decision made lightly, or with
betrayal in mind.

Title: The Heart of a Knight · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Drama:
Incomplete · ID: 335
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-24 22:48:04
It's not often that you see Imhiriel put her formidable talents to
work on longer fanfic pieces, but HoaK makes me want it to happen more
often. As opposed to the challenges of the super-short form, there's a
different set of skills required to carry a plot over multiple
chapters and develop an assortment of main and supplemental
characters. The author is doing a bang-up job of convincing me of the
"reality" of this little corner of Tolkien's world that's being
focused on, and has me eagerly (and impatiently!) tapping my fingers
waiting for the next installment.

The relationships between the various individuals are obviously well
thought-out and believable. Life is not all rosy for the newly-made
Captain of the White Company; naturally he has friends and family who
support him (including a truly lovely and wonderful appearance by one
particularly height-challenged comrade), but there are a lot of issues
to Beregond's situation that keep it from being a "happily ever after"
story - one or two of which I'd never even considered before. Imhiriel
deftly explores these with a very nice nuanced approach that never
weighs the narrative down, yet gives a balance to the judgement
Aragorn has passed.

Very well done, and when can we expect more? :)

Title: Kin-Strife · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres: Drama:
Incomplete · ID: 92
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-24 22:48:35
I know that Isabeau often laments the number of seemingly never-ending
WiPs that beg for her attention, but frankly: I would hate for any one
of them to not be posted. Even as we're hanging on (begging and
pleading and making "Elf-puppy" eyes at her to work on our particular
favorite), each and every one of them is just so darn good as it
stands that I'd hate for it to still be relegated to the privacy of
her hard drive, awaiting unveiling until it was finished.

Kin-Strife is a perfect example to hold up. Yes, we want the last of
the details worked out and committed to the final chapters, but the
interactions between Imrahil and Andrahar (one of the absolute best
OCs in the fandom) are all emotionally engaging, enlightening and
entertaining. I love these scenes of the two of them in their youth
with their successes and failures, and the growth and healing that
gradually takes place.

Isabeau's writing is always superb, with humor and poignancy both in
ample supply. There's awesome conversations, stirring plot lines, and
wonderful connections and interweavings with Tolkien's canon and other
stories in this fanon universe. And the characters: Isabeau imbues
each and every one, from major to minor, with a vivid and compelling
voice. Small wonder they've all started clamoring to have their own
story told!

Title: Autumn · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 489
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 23:43:45
Spoilers!
This is an excellent story, that I particularly enjoyed, as Autumn is
one of my favorite season, with the leaves, the crisp nights, the
pumpkins, and the holidays. It was very nice to how Fourth Age Aragorn
is enjoying his life in this little fic. He no longer has to spend the
cold nights of fall and winter wandering Middle Earth as a Ranger or
in one of his other guises. Instead, he can spend them indoors, by a
bright fire, with his loving wife and family. Just one of the perks of
being King and marrying the woman you have loved for decades.

Title: Drawing the Eye · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Late Third Age
· ID: 569
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 23:47:16
Spoilers!
A very tense, somewhat melancholy story of Aragorn, Halbarad, and the
Palantir. A good portrayal of what might have actually happened when
Aragorn had to confront Sauron with the Palantir.

Title: Music hath Charms · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 361
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 23:52:13
Come down, lady come down! This playful fic reminds me a great deal of
the Colin Firth, Rupert Everett, Reese Witherspoon movie of Oscar
Wilde's The Importance of Being Ernest. In that movie, the gentlemen
attempted to win the favor of their angry lady-loves by serenading
them, just as Aragorn and Faramir successfully did in this story. It
was cute romantic, and a very sweet snippet from Fourth Age Gondor.

Title: Seeking the Sun · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men · ID: 488
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 23:55:48
Spoilers!
I really like the outsider\\\'s point of view used in this story, as
the reader is able to see the familiar Tolkien characters from another
angle, one that is not initially postive. I was so glad that the poor
lady got to see that Aragorn, Arwen, and the like were not as she had
thought them to be, and that the story had a happy ending at last.

Title: Playing with Fire · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 21
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-24 23:57:30
An excellent story showing one of Aragorn and Arwen's many moments of
being parents as well as King and Queen.

Msg# 9569

MEFA Reviews for Tuesday, November 25, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 25, 2008 - 19:37:05 Topic ID# 9569
Title: The Shadow · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres: Drama: Ring War
Drabbles · ID: 25
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-25 00:00:58
Spoilers!
Poor Smeagol! Frodo is having dark thoughts in this one. One hopes
that the a shadow cannot cross the sea, so that the Rinbearer may find
peace at last.

Title: Comes the moment to decide · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times:
Late Third Age: Gondor · ID: 418
Reviewer: juliaaurelia · 2008-11-25 00:04:59
Spoilers!
A very well written, very sad story. Nope, Denethor was never going to
win Father of the Year, especially after he started playing with the
Palantir. At the end of the story, one wishes they could reassure
Faramir that better days are on the way.

Title: Dol Amroth Yule · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres:
Adventure · ID: 295
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-25 01:19:30
Spoilers!
Isabeau's short story "Dol Amroth Yule" describes a couple of days in
the life of her original female character Hethlin, as she serves as a
Swan Knight trainee in Prince Imrahil's domain under the tutelage of
the OMC weapons-master, Andrahar.

We get a satisfying glimpse into the life of an esquire and the
behind-the-scene workings of the Prince's castle. Hethlin is resentful
that she is the focus of so much unpleasant personal attention and
training from Andrahar, who, from his own standpoint, is trying to
remedy her profound deficiencies in weapons handling.

She is also the target of pranks from other esquires, and is punished
for her perceived tardiness. That is when we get a chance to see the
kitchens at Dol Amroth preparing for Yule feasting, and the richness
of detail and cheerful interactions with the staff [Chopper!] are
interesting. (Being a baker wannabe myself, I especially enjoyed the
description of decorating the swanship cake.)

Hethlin feels unfairly treated, but she has the grace to bear her
burdens well, which serves her well in the two major tests to follow.

Hethlin's various interactions with other characters are fascinating
and well-drawn... she is angry Andrahar for his especially demanding
toughness with her, yet respects his skills, determination, and
position. She treats pages and maids well, and is well-liked by the
kitchen staff. She shrugs off being hazed by the other esquires. She
has a sharp eye for personal detail during a fight with corsairs,
which comes in handy later.

Andrahar behaves uncharacteristically in this story, and it is
shocking (but he makes amends in the sequel, "Reparation"). But
Hethlin makes a great effort to control her anger, when to do
otherwise would be to be dismissed from the Swan Knights. Though she
did not choose to join them, she will do her utmost to uphold their honor.

And I so enjoyed the ending, though I will never look at marmalade the
same way again!


Title: Above All Shadows · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Alternate
Universe · ID: 492
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-25 02:44:19
Spoilers!
This is a completely unique and beautifully constructed AU account of
events that are totally familiar to LotR readers. The author alters a
few little details and thereby introduces a mystery completely
engaging the reader, heightening their tension, and drawing them into
this story. It is particularly effective that he takes one of the
beloved members of the Fellowship and a selflessly hero and places him
in harms way, in fact, has us wondering if he is suffering hero or a
representative of evil. The mystery element is not only one for the
reader but even more torturously one for the protagonist as well. A
progression of memories are recovered bit-by-bit, like peeling the
skins off an onion, at times, however, masking as much as they expose,
by revealing more and more about mysterious events from the past life
of Legolas.

One of IgnobleBard's skills as a writer of Tolkien fanfiction to
immerse himself into the style of the original in such a way that
one's feels it could be a missing chapter from the book. The story is
written in the first person, one of the most difficult voices to get
right, and the author creates a true and consistent voice for Legolas
that never falters. He also builds a convincing and consistent
characterization for his principle character. The reader becomes
emotionally involved, not just with Legolas, but Aragorn as well. The
tale as it is told here requires extreme and careful attention to
canon details on the part of the writer. One of the signs for one of
an exemplary AU story is that the alterations to the original are
tiny, but turn the whole story upon its head and leave the outcome in
doubt for the reader. This is exactly what happens in this one. What
fun to read an account of facts, personalities, and details with which
one is so familiar and yet be holding one's breathe until nearly the
last line before knowing for sure how the story will be resolved.


Title: Reparation · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men · ID: 296
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-25 02:54:34
Spoilers!
Isabeau's story "Reparation" is a sequel to "Dol Amroth Yule", in
which her deeply honorable, but humanly flawed, original male
character, Andrahar, Captain and Armsmaster of the Swan Knights,
struck an esquire under his command, Hethlin, an OFC.

This story occurs the day after the events of "DAY". Andrahar is
musing over his failings - in his view, one profound one in
particular: he allowed a woman, who turned out to be an assassin, near
the royal family. He is also reflecting on his challenges, like
teaching Hethlin to be a full-fledged warrior when Imrahil is smitten
with her.

We get the real sense of just how honorable a man he is: his
self-criticism is thorough, accurate, and unsparing, and he has a
grudging respect for Hethlin's actions in "DAY", which made up for his
failure to protect the royal family members.

But this is where another OMC, Andrahar's young ward Brand, enters the
story. Both of these characters are well-drawn. Brand is loyal and
uncertain of his own opinion, as befits a lad of his tender age. But
he recognizes dysfunctional behavior from his own background in such a
family, and he is courageous and forthright enough to voice his
observations to Andrahar.

The resulting action is an appropriate resolution to Andrahar's
misconduct, and we come away from this story respecting him, Hethlin,
and Brand even more.

A well-written and very satisfying story! And, like all of Isabeau's
stories with Andrahar and Brand (and her Imrahil), I enjoy re-reading
it regularly.


Title: Chance Encounter · Author: przed · Races: Men: Steward's Family
· ID: 5
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-25 03:16:23
Very interesting and well written tale about Boromir and a chance
meeting with Aragorn in Boromir's youth. I loved the easy feel of the
tale and Boromir's journey, the incident that occurs, and the
intervention of Aragorn. As I said, very nicely written. I'm saving
the link for reading your other LOTR tales.

Title: Hearts of Stone · Author: Elen Kortirion · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 12
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-25 03:48:32
To the author: Oh my goodness. The whole concept took my breath away.
I loved the premise. Especially the Boromir one. Unique thought and
great perspective. Don't want to give away much - but I absolutely
loved these. Forgive my greed, but couldn't you continue....

To readers: A series of three drabbles about precious and not-so
precious stones. One thing I would like to mention - I know nothing of
stones or precious gems (except perhaps jade and diamonds) but the way
the author speaks of each stone - I think the author might be in love
with stones and pebbles too! You don't have to be a geologist to love
these little pieces - the sentiment overshadows evern the loveliest stone!

Each drabble, of course, could stand on its own - but the first about
Arwen was so sweet, and the second about Aragorn was almost whimsical,
but the third, about Boromir just broke my heart. I also liked the
fact that the stones took on a life of their own, as did some of the
places where they were found. You almost made them 'human' and that
helped the reader enjoy these thoroughly. IMHO.

Great writing, Elen...

Psst - So you now give us a clue as to what Aragorn did on those long,
lonely nights in the wilderness?!? Well (blushes furiously) when he
was alone.....

Title: The Clear Ringing Of Silver Trumpets · Author: Lithilien
Quicksilver · Genres: Drama: Featuring Boromir or Faramir · ID: 278
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-25 04:18:15
Spoilers!
From the moment this tale starts, I am caught up, for the author uses
action words to immediately snare her reader. Her use of italics in
parts really underscores the intensity of the moment lived. This scene
has been written over and over again - but I read this many, many
years ago and it still lingered in my heart - enough to finally urge
me to nominate it. It's when a story stands the sands of time that one
knows it is good.

Boromir's first moments of shame are hard to read. He has never been
confronted like this, I think. I love how he yells at himself - and
then forces himself to take some sort of action.

Then, when he knows the Hobbits are in trouble, he runs forward, his
natural bravery shining through, his need to be of use - Ah! It makes
one sad to think the poor Captain-General of Gondor might have needed
to feel useful...

His bravado as he reaches the battle for the Hobbits, his sense of
purpose, his humor, even in the midst of this horror, all shine
through. I loved the lines stolen from the after-math of Moria - it
lends a bitter taste to the fact that Boromir might just be realizing
he could lose this battle. His concern for why his horn call is not
answered... his fierce determination, his disregard for his wounds...
his contempt for his enemies.... And at the last, as he lay in
Aragorn's arms...

Even though it is movie-verse and follows it closely, there is such a
wealth of 'MORE' that touches the heart of this great warrior.

Of course - the ending line is heart-breaking and glorious! This is
really one of my favoritest tales.



Title: The Lost Restored · Author: Larner · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor · ID: 59
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-25 04:51:23
Spoilers!
A well-textured and sensitively written account of the search and
caring for Frodo and Sam after Sauron's fall; with Smeagol, as the
earlier, long-tortured Ringbearer, also searched and grieved for by
Gandalf. I loved the ending, where Frodo meets the restored Smeagol in
the realms beyond Death a long time later, and all wrongs are forgiven.



Title: Jewels of Light · Author: Larner · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 394
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-25 05:52:41
Spoilers!
A touching vignette that, while it contains beautiful descriptions of
Frodo and Sam, is even more remarkable in its presentation of Legolas
and in particular Gimli. Legolas and Gimli find common ground in
understanding the power and grace to which their companions are being
shaped in the Quest - Legolas sees the Light in them, Gimli sees them
as great gems molded by the Shaper - which is wonderfully appropriate
to this Dwarf who has seen so much, in a brief time, of other peoples.
Larner brings out, through this fascinating dialogue between Legolas
and Gimli, the beginning of their recognition of a very special
friendship - their own.

Unusual and thought-provoking.

Title: Nerdanel's Sons · Author: Istarnie · Races: Elves: Incomplete ·
ID: 659
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-25 07:02:57
Spoilers!
Alas that this is as yet unfinished; yet we see the beginnings and
moods of four of the sons of Nerdanel and Feanor as they were within
Aman. A sad thing, to know how much they were beloved and yet how they
took the oath of their father and so sealed themselves to be lost to
their own, allowing the hatred of Melkor to enter their hearts and
lead so many of their folk away from Aman to the Mortal Lands, in too
many cases to loss of their own honor, and in the end to the deaths of
six of the seven.

Sad and painful as well as full of promise lost--the story is told in
beautiful language and imagery, and is well conceived as well as well
researched.

Definitely a worthy story to read and contemplate.

Title: Name Calling: Group Identity and the Other among First Age
Elves · Author: Angelica · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 322
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-25 11:20:24
A very well constructed, informative and well written essay. I
recently got to re-read the part of the HoME the essay deals with, and
I found Angelica's work very interesting. Thank you for writing this.

Title: Arvedui v. Pelendur · Author: Roh Wyn · Genres: Non-Fiction ·
ID: 277
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-25 15:34:38
Like the author, I have always been fascinated by the part of the
appendices dealing with the claim of Isildur's descendants to the
throne of Gondor, in large part because it colours Denethor's attitude
towards Aragorn. Unlike Roh_Wyn, I have no legal background, only
general knowledge about rules of inheritanace, so it was fascinating
to read a lawyerly perspective on the matter. Roh_Wyn explains the
legal situation and implications clearly: it's amusing to realise what
a chancer Arvedui was when the inadequacy of his legal arguments are
exposed, and good to know Faramir's decision was legally consistent as
well as politically astute and, as Roh_Wyn puts it, ["The Right Thing
To Do"]. Not that I don't doubt Faramir could have found a suitable
justification even Aragorn's claim had conflicted with Pelendur's
decision! A fine essay that should be required reading for anyone
arguing about Aragorn's claim to the throne -- bravo!

Title: The Myth of the One Ring's Power · Author: Dreamflower ·
Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 532
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-25 15:34:47
In this essay, Dreamflower provides a comprehensive and fascinating
review of the power of the One Ring and its effect of those who came
into contact with it and knew about its existence. With delightfully
clear prose, she steps the reader carefully through the logic of her
argument and lays bare the nature and source of the limitations on the
One Ring's power. An excellent exploration of one of the major themes
of the Lord of the Rings – well done!


Title: Tolkien's Parish: The Canonical Middle-earth · Author: Steuard
Jensen · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 91
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-25 15:34:53
In this essay, Steuard Jensen lays out a clear and effective framework
for choosing between the many different versions of Tolkien's works in
deciding of the "truth" about Middle-earth. The framework allows
readers to determine their own particular "truth" according to what is
most important to them, while helping them appreciate why other
readers may come to different conclusions. As Steuard astutely
remarks, ["Many heated debates could be more polite and productive if
the participants understood each other's assumptions."] A very
interesting read -- well done!


Title: The Importance of Being Bilbo · Author: Dreamflower · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 686
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-25 15:34:59
This is a delightful essay that pulls together some scholarship of
which most Tolkien fans are probably not aware and then builds on it.
Dreamflower makes a very convincing case for writing more fiction
about Bilbo and her list of areas for further exploration at the end
is dangerously enticing! A very enjoyable read -- well done!


Title: On Canon and Fanfic · Author: Marta · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 123
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-25 15:35:05
This polemic by Marta about how terms relating to canonicity are used,
misused and bandied about in fandom communities is both entertaining
and thought-provoking. Her take is personal, but -- in the spirit of
the essay as a whole -- never a lecture to her readers about what is
right or wrong, but rather a discussion that helps readers consider
their own stance on the matter. Good work!

Title: NIGHT and FOREST: A Glimpse of Beauty · Author: Fiondil ·
Times: First Age and Prior · ID: 554
Reviewer: hrymfaxe · 2008-11-25 16:55:59
Maeve tells an interesting story of how difficult it can be to be
different, and how wast the gulfs can be between our expectations and
the reality of things.

I love this image of Melian even if it makes me very sad for her. The
love she feels for Thingol must be strong indeed for her to have given
such a sacrifice as she has.

Beautiful story with a very interesting theory on Maian nature.

Title: Moved to Pity · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 366
Reviewer: MithLuin · 2008-11-25 20:51:34
Awww, nicely done! I have always thought that an interesting moment,
hidden away from all other eyes. Seeing the two of them react
afterwards is a nice touch, because Namo is not usually someone we see
as needing comfort!

Title: Lost and Found · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 23
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-25 23:08:16
A very lovely interaction between kindred spirits! The
characterizations are marvellous and well-drawn; I really enjoyed
their conversations and exchanges as they walked through the library.
The descriptions of the surroundings did an excellent job of staging
the scene, and I love Faramir's already-budding deductive and
intellectual skills!

Title: The Best Sword Ever · Author: Linaewen · Times: Mid Third Age ·
ID: 290
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-25 23:22:22
Spoilers!
I love how this neatly encapsulates Thorongil's relationship with
Denethor (["...yet subtly opposed him on a personal level in such a
way that even the most successful outcome of a discussion seemed
bought at great cost."]) although it does not dwell much on it. The
rivalry is described just as I would picture it: with respect for
Denethor and without casting blame. Very good depiction of Thorongil's
thoughts; I felt he and Denethor's characters were well portrayed and
true to the individuals we'd meet in LotR.

Little Boromir steals the show, of course! Precocious and clever and
very sweet in his demanding way, it was very interesting to get the
contrast between initial relationship and later meeting, of childlike
trust becoming the doubt-ridden regard of a man who has seen and
experienced many brushes with evil. Well done!

Title: The Skills That Keep You Alive · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 434
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-25 23:34:21
Delightful, wonderful and absolutely creative take on the prompt! I
had a big laugh-out-loud moment at the final line (which followed
right on the heels of an "Ooo, yes!" moment concerning a handful of
oil...).

The vision of young Estel is simply excellent. Gwynnyd depicts the
restless-boy syndrome perfectly: I can so clearly see him dancing
around the room, surrounded by amused Elves. Glorfindel has obviously
had much experience with patience; his examples and gently-given
lecture had me grinning at their inventiveness and successful
implementation.

Terrific finish, running down through all those long-ago lessons so
doggedly learned. Great job!

Title: A Woman in Few Words: The Character of Nerdanel and Her
Treatment in Canon and Fandom · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 107
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-26 00:08:04
Dawn Felagund has put together a broad-ranging essay about Nerdanel
which successfully addresses several key issues. Firstly, she
substantiates -- through an analysis of stories, the details of which
are presented in the appendix -- her perception that Nerdanel is
important and beloved by fanfic writers, especially compared with
other female characters in the Silmarillion,. Secondly, she presents a
comprehensive review of the canon facts about Nerdanel, and discusses
the kinds of conclusions about the character that may be drawn from
those facts -- as well as identifying some widespread fanons that are
not supported in Tolkien's writings. Thirdly, she presents a
discussion of why fanfic writers are so enamoured of such a "minor"
character. I learned a great deal reading this essay, and greatly
enjoyable reading Dawn's clear and engaging prose – highly recommended!

Title: On Hobbits · Author: Aratlithiel · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 457
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-26 00:08:09
In this very personal essay, Aralithiel presents us with an intriguing
insight into her answer to the question "What draws you to hobbits and
Frodo in particular?" I particularly enjoyed reading her thoughts on
the general character of Hobbits and the difference between that and
the characters of the leading Hobbit protagonists – and also the
differences between them. I always enjoy hearing about what attracts
other fans in the fandom and this was no exception -- thank you!

Title: Pride and Despair: A Defense of Ecthelion's Son · Author: Marta
· Genres: Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 624
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-26 00:08:13
One of the things Marta and I have always had in common is a
fascination with Denethor. As she points out in her notes, we have had
many discussions over the years about him and about what Tolkien wrote
about him and exactly what that means. This essay does an excellent
job of pulling together a wealth of canon material as a jumping-off
point for reviewing Denethor's character and actions, and it was a
delight to read it and both rediscover her take on the debates we've
already had and encounter some new thoughts from her about areas of
canon we hadn't got round to exploring together. While I don't expect
anyone reading this essay to fall in love with him, I think it will
provide a great deal more understanding of one of Tolkien's most
subtle, complex and maddening characters. Good work!

Title: One Step More - The Heroism of Frodo Baggins · Author:
ConnieMarie · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 395
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-26 00:08:17
ConnieMarie presents a fascinating exploration of why Frodo offers a
different model of heroism to that in much mainstream culture – and
shows why that is dismissed by some but appeals to many more of us. In
an often personalised discussion, she shows how this character in a
"fantasy" novel resonates with the way we experiences our own lives.
Very thought-provoking!


Title: Name Calling: Group Identity and the Other among First Age
Elves · Author: Angelica · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 322
Reviewer: Tanaqui · 2008-11-26 00:08:21
As Angelica notes in the summary for this essay, there is a "wealth of
knowledge" to be found in the writings of Tolkien included in the
History of Middle-earth series. Here, she summarises and presents some
of Tolkien's fundamental ideas about Elves from the tenth volume in a
form which is easily accessible and digestible for the general reader.
(Or, perhaps, for those like me who are mainly interested in other
cultures and races.). Her writing is clear and well-structured, and
her summary gave me a better understanding of the subtleties of Elven
culture than I had previously. A good and useful read!

Title: The Littlest Warrior · Author: RavensWing14337 · Races: Elves:
Incomplete · ID: 552
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-26 01:21:54
A very--cute--story. Many parts well written; others a bit too given
to the cuteness of baby Estel. As Erestor notes, in this child they
have a born negotiator. As for the villain of the piece--definitely
frightening.

Msg# 9570

Seeking banner customizers Posted by Marta November 26, 2008 - 11:52:38 Topic ID# 9570
Hey guys,

As many of you probably realize, voting for the 2008 awards ends on
Sunday, at 11:59 PM GMT November 30. (Note that's GMT, not your local
time zone.) That's the deadline for getting all your votes in, and also
for changing any draft reviews over to hidden or final if you want them
counted. On Sunday night the awards organizers and I will start working
getting the results ready to share with the world.

Part of that is telling authors who have won, that they've won, and
offering them use of one of the many banners our dedicated banner
artists have made for this purpose - see all of their work at
http://mefawards.net/fanart/categories.php?cat_id=799&page=17 .

You'll notice that these banners don't display the award won - just
"MEFA" or "Middle-earth Fanfiction Awards" and the year. This is where
you can help. When an author wins they will be told to email a certain
address with what banner they'd like to use, and a volunteer will
customize the banner for them. We already have some volunteers but could
always use more - that means less work for everyone involved. Basically
you would be adding the place and category/subcategory to banners and
emailing them out to grateful authors. If this sounds like something
you'd like to be involved in, please let me know and I'll send you more
information.

And whether you're interested in helping out in this way or not, watch
this space for awards results (next week) and details on how to make
suggestions for future years (once we've all had a chance to recupe a
bit. :-D)

Marta

Msg# 9571

MEFA Reviews for Wednesday, November 26, 2008 Posted by annmarwalk November 26, 2008 - 18:59:09 Topic ID# 9571
Title: A Warm Sun Shining · Author: shirebound · Races: Hobbits:
Post-Ring War · ID: 727
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-26 05:10:49
Spoilers!
Happy comfortable Hobbits,Aragorn and kittens! What more could a
reader want?I don't usually much like film verse stories but this one
won my heart as it so beautifully depicts the bond between Frodo and
Sam and the love Aragorn bears for them.I must say the kittens are the
best behaved I've heard of,as any felines I know what not leave much
lunch untouched for their Hobbit friends.I type this watching a row of
three large cats beside the fire! This is a truly,delightful,warm and
feel good story.

Title: Arwen · Author: Neoinean · Genres: Romance: Gondor · ID: 359
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-26 05:20:27
Spoilers!
A beautifully written and moving story of Aragorn and Arwen.
I found this very true to life,especially Aragorn's nightmares as
Tolkien hints he has seen some dreadful things,which cannot fail to
have left their mark.
This is also a tasteful exploration of the intimate aspects of Aragorn
and Arwen;s marriage, which are again believable,such as Arwen's fear
and Aragorn's tenderness on their wedding night.

Title: Aulë the Smith · Author: Oshun · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character
Studies · ID: 530
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-26 07:47:07
Aule is a fascinating character and Oshun brings him to life superbly
with this biography, one of a series she has written for the
Silmarillion Writer's Guild. Aule is a smith and creator who freely
shares his knowledge and works with others before moving on to each
next project. Her comparison between Aule and Melkor, whose thirst for
knowledge led him to envy, desire and ultimately the twisting of his
creative impulse into one of destruction, is noteworthy and fitting.
It seems that Tolkien saw Aule and Melkor as two sides of the same
coin, one faithful to Illuvatar's vision and the other bent on making
that vision his own. But Aule is not simply a mirror of Melkor but his
own man, a character who tempers knowledge with compassion.

Oshun writes informative biographies, giving us information and
insight into the characters in Tolkien's works with her diligent
research and wordcraft. Her keen sense of character brings the
Silmarillion characters to life and her interpretations are always as
fascinating as the nuts and bolts facts of the characters themselves.
Considering how little information Tolkien gave for some of his
characters, it's an amazing feat to make us see the character's place
in canon and how they fit into the tapestry of Tolkien's world. This
biography of Aule is certainly one of her best.


Title: Elflings · Author: Jael · Races: Elves: Family · ID: 348
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-26 16:10:42
This story, Thranduil as a youngster playing a prank on his father
with a friend, could have been a silly or overly sentimental exercise
but instead is a funny, touching, thoroughly pleasing tale. As always,
Jael gives us a Thranduil who, even as a free spirited child, shows
the sense of humor and sense of responsibility we see in him as an
adult. We also learn in this one how Galion's fate came to be so
inextricably entwined with that of his master. Jael's stories are all
part of a larger vision, always giving us that next little piece of
the characters' personalities and unique qualities as they move
seamlessly between past and future, making them seem identifiable and
realistic people. Yet each story can also be taken on its own as a
ripping yarn that, even if one is unfamiliar with the characters,
keeps a reader engaged and fascinated watching the events of their
lives and loves play out. This is one such story and is a good
introduction to Thranduil for those who imagine what type of child he
might have been or how he and Galion, who appears to great effect in
many of Jael's stories, became so inseparable.

Title: Heart of the Wood · Author: Kenaz · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 60
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-26 16:38:15
It is not often I read a story so beautifully written, so insightful,
and so moving as Kenaz's look at the relationship between Turin and
Beleg. I do a lot of swap stories, written upon request to a specific
set of criteria, and it is always a challenge to write a story that
captures what the requestor wants and, at the same time, make it a
true work of fanfiction that can stand on its own as good read for
everyone interested in the fandom. This story goes beyond even those
goals to the realm of a work of art. The characterizations are spot
on, the descriptions take the reader to the time and place so
effortlessly it is like we are part of this group of Elves who are
defending the borders of Doriath. This is a slash story but to call it
a slash story is like calling The Catcher in the Rye "that emo tale".

It's extremely rare that I read a story that stays with me for days
after I read it, that makes me return to the characters in my mind and
recall an incident or turn of phrase contained therein that tugs at my
heart or makes me smile. This is one of those stories, and I'm not
ashamed to admit the ending moved me to tears and gives me a
melancholy feeling even as I'm typing this review. If you have never
read slash out of fear of what you'll find or if you don't read
stories of Turin and Beleg because you think you know all there is to
know or find the characters uninteresting or for whatever reason, this
story is guaranteed to change your mind. I encourage everyone who
likes Lord of the Rings fanfiction, be their preference Elves, Men,
Hobbits, Dwarves, any genre, any style to read this one. If not you
will be truly missing one of the great ones.


Title: The Portrait · Author: agape4gondor · Races: Men: Pre-Ring War
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 288
Reviewer: Linaewen · 2008-11-26 19:44:04
There is so much that I love about this short little tale! Boromir and
Faramir are on a search for the perfect Yule gift for their father,
and the suspense of that search is intense. Boromir knows what he is
looking for, and is frustrated that he cannot find it. But he will not
give up, and I would not expect him to do so. Not Boromir! Faramir
does not seem to have figured out what Boromir has in mind, but he
nevertheless follows him confidently. Even in a tale of so few words,
Agape4gondor can give us a clear glimpse into that brotherly
relationship which is so special between these two men!

The suspense of the search mounts as it seems Boromir has found what
he is looking for – but no, not yet. But finally, the place Boromir is
looking for is found, and Faramir at last understands. Tears fill my
eyes just as they do Faramir's eyes, every time I read this story.
What is special about all this is that Agape4gondor never comes right
out and tells us what that gift is which the two brothers have finally
discovered after a long search. But we can supply our own guesses, and
it is very satisfying to be able to do so. I feel as if I had been
searching along with Boromir and Faramir on their quest for the best
gift ever, and when it is located, I feel the same joy and wonder as
the two brothers must feel!

I suspect Denethor will have a hard time keeping his tears to himself
when he is presented with such a gift, not only because of the gift
itself, but also because of the obvious love and intimacy that will be
shared between him and his boys when he realizes how they wish to
honor him at Yule.

This is a glorious story that will never cease to move me!


Title: National Treasure · Author: Baranduin · Times: Modern Times ·
ID: 201
Reviewer: Linaewen · 2008-11-26 20:11:08
What an amazing story! I thoroughly enjoyed this tale from beginning
to end. I found it strangely moving, as if I were present as well,
making discoveries of things lost and pondering what it could all
mean, right alongside the husband and wife archeologist team who are
searching for Templar locations in Scotland. The descriptions of the
setting are exquisite, and worded in such a way that one feels the
mystery of something else that is as yet undiscovered, even as the
archeologist team finds what they are seeking.

Who hasn't wished they could find such a treasure -- and yet these two
do not realize what they have found. Not yet, anyway.

When I first read this story, I literally exclaimed in delight at the
final sentence! I had suspected that this was where the story was
heading, but even so, I was unprepared for how the mystery was to be
solved. I found myself wishing for a sequel, and yet I think this was
the best way to end the story, because the imagining of what happens
next is unfettered.

This story is definitely one that I will never tire of reading over
and over again!

Title: There Was A Hobbit · Author: agape4gondor · Genres: Humor:
Drabbles · ID: 111
Reviewer: Linaewen · 2008-11-26 20:31:54
Agape4gondor certainly does have a knack for drabbles, both serious
and light-hearted, and this one is no exception. This particular
drabble falls under the "light-hearted" category, and it was really a
fun read! That particular song is omnipresent indeed, if it has even
made its way to Middle-earth!

Aside from the unexpected twist and resulting hilarity as the song
lyrics are revealed, this story is lovely for other reasons. I am
particularly fond of the picture it creates of Boromir and Haldir
laughing together over something they both find humorous – not to
mention the thought of the Elves of Lothlorien actually having the
audacity to sing such a song out loud! I almost wish we could find out
what others think of the song, particularly the one who is the main
subject of the song, hehe! But even more than that, what is most
precious to me is the exquisite picture of the noble Celeborn and his
quelling look. I truly can imagine it would be a thing to be avoided,
being pinned by that Look, and woe to the one who is not paying
attention and misses the cue.

This is a very enjoyable tale, even if it DOES get that song in my
head every time I read it! *winks*


Title: A Cat in King Elessar's Court · Author: agape4gondor · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Friendship · ID: 66
Reviewer: Linaewen · 2008-11-26 20:54:38
Agape4gondor is an author who has the capacity to tell a familiar tale
in such a way that it becomes totally new and fresh, making it
amazingly insightful in the process. Here we have a story about
familiar characters and places, yet told through the point of view of
a cat! The cat is not just any cat, however; we find out soon enough
that this particular cat is a very special one indeed.

On the face of it, it hardly seems possible that we could learn much
of what goes on in Minas Tirith from a cat, yet Agape4gondor makes
this character seem incredibly believable, to the point that we are
caught up in the same emotions and fears and observations as
Alqualonde the cat, who is advisor and comforter to the Ruling Steward
Denethor.

I very much love the idea of the Steward having such a special friend,
particularly in the final days when he seems so very alone. I also
very much appreciate the insight this relationship gives into
Denethor's inner thoughts. We see him so very clearly when we look at
him and the events that surround him through the eyes of this wise
creature. To see Denethor and his city and his people through the eyes
of a cat somehow makes him all the more human and touchable! I love,
too, the fascinating relationship that develops between Alqualonde and
Pippin, and later Aragorn.

This is a magnificently lovely tale that makes me laugh and cry and
sigh happily, no matter how many times I read it! Thank you so very
much for being willing to be scribe to the Muse Alqualonde, Agape!


Title: Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast? · Author: viv · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 180
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-26 22:19:56
Spoilers!
What I love about this most is that the author does not only give us a
new and totally clever way of seeing Tolkien's work, but just how
little she changes Tolkien's own words to do it. Labelling the Witch
King's threats as a come-on line alone is worth an award! Wickedly
brilliant, as always!

Title: Gently Held · Author: viv · Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 6
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-26 22:22:53
This is such an extraordinarily incisive vision. The use of first
person gives an immediacy and intimacy to this work, and by beginning
with false starts, as it were ["guess again"] brings the reader closer
and closer with each paragraph. It is an exercise in synecdoche,
right? making a part represent the whole? and hands are so wonderfully
symbolic, and actual simultaneously. An exemplary work.

Title: Pippin's Secret · Author: shirebound · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 599
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-26 22:29:23
This is an interesting little 'what-if'.

Msg# 9572

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by nancylea57 November 26, 2008 - 19:46:23 Topic ID# 9570
Mrta, not terribbly artistic on original art format but have been
hoping for a chance to help. please let me know how to sign on or who
to contact for more info. n.

Msg# 9573

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by Marta November 26, 2008 - 20:45:34 Topic ID# 9570
nancylea57 wrote:
>
>
> Mrta, not terribbly artistic on original art format but have been
> hoping for a chance to help. please let me know how to sign on or who
> to contact for more info. n.
>

Hi Nancy,

I'd love your help. I'll email you privately, from
mefasupport@gmail.com. I'll be sending some more instructions (both in
the body of the email and an attachment) on how exactly this works.
Please read over it all, and if it sounds like something you think you
could do, we'd love to have your help.

Thanks,

Marta

Msg# 9574

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by H Mistry November 26, 2008 - 23:39:17 Topic ID# 9570
Hello Marta
I've been woefully neglectful of the MEFAs, but I have PS and could help with this one (especially as it doesn't require talent, just copy/paste and emailing *g*). Let me know.
Cheers
mistry89 (Helen)


--- On Thu, 11/27/08, Marta <marta.fandom@gmail.com> wrote:
From: Marta <marta.fandom@gmail.com>
Subject: [MEFAwards] Seeking banner customizers
To: mefawards@yahoogroups.com
Date: Thursday, November 27, 2008, 6:52 AM











Hey guys,



As many of you probably realize, voting for the 2008 awards ends on

Sunday, at 11:59 PM GMT November 30. (Note that's GMT, not your local

time zone.) That's the deadline for getting all your votes in, and also

for changing any draft reviews over to hidden or final if you want them

counted. On Sunday night the awards organizers and I will start working

getting the results ready to share with the world.



Part of that is telling authors who have won, that they've won, and

offering them use of one of the many banners our dedicated banner

artists have made for this purpose - see all of their work at

http://mefawards. net/fanart/ categories. php?cat_id= 799&page= 17 .



You'll notice that these banners don't display the award won - just

"MEFA" or "Middle-earth Fanfiction Awards" and the year. This is where

you can help. When an author wins they will be told to email a certain

address with what banner they'd like to use, and a volunteer will

customize the banner for them. We already have some volunteers but could

always use more - that means less work for everyone involved. Basically

you would be adding the place and category/subcategor y to banners and

emailing them out to grateful authors. If this sounds like something

you'd like to be involved in, please let me know and I'll send you more

information.



And whether you're interested in helping out in this way or not, watch

this space for awards results (next week) and details on how to make

suggestions for future years (once we've all had a chance to recupe a

bit. :-D)



Marta



























[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 9575

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by Marta November 26, 2008 - 23:55:14 Topic ID# 9570
Hi Mistry,

Would love your help. I'll email you some more info privately, from
mefasupport@gmail.com

Thanks,

Marta

H Mistry wrote:
>
>
> Hello Marta
> I've been woefully neglectful of the MEFAs, but I have PS and could help
> with this one (especially as it doesn't require talent, just copy/paste
> and emailing *g*). Let me know.
> Cheers
> mistry89 (Helen)
>

Msg# 9576

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by nath kuijpers November 27, 2008 - 1:11:22 Topic ID# 9570
Hi Marta,

Yes, I'd be willing to lend a hand.

Nath

.............................................~o^=o>
.....................................~o^=o>
..............................~o^=o>
........................~o^=o>


--- On Wed, 26/11/08, Marta <marta.fandom@gmail.com> wrote:

> From: Marta <marta.fandom@gmail.com>
> Subject: [MEFAwards] Seeking banner customizers
> To: mefawards@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Wednesday, 26 November, 2008, 5:52 PM
> Hey guys,
>
> As many of you probably realize, voting for the 2008 awards
> ends on
> Sunday, at 11:59 PM GMT November 30. (Note that's GMT,
> not your local
> time zone.) That's the deadline for getting all your
> votes in, and also
> for changing any draft reviews over to hidden or final if
> you want them
> counted. On Sunday night the awards organizers and I will
> start working
> getting the results ready to share with the world.
>
> Part of that is telling authors who have won, that
> they've won, and
> offering them use of one of the many banners our dedicated
> banner
> artists have made for this purpose - see all of their work
> at
> http://mefawards.net/fanart/categories.php?cat_id=799&page=17
> .
>
> You'll notice that these banners don't display the
> award won - just
> "MEFA" or "Middle-earth Fanfiction
> Awards" and the year. This is where
> you can help. When an author wins they will be told to
> email a certain
> address with what banner they'd like to use, and a
> volunteer will
> customize the banner for them. We already have some
> volunteers but could
> always use more - that means less work for everyone
> involved. Basically
> you would be adding the place and category/subcategory to
> banners and
> emailing them out to grateful authors. If this sounds like
> something
> you'd like to be involved in, please let me know and
> I'll send you more
> information.
>
> And whether you're interested in helping out in this
> way or not, watch
> this space for awards results (next week) and details on
> how to make
> suggestions for future years (once we've all had a
> chance to recupe a
> bit. :-D)
>
> Marta

Msg# 9577

ADMIN – How awards are made, and some final reminders about review Posted by Tanaqui November 27, 2008 - 10:08:54 Topic ID# 9577
Hey guys,

Here is your weekly admin post  the last for this year's MEFAs! That's
because *** VOTING ENDS AT 11:59 PM GMT ON SUNDAY 30 NOVEMBER*** so make
sure you get your votes done in plenty of time!

This week, I'm going to talk about how your votes decide which pieces
win which awards.

* The first step is that each story is awarded points based on the
number of characters in your review. You can find a table showing the
number of characters needed for each points score at the "How are votes
scored?" FAQ at
http://www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/index.php?page=FAQvoting#vot_11. Only
certain characters count towards the total - you can find a list of
which ones count in the same FAQ.

You'll see the actual number of characters that count (according to the
site), and the points that will be awarded, near the top of the page
when you preview your review.

* The second step involves adding together all the points awarded to
each story. The story in each subcategory that earns the most points
gets first place, second highest gets second place, and third highest
gets third place.

* If two pieces have the same number of points, the story which has the
greater number of reviews  meaning more people voted for it  is placed
above the story with fewer reviews. If each story received the same
number of reviews, we add together the number of counted characters in
all the reviews for each story, and the story which has received the
most number of characters overall is placed higher. If there's still no
way to break the tie, they will receive the same award. You can find out
more about how ties are broken in the FAQ at
http://www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/index.php?page=FAQvoting#vot_12.

* As well as first, second or third places in a subcategory, stories may
also be awarded an "Honorable Mention". This recognizes that some
categories are larger or more competitive than others. Any story that
receives more than the number of points received on average by ALL
stories competing in this year's awards is given an Honorable Mention.
In addition, any story that ties on points with the third-placed story
in the same subcategory (but which is placed lower as a result of using
number of reviews or characters to break the tie) will be awarded an
Honorable Mention. There's more about how Honorable Mentions are awarded
in the FAQ at
http://www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/index.php?page=FAQvoting#vot_11.

***IMPORTANT***

Remember that stories only receive points for FINAL or HIDDEN reviews.
Draft reviews will not be counted. Make sure you CONVERT ALL DRAFT
REVIEWS to FINAL or HIDDEN by the end of Voting if you want them to count.

And a final reminder...
*** VOTING ENDS AT 11:59 PM GMT ON SUNDAY 30 NOVEMBER***
(The MEFA server runs on GMT, and you can find out what time it is on
"server time" by looking at the time stamp at the bottom of each page on
the MEFA site.)

Happy (Last-Minute) Reviewing!

Tanaqui
(MEFA Tech Support)
PS: Apologies for all the "shouting" but I wanted to make sure the
really important information was clear!

Msg# 9578

MEFA Reviews for Thursday, November 27, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 27, 2008 - 20:42:14 Topic ID# 9578
Title: Sun · Author: Claudia · Races: Cross-Cultural: Frodo and
Faramir · ID: 223
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-27 01:30:38
This was lovely! I absolutely loved the description (though incredibly
sad) of the people weeping and digging... and Frodo's kindness in
regards to Denethor... and Faramir's tears.

Title: Many Branches · Author: Baranduin · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Frodo and Faramir · ID: 420
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-27 01:35:30
There is nothing in this tale NOT to love. The descriptions are
beautiful, the phraseology is crisp, and the friendship is sincere.

I just loved it. The intricacies of Shire life and Hobbit geneology is
too much for my simple brain - and drinking ale at the same time. I'm
surprised neither fell of that wall.

A peace-filled, lovely moment of renewed friendship and love.

Title: Dirty Jobs · Author: Pearl Took · Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 232
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-27 04:07:56
There is a tendency in many fics to follow a fanon that portrays
Pippin as feckless and lazy. Pearl definitely plays against type here,
with a Pippin who is more like the Pippin of the books. This Pippin is
a polite youngster, who is definitely not afraid of hard work. He has
a deeply loving nature, and he takes pride in what he does.

This is a Pippin who will grow up to follow his cousin on a dangerous
Quest and when the going gets tough and he is asked how much he can
carry on his back gamely replies ["As much as we must"].

I'm very proud of this young Pippin, and of the author who chronicled
this particular adventure of his.

Most Excellently Well Done, Pearl.

Title: Took Broth · Author: Pearl Took · Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 543
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-27 04:08:17
This is a quintessentially hobbity story: it's about food (nothing
more hobbity than food) and family and the still slightly insular
attitude even the best of hobbits can display when confronted with a
strange custom! I love Sam's efforts to avoid offending the Tooks, the
camradery of the wives, and Merry's amusement at Sam's discomfiture.

A very enjoyable little story!

Title: Untold Tales of the Mark: The Banishment of Éomer · Author:
Katzilla · Genres: Alternate Universe · ID: 206
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-27 05:29:19
I think one of the tell tale signs of a great tale is when it keeps
you up late into the night, night after night, to finish it. This tale
is that kind of a story. Though AU – it is so plausible that one has
to stop and remember exactly what the `real' story was.

The level of tension in every chapter is incredible. The characters
voices are defined and crisp. I never had a problem `knowing' who was
speaking. There is the sense that someone must come and `save the day'
but the horrors that Éomer and Rohan face seem insurmountable.

The scenery is used well. I had to laugh for I have been on Mount
Sunday in New Zealand and found out later that the author had been
there too. Easy to picture PJ's idea of Edoras – but it seemed very
close to what Tolkien `saw' too. The author uses this as another great
tool in her repertoire.

I think the thing that proved the most compelling to me – was the
conflict between Éomer (as told in the book when he is arrested) and
his uncle, his own men, and his people. Looked upon as a traitor, the
young man perseveres as his heart is torn asunder. Stunningly tragic
time for Rohan.

Even though AU – this is an incredible tale of courage and hope. And
again - most plausible.

IMHO – Ch 65 – was the best chapter – if you don't have time to read
the rest – at least read this!


Title: Lost Love · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 271
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-27 06:07:41
I loved these drabbles giving an insight into the lives of Faramir's
long ago ancestors. The Plantagenets had a similar mysterious
ancestress,only in their case a demon.I can understand the lure of the
sea proving too much for an Elf even with a loving and kindly
husband.I wish more was written about this fascinating tale which you
tell very poetically and well leaving the reader wanting more.

Title: Arvedui v. Pelendur · Author: Roh Wyn · Genres: Non-Fiction ·
ID: 277
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-27 06:10:26
Spoilers!
A very interesting essay,thank you which I enjoyed reading very much
!As a big Aragorn fan, I always believed his claim both legal and
moral.Your point that Aragorn's claim succeeded as he was now the last
surviving heir of both Anarion and Isildur made excellent sense.

Title: The Price of Pity · Author: celticbard · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 373
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-27 07:37:47
Spoilers!
A fascinating AU, a mixture of movie-and book-verse, in which Faramir
had brought another bride to Minas Tirith some years before the final
battles of the War of the Ring--an Elf from Lothlorien. She does not
love him, and he does not love her--or do they love one another in
spite of themselves.

But she was lost shortly after the gates of the White City were
destroyed by the great ram Grond, and Faramir found one he truly loved
among those who strengthened after suffering grievous wounds, there in
the Houses of Healing.

Now Eowyn faces the memory of Aniror, the female Elven warrior her
husband had reluctantly taken to wife, as well as the rejection of her
new stepson. How is the ghost of the Lady Aniror to be layed, and
shall she gain the trust of the child?

Well crafted, and excellent and effective pacing of the story as Eowyn
learns the history of her husband's first, tragic marriage.

Title: One Equal Temper of Heroic Hearts · Author: Gwynnyd · Genres:
Romance: Gondor · ID: 334
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-27 09:06:15
Spoilers!
A sensual, mischievous vignette where Aragorn, on his eighty-fifth
wedding anniversary, desires Arwen more than ever. Well written, with
just the right amount of sexuality.



Title: The Road Trip · Author: Garnet Took · Times: Modern Times · ID: 410
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-27 14:04:35
This story is simply too, too funny, LOL! Especially Pippin - oh my,
talk about a side-busting good story - thanks Garnet!!

Title: Shelter From the Storm · Author: SlightlyTookish · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Friendship · ID: 315
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-27 14:09:08
I adore stories that feature Boromir and the hobbits, particularly
Pippin and Merry. SlightlyTookish's tale is a wonderful gapfiller
highlighting some of the man of Gondor's best moments with the hobbits
on Caradhras. His caring for them shines.

Title: A Hobbity Wizard · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Childhood ·
ID: 596
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-27 14:13:49
A lovely, very hobbity romp with Gandalf and Pippin! Golden, in her
usual excellent storytelling brings a fine touch to this little tale.
For someone who writes so much angst, this writer really shines when
it comes to writing humour and fluff, and I wish she would do more of it!

Title: The Right to Bear Arms · Author: Pearl Took · Genres: Humor:
Elven Lands · ID: 653
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-27 14:21:44
Pearl Took has crafted a very lovely story here, and one that is so in
character. Boromir does not yet realise just what kind of people the
hobbits are and soon will find them to be full of surprises and
resourcefullness. Stories that feature Boromir interacting with the
hobbit, particularly Pippin and Merry, are among my favourites in the
fandom. Pearl does a marvelous job with them all in "The Right to Bear
Arms" and the man of Gondor learns that even the smallest person can
indeed make a huge difference. Pippin at his hobbity best here as he
spars with the big man!

Title: An Ordinary Woman · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 32
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-27 14:22:04
Luthien as an ordinary woman or maybe not so ordinary. At least she
doesn't fall for her own legends. This whole tale takes the glamor out
of the legends. When describing the table manners of Thingol compared
to Finrod's, the king comes away as pretty ordinary himself. No wonder
that Luthien is quite ordinary. And the enchanted girdle of Melian...
I had to laugh at that.

Title: Chance Encounter · Author: przed · Races: Men: Steward's Family
· ID: 5
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-27 14:26:11
Spoilers!
On his way home from Dol Amroth, Boromir runs into some trouble. I can
imagine Boromir pulling this stunt as a young man. Luckily for him, he
gets some help. I like the way Boromir as a young man is described
here, inexperienced and rash, but already a great warrior with
glimpses of the Boromir we will get to know later. I loved his pledge
to Estel. Little does he know what the future holds.

Title: Hope comes for Estel · Author: stefaniab · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Aragorn · ID: 622
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-27 14:30:30
This story about Aragorn's first meeting with Faramir after Faramir is
back on his feet shows the dance the two men do to get to know each
other without giving too much away, without showing weakness, but
still trying to gage the character of the other. How much is Faramir
like his brother and father? Is Aragorn really worthy to be King?

I like Aragorn's musings about what he is to do about a kingdom in
peace as he knows only warfare and his observations about the
differences between the Northern Dunedain and their southern counterparts.

Title: A Time to Hope · Author: PipMer · Races: Hobbits: Incomplete ·
ID: 302
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-27 14:31:01
Pipmer has created a lovely glimpse into the aftermath of the events
at the Black Gate. There has been so much death and destruction
already, and now Merry must wait to see the final outcome of the
recovery of each of his cousins and his friend. They have been through
much together, and the sense of hope that they will also overcome
their most recent trials is conveyed clearly. I love the care and
concern Merry shows for them, and most especially Pippin, and the way
Pippin returns that caring to his elder cousin. The love between these
characters is highly evident in this story and I find myself holding
my breath along with Merry as he waits to find out how events will
finally finish unfolding. Although I already know the outcome will be
a happy one, I can still feel the angst and the pain and suffering
each of them has endured, and cheer for them as they return to health
and find each other whole.

Title: Leather · Author: Marta · Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 297
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-27 15:22:18
Spoilers!
In Marta's fascinating drabble series, "Leather", we see vignettes
from the lives of Boromir of Gondor and Theodred of Rohan, who are
lovers in this universe. Each drabble is a glimpse of the life of one
or both; two of them are coming-of-age stories, where one is losing
the innocence of childhood unexpectedly, and the other is gaining the
trappings of manhood. The contrasts between the sadness of Boromir and
the fondness of Theodred as they remember their childhoods is great.

I especially like the vivid and sensual details that make reading
these drabbles a treat for the senses. I could feel the giddiness and
abandon of the love each held for the the other in the rare moments
they could spend together. We know how each encounter sounds
(sometimes silent) and feels and looks, and I can easily imagine the
smell of the leather whose presence is a unifying theme through the
entire series.

These drabbles are rich and evocative, a feast for the reader's
senses. Very nicely done!


Title: Old Man Willow · Author: Nath · Races: Other Beings · ID: 314
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-27 16:36:40
Spoilers!
You know that proverb that comes from George Orwell's "Animal Farm":
[Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.]? There must be a
corollary for how power that is derived from absolute evil can affect
an already relatively evil creature.

Nath's highly original short story, "Old Man Willow", is a
spine-tingling Alternate Universe that explores the question of what
might happen if the eponymous character had done away with Frodo and
company and taken the One Ring. I've read several stories over the
years where "X takes the Ring", but I think this one left me more
unsettled and "creeped out" than any other.

Readers may start to get an ominous sort of feeling as soon as we read
[His soil was still rich enough that it didn't need fertilising.] If
that's how a tree thinks, I'm going to stop hugging them. Permanently!
*Barbara stares suspiciously at the redwood tree outside her window.*

The writing is very simple, as is appropriate for the point of view
character - but extremely powerful. And the protagonist's grand scheme
for conquering of Middle-earth, and then onwards from there, is
stunning in its scope, audacity, and utter maliciousness.

A truly original and creative idea... and very well done!


Title: A Treasured Piece of Cloth · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 600
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-27 17:11:44
Another very sweet and imaginative tale from Golden!

Title: Loss · Author: SurgicalSteel · Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 196
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-27 17:52:19
This story is heartbreaking and made me teary-eyed. I knew about this
episode from the main story, but seeing it all written out makes it so
much more real. That midwife needs a dose of her own medicine.

The characters in this universe seem so real that it doesn't matter
that all of them are either OCs or just little mentioned characters in
LOTR. Lucky for Halbarad that he paid attention to the lectures his
wife gave to him and Thorongil. I love the medical detail in this story.

Msg# 9579

MEFA Reviews for Thursday, November 27, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 27, 2008 - 20:43:50 Topic ID# 9579
Title: Too Many Rangers · Author: Larner · Races: Hobbits · ID: 116
Reviewer: Yeade · 2008-11-27 19:32:59
Spoilers!
Trotter, the Ranger Hobbit (whose wooden clogs really aren't conducive
to stealth)! Bingo (seriously?) Bolger-Baggins! (What a mouthful!)
ROTFLMAO! XD

I admit I have something of a soft spot for meta humor, which includes
(in my experience) many comedic fanvids and crossovers, often the
inappropriate ones, as well as writer commentary on elements of canon
and the creative process done in-universe via the characters. The
latter I usually see in response to unpopular decisions made by TPTB,
such as the cancellation of a favorite TV show, and rarely in the LOTR
fandom. So, it's a pleasant surprise for me to find such a rich and
imaginative take on the way Tolkien's conception of his epic story
developed over the years. Especially as the various stages of this are
so well and conveniently laid out in HOME.

Now, there are several things I consider requisite for a *good* piece
of meta humor: 1) Clever wit. 2) Attention to detail. 3) Relevant
conflict of some sort. 4) Believable characterization despite the
wildly improbable, if not impossible, situation. 5) An ever-present
awareness and acknowledgment of the fourth wall whether it's broken or
not. "Too Many Rangers" handily fulfills all these expectations.

Of particular note, IMO, is (2) the complicated Hobbit genealogy I
can't *begin* to follow, having never been interested in that aspect
of LOTR, (4) the hapless Butterbur's typical yet wholly deserved
confusion at the whole mess, how Aragorn unceremoniously herds all the
Hobbits to a private room when their strange party begins to attract
unwanted attention, mirroring his actions in the book proper, and (5)
the hilariously oblique references to Tolkien, who's never mentioned
by name. The otherwise inexplicable discussion of the real calendar
and Latin's nonexistence in Middle-earth is a nice touch in this
regard, too. A good portion of my enjoyment also stems from (3)
Trotter and Strider competing to guide Frodo et al. to Rivendell as
well as the countless additional problems the arrival of Butterbur
with Gandalf's letter (which says what, exactly? XD) in the end leaves
open to personal embellishment, so to speak, lol. 'Tis truly a
marvelous place to stop!

Poor Trotter! You can't blame a Hobbit for being confused and, by my
reading, kind of horrified, maybe a little betrayed, upon discovering
his creator's abandoned him to a strange world filled with strange
folk wherein he has no place and has in fact been *replaced*. I truly
feel for Trotter when he collapses into a chair, face in hands.
Doesn't help that Aragorn's smugness at having made the final cut is
rather unbecoming a king in exile either, lol. I almost, *almost* feel
bad for laughing at Trotter's dismay, but the fact that he's
sympathetic as a character only enhances the impact of this fic. Well
done, Larner!


P.S. Noticed that you use the colloquial "bad penny" in the first
paragraph. Is this an intentional anachronism? 'Cause I don't remember
specific units of money ever being mentioned in LOTR...

Title: Bears With Honey · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 243
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-27 19:35:57
This sundry drabble, told from the perspective of Beorn's wife, always
puts a big smile on my face. Gandalf's Apprentice picks and chooses
her words carefully from her novels to her drabbles, and to good
effect here. In 100 words, we get a glimpse into the day in the life
of a shape-shifter's spouse. Now I want the recipe for those honeycakes.

Title: The Ribbon · Author: Gentle Hobbit · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 336
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-27 19:51:39
This is very sweet. Funnily enough, I've just written a story about an
aputee with phantom pain, who feels a lot of gratitude for a healer in
Minas Tirith.
It's delightful to see Frodo for once without anguish and dispair,
interacting with a child and a kindly hobbit. Both Rosie and Frodo are
well portrayed.

Title: The Craft of the Elven Smith · Author: Larner · Times:
Multi-Age · ID: 1
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-27 20:17:13
Spoilers!
I find myself greatly charmed by this story. The concept is a
fascinating one, to think that such a wide variety of items made it
trough the ages in Middle-earth and finally arrived where they were
most needed. Because there were so many of them, and so many
recipients, the narrative could heve become rather disjointed, but I
felt each section was just the right length and it was easy enough to
follow. I also greatly approve of the female smith and her
considerable creative power! The idea that she would find her own
healing in being allowed to create tools to counteract the havock
wrecked by her husband is very appealing.

Title: Dawn Twilight · Author: viv · Times: Modern Times · ID: 182
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-27 20:26:43
As a linguistics student and fellow linguist geek, it was the idea
(and, let's be honest, a bit of wish-fulfillment) of an elf as
linguistics professor that drew me in. Little did I expect the course
this story would take, and less had I expected to like it so much,
although personally I would not want to be along for the ride. This
was a fast-paced, engaging, fascinating read, funny and scary in all
the right places, with plausible characters and antagonists that were
strong without becoming one of the dreaded Marty Stues or Mary Sues,
and finally, with a tearjerker end. I applaud you for the inclusion of
Brock, Elvis and the rest of their people, they were a delight to read.

All this coming from someone who is usually wary of modern-day-elf
fanfictions... well, you must have done something right. Very right
indeed.

Title: Too Many Rangers · Author: Larner · Races: Hobbits · ID: 116
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-27 20:28:23
The volumes of [The History of Middle-earth] are jam-packed with all
sorts of wonderful oddities at the disposal of the imaginative fan fic
author. In [Too Many Rangers], Larner takes a concept that dropped my
jaw when I first read it and runs with it, creating a hilarious
commentary on the fluidity of Tolkien's "canon." The personalities are
fantastic here, from the much put-upon Trotter to the exasperated --
and resigned -- Strider. The lobbing about of hobbit genealogy is
great: a Middle-earth version of 'Who's on first?" and one that made
me laugh aloud. And the whole shtick with the wooden shoes just
*kills*! Very well done, Larner!

Title: Creation Myths · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 300
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-27 20:45:05
A drabble that left me breathless and inspired with the comparisons
drawn, the answers hinted at, and the implications left for the reader
to draw. The perfection starts with the possibilities to interpret the
title and continues with the gorgeous juxtaposition of perfection and
imperfection, though which is which - and if anything can be perfect
at all within Arda Marred -, can only be answered with regards to the
greater cycle of Tolkien's subcreation. Profound and beautiful, with
language-use that matches the overall theme.

Title: Reflections in the Smoke · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times:
Late Third Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 294
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-27 20:49:14
Probably for reasons that would not surprise Raksha, or others
familiar with my proclivities, this ficlet appeals to me at multiple
levels. Gandalf's voice is nicely rendered here. He has completed his
task and he is tired. Incarnated, he *feels* that weariness, but due
to his Maiarin nature, he is able to "see the big picture" in ways
that most around him cannot. Part of that greater overview is the
nature of the Maia he names his brother, the one that has been
destroyed at last, thus ending Gandalf's labors in mortal lands.
Raksha gives voice to Sauron's original nature through Gandalf's
perceptions, thus reinforcing Sauron's precipitous fall from his
beginnings

And I loved this: [At the end of so many Ages, Sauron had grown only
in arrogance, leaving Orodruin unguarded, to his ruin.] When
intelligence is blindsided by obsession and consuming ambition, those
little details escape notice. That is a satisfying remark in this
ficlet. I'd like to think Olórin was able to put his feet up and rest
when he returned to Valinor.

Title: Trinity · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Modern Times · ID: 51
Reviewer: Lethe · 2008-11-27 21:50:13
Spoilers!
This piece is the first work of the authors I read, and really only
out of curiosity as the summary seemed so different. I am simply a
layperson, with very little knowledge of the science in Pandemonium's
works, but the atom bomb is surely something which fascinates all the
generations who were around when it was first tested, and after.

I could not believe how believably the author wove Tolkien into the
world of Oppenheimer, the canon characters interaction with him - and
he with them. I was spellbound, for here was one incredibly brilliant
man who saw something come to pass which changed the world. Looking at
images of a nuclear blast, whether real or special effects, reminds me
of the first time I saw Jupiter and it's moons through a good
telescope, the sense of something I was too small and insignificant to
comprehend was overwhelming.

Tolkien's canon characters in this story both created something of
vast power, and were both geniuses, so one sees the parallels
immediately. Not only is the story wonderfully written, with the
personalities of Tolkien's characters ( and Oppenheimer's )
wonderfully drawn, but it also leaves one with real food for thought.

It's a rare writer who can blend the modern world and the mythology of
Tolkien and suspend disbelief, but Pandemonium does it effortlessly,
just as she does in incorporating * science * into her longer works.
Although I do not understand the principles, she writes in such a way
that it is easy for me to follow, they not stories that can only be
fully appreciated by people with a similar background and knowledge to
her own. I would like to hope that this is something within her AU,
not a one-shot, since with her familiarity with science, mythology and
history, she could easily write from the ancient world of Tolkien and
weave it into real world history up to the present day, and it would
all flow perfectly.

Title: A Fitting Occupation · Author: Radbooks · Races: Men: Pre-Ring
War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 601
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-28 00:59:15
I don't usually read stories about the Hobbit but these drabbles were
very enjoyable and well written.

Title: Seeing Stars · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 360
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 01:56:27
Spoilers!
In this charming tale Faramir celebrates the birth of his heir with a
bit too much alcohol. I love Faramir's conversation with the King in
his slightly drunk state. This once he is forgiven, since he doesn't
get an heir all the time ;-). Faramir makes an amicable drunk and I
love the way Aragorn handles him.

Title: Messengers from the West · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 98
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 01:56:58
Spoilers!
I think that was the best birthday present Thorongil could have
gotten. I could feel his joy once he realized who came to visit. Smart
elves to make the meeting inconspicuous.

Title: The Conscience of the King · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor · ID: 649
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 01:57:41
I love this little conversation. But I can understand Eomer. So much
has changed for him that he wants to keep as much as possible the
same. But luckily he comes to his senses and can join in the fun. I
love the last line. To me it shows clearly that he is over his bout of
overprotective older brother.

Title: They Also Serve · Author: Marta · Times: Late Third Age · ID: 365
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 02:06:55
This is a lovely little vignette about the interminable waiting for
news. Arwen seeks comfort in the familiar surroundings of the kitchens.

Arwen gets a personality in this short piece. Her actions and
woolgathering make her more accessible to me. I like the cook who
seems to be the only one really understanding Arwen.

Title: Sun · Author: Claudia · Races: Cross-Cultural: Frodo and
Faramir · ID: 223
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 02:10:49
Spoilers!
Frodo imparts some profound wisdom on Faramir who is usually the wise
one, and I think he has the right of it. I liked the description of
the aftermath after the war and its impact on the people.

Title: Dangerous Folk · Author: Budgielover · Genres: Adventure · ID: 546
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 02:12:31
Adventure, angst and suspense galore welcomes the reader of this
story. The heroes fall from one dangerous situation into the next and
sometimes it doesn't look too good for them. All the characters are
spot on. I especially liked Gimli and Sam in this piece.

Title: Five Hair Care Tips for Rohirrim · Author: EdorasLass · Genres:
Humor · ID: 71
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 02:14:22
LOL! These hair care tips are hilarious. I like the way they are
worded specifically for the Rohirrim who care more for the hair and
hide of their horses. I love the crossed out side remarks (and agree
with them). The Bonus tip would be my first pick of what to do with
hair, but I can see the point for a Rohirrim in the field.

Title: A Friend's Hug · Author: Golden · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Friendship · ID: 142
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 02:15:27
This charming little gap-filler fills out a bit about what Pippin is
up to during their stay at Rivendell and the, for the hobbits,
interminable wait and worry for Frodo's recovery.

The description of the room for Merry and Pippin comes off the page.
It is so vivid.

I love Arwen's solution to help Pippin release some of his tension.

Title: The Dooming of Small Hands · Author: Thundera Tiger · Times:
Late Third Age · ID: 639
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 02:16:11
Spoilers!
That is a weighty discussion between Elrond and Gandalf. And that is a
heavy burden Gandalf has to bear. It hurts just to think about it. I
loved the contrast between the dark thoughts between Gandalf and
Elrond, where you can feel their desperation, and the peaceful sunny
room where Frodo sleeps one of his last, peaceful, and comfortable
nights for a long time to come.

Msg# 9580

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by H Mistry November 28, 2008 - 3:23:35 Topic ID# 9570
Hello Marta
I've tried one (editing, moving, editing the banner, replying) - but it will be in the fanart Sent folder (just did it was a reply). Hope it was okay.
Cheers
Mistry

--- On Thu, 11/27/08, Marta <marta.fandom@gmail.com> wrote:
From: Marta <marta.fandom@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [MEFAwards] Seeking banner customizers
To: MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com
Date: Thursday, November 27, 2008, 6:54 PM































[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 9581

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 28, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 28, 2008 - 18:09:16 Topic ID# 9581
Title: Fidelis · Author: Pentangle · Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort · ID: 612
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-28 04:54:38
I seem at a loss for words to describe my heartfelt joy at finding
this tale and my heartfelt sorrow at the reading. Yet, I will try to
communicate something of this to you, in hopes it will propel you
towards reading it. And I am kicking myself for not reviewing this
earlier (I had read it about two months ago but dallied in the review)
when it will hardly give you the time to review it yourself…. Stupid
woman that I am!

It is not that long in the telling, just about ten chapters, but every
one is a gem and well worth your time reading.

The first thing that caught my eye about this tale was the decidedly
unique location. I won't give it away, but I've never heard a story
located in such a place – though that does not mean it is not a
plausible place – just very different.

The second thing was the writing – the descriptions of places, people,
and things were very good. I'm not a description-reading person. Not
much at least. And yet I found it easy to read the author's
descriptions. I didn't quickly move on to the dialogue, passing over
the descriptions – which is a complement to the writer. The dialogue
is crisp and the characters are easily identified as they speak.

This story revolves around two Elves who are wound into the ribbon
that is Aragorn's life. Not only Aragorn's but Legolas' too. The Elves
are a conundrum for the Healer of the North; whilst one is a challenge
for the Wood Elf.

The category is hurt/comfort. I've not read many stories that so
embody the `ideals' of this category. My heart broke from about
chapter three onward, not because one or two were poorly written, but
as one is drawn to these two wounded Elves, the heart becomes entwined
with their fate. Thus the inevitable outcome of ownership and love for
the characters.

Aragorn is superb in this tale. Exactly as I would think him. I don't
oft read much Aragorn, but I `know' him, if any can, and he is truly
`royal' in his demeanor, his heart, and his caring. Legolas is beyond
tender, not with over affectation, but with pure-heartedness.

I really don't think you should read this if you do not want to pull
out a tissue now and again. Yet, it is not `sickly sweet' in it's
telling; but the telling of any story as tragic as this tends to draw
forth tears. I really, really recommend this. Not often have I been
moved, of late, so thoroughly!


Title: Young Fëanáro Makes A Stone · Author: Oshun · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 77
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-28 05:10:42
Spoilers!
A delightful account of how the Elessar came to be created which
appeals to me as an Aragorn fan,though I know little of the
Simarillion. I loved the idea of the jewel being inspired by moonlight
on a leaf.The characterisation of Aule brought him vividly to life as
never before.

Title: The Blessing · Author: Mews1945 · Genres: Drama: Featuring
Frodo or Sam · ID: 228
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-28 05:15:04
Spoilers!
A touching moment at Cormallen when Frodo,Sam and Aragorn visit the
wounded.It was interesting to see these events through the eyes of an
ordinary soldier.

Title: The Skills That Keep You Alive · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 434
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-28 05:26:51
Spoilers!
I greatly enjoyed this when I first read it and enjoyed reading it
again. I'm not quite sure that Aragorn as Thorongil really work as a
half naked juggler but it was great fun to imagine,a clever use of the
prompt and a good lesson that sometimes skills you never dreamed would
be useful;are! I loved Glorfindel as a wise and patient teacher while
young Estel was very believable.

Title: Five things that never happened to Nerdanel · Author: Meril ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 389
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-28 05:30:40
I found this list of things that never happened to Nerdanel made me
realise just what a wise and strong woman she was!

Title: Night Terrors · Author: Gwynnyd · Genres: Drama: Gondor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 433
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-28 05:39:46
Spoilers!
I found this story very moving and true to life. As Faramir and Eowyn
have both suffered so many losses in their lives it is very natural
that they should be nervous about their baby.I see Faramir as a
wonderful loving father and hope his fears will prove groundless.A
touching,well written story.

Title: Wild Swan · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: Gondor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 328
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-28 07:46:21
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's fortuitous drabble series, "Wild Swan", is a collection of
vignettes about Imrahil, Prince of Dol Amroth, and many of the people
he touched throughout his life. I call it "fortuitous", because
Tanaqui wrote each of these drabbles as part of the Tolkien
Drabble-a-day self-challenge; they were not originally planned to be a
standalone series, but they fit together very well and beautifully
illustrate so many key moments of Imrahil's life.

The interactions between Imrahil and the other characters are very
clear and evocative: his unease when Denethor becomes overly familiar
in a manipulative way, his anxiety and then relief when Thorongil
survives the swim to the docks of Umbar, his solicitous nurturing of
very young Faramir and Boromir (and, by extension, his own children),
his skill as a warrior and as a military strategist, his love of his
wife and admiration of her capabilities, his staunch loyalty to and
respect for the adult Faramir, and his easy rapport with Elessar and
presumably Eomer.

What I especially enjoy and appreciate is how Tanaqui wields language
like a scalpel, to incisively lay bare the heart of the physical and
emotional scene that the drabble depicts. For example, [feeling the
weight of Denethor's arm around his neck] works on both the concrete
and metaphorical level. And [Faramir dived, and Imrahil followed him
down, close but not crowding him.] directly describes the ability of a
adult to nurture a child, but also hints at a possible approach of a
respected commander at fostering military talent. And [I think Éomer
King is minded to put a stallion of Rohan to a filly of Dol
Amroth....] displays a delightfully wicked sense of humor....

The talent displayed by this series leaves me in awe, and I really
enjoy re-reading it.

Very nicely done!


Title: In absentia · Author: Robinka · Races: Elves: House of Finwe ·
ID: 84
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 09:12:16
Spoilers!
This vignette still has me going: now how about that! It doesn't
matter how often I read it (this time for the awards) and I really
cannot think of so many superlatives that will do this story justice.
Chilling, angsty, vivid, stunning, scary… what more Binks, it just
doesn't seem to cover what you did with this post-Thangorodrim story.
It starts at the beginning, the setting of the scene and the
introduction of the plot. It simply pulls you in and does not let you
go. You just want to know what will happen: will they erupt in a
physical fight, will Fingon manage to get through to Maedhros. What
does this elf has to do to bring out that spark within Maedhros while
his spirit fights just as well to return. It rather wants to remain in
absence than to acknowledge his current state, the deed done and the
situation of his people. And that is just Maedhros, but what about
Fingon? From despair to utter stubbornness, he just will not give in
so easily, his valiant nature will not run away from his cousin's
anger. And oh wait, yes you as a reader just feel as if you're in the
room. What a tension in that room, it's very palpable and the outburst
is just, well timed. I think, personally, that this is one of those
angst-ridden vignettes that strikes you at the heart and before you
know it, you want to stoke up the heat as well. There are so many
details in this vignette that I would love to discuss or which needs
the praise, but then I probably will end up typing an immensely long
review. Others who might read this review: read it and set your mind
wide open for a most enthralling and immensely well-written story. You
won't be disappointed.

Title: In Dreams · Author: Phyncke · Genres: Romance: Elven Lands ·
ID: 609
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 09:28:13
Spoilers!
[In Dreams] is just as the title suggest an utmost dreamlike story
that is immensely beautifully written. To start with I just love the
opening paragraph: [It was a field of golden flowers, long stems
swaying in the wind, a fire-like ripple effect.] Now even when you are
not sure what is to come (a second or a third read of this romance
will make your smile bigger which also makes this story a treasure to
re-read), this is perhaps one of the most gorgeous opening sentences I
have read. The tone of this piece is light with just small touches
upon angst, but the manner in how Phyncke brings this to its
conclusion: it so elegantly with humorous touches. Especially the
dialogue is just witty and makes you chuckle. It is not too much, not
too many: just perfectly balanced. It is just how a happy dream should
be with the small reminders woven into it: ["You already know in your
heart."]. Besides that, what I so love about this piece is how Phyncke
describes how a lingering love becomes reality to not only one pairing
but to two. The gold flowers at the start just seems to bud and open
to you. At the end it is revealed how this has come to be and how
fitting it is that the Valar of dreams after some nudges would grant
those elves who have sacrificed so much the love they deserves. I find
that a great way to bring the story to full circle: answering those
small questions the reader might have.

Title: On Canon and Fanfic · Author: Marta · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 123
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 09:58:29
Spoilers!
This is a thorough essay that as a starting point defines the nature
of canon, the role of the fan fic writer as he or she takes on writing
a piece based on an existing story.

The initial discussion about AU at various places which was the cause
of this essay mainly mirrored the frustration of injustice done to
those who write AU, but felt like they never got the appreciation they
deserve. If you happen to think AU's do not contribute much, please do
read this essay, it might change your mind. Marta's work rationally
dissects all variations of what is canonical and what is not, giving
every variation on it the praise and insights it deserves. The essay
is built up quite logically points out that no matter how you look at
it: almost every ff out there is AU or perhaps not canonical. While
(re-)reading this essay once more, I found myself nodding and agreeing
with her reasoning and points. I do not have more to add to her
sharply written analysis of stories within our fandom, just reminding
us all that we all write stories for our own reason even those who
take up the challenge to write this genre within fanfic. For why it is
such a challenge, I do refer to this piece and I hope it will make the
reader and writers amongst to pause, think and appreciate this genre
with all its gems it has to offer.

Title: Five Things that Never Happened to Serinde of Dol Amroth ·
Author: SurgicalSteel · Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy ·
ID: 222
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 13:34:56
Spoilers!
After reading [The King's Surgeon] a few months ago, these five
vignettes gave me the chills, except for the last that is.
SurgicalSteel took out five events of the many in Serinde's life and
gives us a different view on the what if thoughts. What I find so
amazing in these series is how a different turn out of events changed
her OFC, from a meek and silent daughter and oh my: a gentle natured
surgeon? Serinde has many qualities but that one had me going like: oh
my! Every vignette in that sense has been written in a different voice
with their own (bitter) consequences, but most certainly a must read
for all Serinde fans!

Title: Some Confusion in Accounts · Author: viv · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 276
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 13:43:56
Spoilers!
Oh my goodness, yes I can most definitely imagine such an interview on
TV, with the reporter just wanting to ask that question where one has
never dared to do so before. Yet she prompts it and there you have it:
a reader's anticipation. I just love the tiny details like: [frothy
pink drink] (pink Viv??? *snicker*), [she raised one arctic eyebrow
and hinted at a smile.] or [Mr. The Wise lolled in incandescent
beauty], this just alone makes reading Viv's fusion of modern earth
with Tolkien such a magnificent read. And no, I wouldn't have waited
either!

Title: Heavens' Embroidered Cloths · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 292
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-28 13:43:59
Spoilers!
The Numenoreans were sea-farers; they must have navigated by the
stars. But even those who always dwelled on land feast their eyes on
the splendor of Varda's sparkling jewels, and make up stories to
explain their patterns... and pass these stories down through generations.

Tanaqui's drabble series, "Heaven's Embroidered Cloths", sees a newly
wedded Eowyn reviving a Mettare tradition from Faramir's childhood...
the early, happy part, when he felt loved and safe, before he lost his
mother to illness and his father to the grimness engendered by the
bitter struggle with Sauron.

The tradition is to hang fabric representations of the constellations,
and to tell stories about the origin of each. Faramir becomes lost in
remembering the legends told by Denethor and Finduilas (and young
Boromir, though the credibility of his version is somewhat suspect!).
Each drabble presents a new tale, many adapted from Tolkien's
legendarium, explaining how that constellation came to be. The
descriptions are rich with detail and fascinating bits of canon, as
well as creative bits of imagination.

The stargazing aspect is an absolute delight, but in addition, the
glimpses we get of Faramir's interactions with Eowyn and with his
family of origin are rich with love and nurturing. Tanaqui's language
is so evocative that she paints vivid pictures with few words. And the
star stories are effectively framed by drabbles with Faramir and Eowyn
together, enjoying their happy state as a couple.

I especially appreciate the hopeful outlook of this series; Eowyn
revives the tradition to please Faramir, and it serves to remind him
of early, happy days with his family... and gives us hope that the
happiness and the traditions will continue on for the rest of their
lives, and for the succeeding generations.

Outstanding!


Title: The Least of Rings · Author: Marta · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Drabbles · ID: 621
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 13:45:14
Spoilers!
This is terrific. Not only does the author take on a complicated
subject in drabble form, one other authors have only been able to
touch in near novels, but she finds a remarkably pinpointedly clear
angle from which to say something very fresh. The idea that Boromir
should 'sacrifice' his wedding ring to gain the one ring, is a perfect
metaphor for all desire of the ring makes one devalue. Well done.

Title: With Hope and Without Hope · Author: docmon · Genres:
Adventure: Incomplete · ID: 466
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 13:52:49
Spoilers!
As others have commented here, I also wondered at first if this would
turn out to be simply another story in this venue with a typical
ending. Docmon has proved to her readers that is not the case! I like
AU stories in general because it's fun to follow the writers'
imaginations to find out what kinds of events might have taken place
if things had gone even a tiny bit differently. "With Hope and Without
Hope" executes a wonderful exploration of the theme 'What if?' What if
Merry and Pippin had not been the only ones captured by the orcs, and
what if other members of the Fellowship were also captured? Docmon's
story examines each character's feelings in detail and shines the
spotlight for a time on each one as they struggle to escape and help
their fellow travellers. I particularly love the way she's portrayed
Pippin and Merry in this. They have a definite part in making things
happen and in changing the way things are going to work out. One
person is not taking care of everyone, they all have an important part
to play. This is an angsty H/C tale that still portrays a ray of hope
for our weary travellers. Well done!

Title: Sharing Good News · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Humor: Drabbles
· ID: 216
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 13:52:56
Spoilers!
This is such a wonderful drabble that in such effective way describes
the unique and warm friendship between Aragorn and Bilbo. I just love
the thought of this ranger racing to the Shire to share that bit of
immensely well news; especially after waiting so long to find out to
begin with (I mean forty years!). One can only imagine the huge smile
on Bilbo's face that will follow suit and the almost expected fussing
over matters and the man that will come after that, perhaps making tea
and discussing more. What a great snapshot Imhiriel, simply wonderful!

Title: Bibliophile · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Romance: Drabbles ·
ID: 370
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 14:02:42
Spoilers!
I really love this drabble because it gives you so much to think
about! Why would Éowyn for example still read a lament, but answer so
down beaten when Faramir asks her about it. Would it have remembered
her of her own unrequited love towards Aragorn: a parallel is most
certainly there. This leaves me glad to think that in the end Éowyn
found her Gwindor in Faramir, someone who loves her so much. Still at
the end of the drabble, we're not sure how far Éowyn was while reading
the lament, leaving me as a reader to ponder if Faramir will tell her
how it ends or if she returns to finish it after all. This is a great
drabble Imhiriel, it is wonderfully constructed (also that you tied
the LotR characters to Silmarillion characters/events) and it leaves
it to the reader what might happen next.

Title: Homecoming · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 706
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 14:19:42
I appreciate this kind of AU - where only one critical aspect of the
story is changed, and so we see something familiar in a new way.

Title: The Skills That Keep You Alive · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Mid
Third Age · ID: 434
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 14:22:22
Isn't it interesting where a prompt can take you? This is like the
best shaggy dog story, in that I didn't see the punch line, as it
were, coming.

Title: Faithful · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Second and Early Third
Age · ID: 105
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 14:24:56
I liked ths vision of Dol Amroth. The Author really gives the reader a
rich sense of place, both physically and politically.

Title: The Blessing · Author: Golden/Pearl Took CoAuthors · Genres:
Longer Works · ID: 511
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 14:31:49
Spoilers!
I hardly know exactly where to begin with this story's review! Quite
honestly, I find myself in awe of the tremendous amount of effort and
thought that went into writing "The Blessing", and I feel that two of
my favourite writers have truly outdone themselves. Again, I've said I
very often like AU stories in that it's great fun to explore what
might have happened and how each writer envisions her universe in very
individual ways. "The Blessing" has made me cry, laugh, cheer, smile,
wince, hope, and wait impatiently for more, among other things, but
never has it made me disappointed. Pearl Took and Golden put a great
deal of time into research for this story in order to make it as
realistic as possible. I'm sure it was also a challenge to take a
disorder we know so much about these days and write about the ME times
equivalent. They somehow managed to get inside each character's head
and express their multitude of mixed emotions the problem presented
for them.

The "What if" question in this case is, "What if Pippin did suffer
permanent physical damage from being crushed by the troll?". I have a
hard time imagining that he didn't, but of course, Tolkien did not
write it that way. The very idea of our beloved Pippin having a
seizure disorder and going through so much with adjusting to it was
hard enough for many readers. And the authors go on to take the
youngest hobbit through a great many trials before the end. I liked
seeing Merry portrayed as having a very difficult time dealing with
it, and I felt that was very realistic. I also like the way Frodo and
Sam took care of Pippin and Merry both throughout the ordeal.

The tale is thoroughly angsty and dramatic, taking the reader to new
heights of angst as we worry about what will eventually happen
because, after all, this *is* an AU. I also appreciate the way the
writers resisted the temptation to magically "heal" Pippin before it
was over. As much as many of us yearned for that, it simply wasn't
realistic to the tone of the story. The best parts of "The Blessing"
are obvious when we see the way Pippin's undauntable spirit carries
him through and helps him, if not be cured, at least conquer his
feelings and grow to the point where he learns he can accept the blow
fate has dealt him as long as he has the precious support and
understanding of his family and friends.

Well envisioned and excellently written, "The Blessing" is a must-read
for AU and angst-lovers alike! Bravo ladies!!!

Title: Dirty Jobs · Author: Pearl Took · Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 232
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 14:59:10
Spoilers!
For some reason, this little story has become one of my favourites! I
love the way Pearl has portrayed Pippin in this tale as a resourceful,
hardworking youngster who is not afraid to tackle just about anything
to reach his goal. In this case, the goal is to make enough money on
his own to purchase a "just because I love you" gift for his mother.
He doesn't want to ask his father for money, he insists on earning it
himself, and this shows him as having the very admirable trait of
being self-motivated and ambitious. That's one thing about the way
Pippin was portrayed in the movies that I have never liked, and
honestly, he's so often shown as being hyper and/or overly energetic
that I can't understand why anyone would show him as lazy? That just
doesn't fit in my view of this wonderful character and I love the way
pearl has taken his trait of resourcefullness and carried it to new
heights as the lad cheerfully takes on every job he can find, no
matter how foul!

Of course, his behaviour then leads to the suspicion that the Took's
are going broke! Naturally, this is not the case and after a time the
gossip reaches Paladin Took's ears and he confronts his son about what
he's been up to. The story finishes with some touching father and son
interaction. I highly recommend "Dirty Jobs" to every Pippin lover who
likes seeing him portrayed as the clever, ambitious and thoughtful lad
he is and not some layabout character who "never did a hard day's work
in your life" as movie Merry said to him.


Well done, Pearl, and I'd love to see another story along these lines!!



Title: Not Quite Any Other Day · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 631
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 15:06:43
This is a lovely, touching exploration of the beginnings of
Esmeralda's and Saradoc's courtship as Paladin prepares to marry
Eglantine. Poor Esmie. I remember, as someone here has already
mentioned, my own wedding day and my brother's reaction and feelings
about it. It's hard when relationships change, but we just have to
look forward to what is to come! Very sweet story, and I do enjoy
tales that look at the early relationships of some of my favourite
characters!

Title: A Taste of Home · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 138
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 15:15:28
Spoilers!
I'm not usually all that fond of stories that take place in Merry and
Pippin's later years because they make me sad. For the moment, I am
still very content in reading and writing the younger years of all the
hobbits. Maybe it's because I see so much angst in my RL job that I
gravitate towards the younger, happier times. Anyway, this is a
charming tale depsite the underlying current of the pain and dread of
old age and the loss of loved ones. I cannot *abide* fruitcake, hee! I
admit even reading about how it's made makes me feel ill <wink> but
this is a lovely and touching story about a very special friendship
and the lengths Merry and Pippin will go to for one another. I enjoyed
it very much!

Title: Yule Tails · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Cross-Cultural · ID: 303
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 15:22:27
Spoilers!
This bright and cleverly written story was created for the G-Fic
group's very first Yule Fic Exchange last year, and what a lovely
example of contrast and comparison between the characters of Pippin
Took and Faramir of Gondor, who is the namesake of Pippin's son.
Certainly these two must have shared a special bond to have caused
Pippin to name his son after him. Pearl's story is excellent and takes
the reader from each character's childhood Yules to later ones, and
centers around a much-desired gift of a pony or a horse. From toy ones
all the way to real ones, each phase of their lives is accompanied by
something special happening on Yule, and brings us to a very
delightful conclusion!

MEWD, Pearl!

Msg# 9582

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 28, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 28, 2008 - 18:12:30 Topic ID# 9582
Title: Between Childhood and Coming of Age · Author: Dreamflower ·
Races: Hobbits: Friendship · ID: 141
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-28 15:24:52
Oh yes cathleen I certainly loved getting this story as a Yule Gift
last year. :) It is a great story and I loved to read it! It is very
well written and I simply love the interaction between the
cousins..and Pips reaction when he heard what to poor Merry once
happend when he judged the lass wrong and kissed her. *giggles* Also
the end of the story..hihi..well I hope Sancho learned something and
took those wise last words to heart. ;)
Thanks Barb!

Title: Took Broth · Author: Pearl Took · Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 543
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 15:25:26
Heh, heh - it's hard to imagine any hobbit hesitating when it comes to
food! This is a wonderful, hobbity story and an excellent read!

Title: Frogdom · Author: Neilia · Genres: Humor: Elven Lands · ID: 192
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-28 15:34:12
*giggles* That story is one of the funniest I have ever read. Its all
so good to picture and Pippins cheek is just so cute... now he knows
that Gandalf is not only barking, but can also bite. *L*

Title: For Our Friends · Author: Pearl Took · Genres: Drama · ID: 654
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 15:34:30
I love the excitement in this story and the unusual way of gapfilling
by expanding on each of the characters' thoughts from scenes that were
done in which we really didn't get to see inside their minds.

Title: Pippin-Frog For A Day · Author: Neilia · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Incomplete · ID: 115
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-28 15:38:53
And here this most funny story continues. I was delighted when I saw
it. Its a great read and brings tears of joy in ones eyes. Pippin
still has his cheek even as a frog..and poor Merry. Well but Pip gets
his shock too. I hope this story continues soon.

Title: Faeries · Author: Pearl Took · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond ·
ID: 304
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 15:40:23
I love the stories that explore the myth of the Took Sight and the
Faerie legend. This was also a very nice look at the adult Pippin in
his role as father to little Faramir Took. I can definitely see
glimpses of the lad Pippin was and the grown-up hobbit considering how
to talk to his son about the faerie legend. I wonder if Pip was
remembering a time when he discussed the same thing with his own da? A
very special tale with a lovely feel for father and son closeness.

Title: A Day in Time · Author: Pearl Took · Times: Multi-Age · ID: 230
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 15:43:32
This story is somewhat unusual and of course, very well done. I've
never read anything quite like it!

Title: Of Cake and Crumbs and Distant Dreams · Author: Lindelea ·
Races: Hobbits: Hurt/Comfort · ID: 688
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-28 15:53:29
What a sweet moment between the cousins. This story has such a great
warming atmosphere with a hint of sadness in it. I really like how you
portrait Frodo and Pip here and also that Frodo also after the Quest
still is the big cousin that can make Pip feel save and comforted.

Title: Loudwater · Author: Adaneth · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 63
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-28 15:58:23
Spoilers!
Adaneth's drabble, "Loudwater", is such pleasure to read that I do it
again at every opportunity.... She claims that it the first drabble
she wrote -- but if that's truly the case, then I will have to start
believing in reincarnation. LOL!

The most surprising part is the point of view: the river Bruinen,
which has much to say in this drabble, as befits its common tongue
name, Loudwater. What an inventive idea to make it the PoV character!

The vivid opening, [Drifts of rain or drifts of snow], is brilliant; I
get hooked by the rhythm and imagery from that very first phrase. The
PoV character is just water, not even coalescing into a rivulet yet,
or emerging as springs, much less a rushing river... yet it is already
a conscious, sentient, and clearly perceptive entity.

The language is so picturesque and evocative, I could almost feel the
Bruinen's revulsion at being sullied by the touch of the Nazgul horses.

I love how Elrond is referred to, as simply the [Master] or the
[Mariner's son]... the river is busy taking messages not just to the
sea, but to the Lord of Waters, Ulmo himself, and so is cognizant of
the more mythic aspects of Elrond's background.

And [Haven of the Mariner's son] is a perfect example of the many
layers of meaning Adaneth puts into this drabble, vaguely suggestive
of Earendil's ports of call as well as directly describing Imladris.

This is a fine example of how a drabble should be written, and I hope
Adaneth writes more when she can.

Well done!


Title: My Precious · Author: SheBit · Genres: Romance: Drabbles · ID: 14
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-28 16:07:38
Spoilers!
Oh, I am so glad I read the warning before reading this vignette!

This is truly a vivid description of Grima Wormtongue's stalking of
Eowyn. Told from his point of view, it gives an accurate picture of
just how depraved the man could be... and how much he endangered
Eowyn. It gave me the creeps!

Nicely done!

Title: Five things that never happened to Nerdanel · Author: Meril ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 389
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-28 16:10:16
Spoilers!
I have read this story several times already, and still find myself
mulling over what to write as a review - there is so much to say, and
very little I can do to do the whole thing justice.

This result of the 'five things that never happened to ...' meme is a
truly great achievement, sketching possibilities (or rather,
impossibilities) in magnificent detail while still leaving much to the
reader's imagination. Meril depicts Nerdanel's strengths, weaknesses
and actions not through what she did do, but what she did not do and
never would, resulting in unique looking-glass realities that allow
for explorations of the character of Feanor's wife far beyond your
ordinary Silmarillion fanfiction. She does this without descending
into cliches and tropes, but instead writes in magnificent
near-Tolkienian style that leaves the reader speechless and perfectly
compliments the subject matters of her stories. The stories themselves
- Nerdanel's flight from Feanor, her giving him up, her voluntary
death after the birth of her twin sons, her accompanying Feanor and
sharing in his doom (beautiful and powerful and terrifying), and their
staying in Valinor and debating what-ifs (a lovely sort-of meta) - all
have the power to grab your heart and squeeze (at least if you are a
relentless Feanor/Nerdanel shipper like I am) and would make for
interesting full-scale AUs. But here, much of their power comes from
their brevity.

Magnificently done, Meril. Thank you for sharing this gem.

Title: Comfort and Joy · Author: Pearl Took · Times: Mid Third Age:
Eriador · ID: 656
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-28 16:14:18
*giggle* Oh I remember the night that was the reason for this bunny. I
think I started cooking a menu at like 2 in the morning. But it was
yummy.The story you made ou of it is so funny. *L* Frodo and Merry,
well those two have no easy life with Pip around, huh? But the love
they fell for each other is just so warming and cute.

Title: Relief · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Men: General Drabbles · ID: 446
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-28 16:20:29
Spoilers!
*Fans self*

Okay, let's just stipulate that Captain-general of Gondor's heart
isn't the only one that is [thundering]. Mine is going almost as fast
as it did when the damnable burglar alarm went off by accident -- and
quite unexpectedly -- this morning... LOL!

This is just so vivid, Tanaqui... and so sensuous... and so sensual!
And did I mention erotic, though not overtly sexual?

I'd write more, but really I'm rather.......... erm, distracted.....
watching all those.... ripples.....

Is it me, or is it really, really hawt in here?

Very well-written, my talented friend! ;-)

Title: A Harmony In Autumn · Author: Oshun · Genres: Romance: Elven
Lands · ID: 49
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-28 16:32:00
Spoilers!
Turgon is founding Gondolin and is looking for a few good Elves to
help. Fingon feels his brother is making a mistake and decides, at his
father's urging, to go and tell him so. Glorfindel has his own reasons
for answering the call, not the least of which is his beloved friend
Ecthelion. In her own inimitable way, Oshun creates a story of the
love between Glorfindel and Ecthelion set against the backdrop of the
founding of Gondolin, interweaving politics with romance in a rich
tapestry of character and event that is unmatched by other writers of
this genre.

The Glorfindel/Ecthelion pairing is one that is often written by slash
writers but, as usual, Oshun manages to make the pairing all her own.
Her Glorfindel is at once shy and bold, wondering how his declaration
of affection might be met by his intended. But his worries turn out to
be unfounded as Ecthelion has felt the same for him for a long time.
They never knew until parted how deep their feelings went and how much
their desire harmonized each with the other.

The moments of tenderness between the two are sweet and satisfying.
The inclusion of Findekano is a welcome addition as she writes his
character so well. Taken all together, this is as fine an example of
how to write a popular pairing as you're ever likely to find. I
recommend this one wholeheartedly!


Title: Least Expected · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Alternate Universe:
Drabbles · ID: 512
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-28 16:42:19
Spoilers!
Chilling doesn't even begin to describe this perfectly feasible
Alternate Universe drabble by Imhiriel.

The actions are completely consistent with the canon that she quotes
after the drabble; only the timing is different enough that the Grey
Company doesn't meet Theoden's escort, but Grima Wormtongue's instead.
Now, he may have just been in the right place at the right time, on
his flight to Saruman at Isengard... or perhaps, something even more
sinister has happened, and he is now the leader of the Rohirrim.
Either way, the consequences are harsh for Halbarad and, presumably,
the Dunedain that rode with him.

(Eeep. I just remembered that Elladan and Elrohir was in that company,
too. As if the scenario weren't already bad enough!)

But as shocking as the action is in the overall, we ain't seen nothin'
yet, until we get to the last two words.... And then the bottom falls
out of Middle-earth.

I am so grateful to Dwimordene for asking for AUs for her birthday;
the results have been eye-opening! And I think this one ranks as one
of the most horrific scenarios.

Very well done!

Title: Forfeit · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 401
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-28 16:51:38
Spoilers!
Lady Branwyn's drabble, "Forfeit", is a satisfying glimpse of the
honorable soldier that is Beregond. He is offered a way to escape the
judgement for his desertion (while he rescued Faramir) that he knows
may result in his being put to death. Yet, he will not have it said
that he was fled in a cowardly manner. Insted of running, he makes his
uniform ready to pass inspection, and watches over his sleeping son on
what may be the last night of his life.

I was always impressed by Beregond's character in the book, and I
think this drabble vividly illustrates the depth of his honor and courage.

Very well done!

Title: The Lowest Circle · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Elves: Drabbles ·
ID: 449
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-28 17:04:07
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble, "The Lowest Circle" is just plain horrifying. It is
about an Elf being slowly turned into an Orc in the dungeons of
Morgoth or Sauron, and the creepy environment gives me claustrophobia.

But most horrifying is not just the cramped quarters and the darkness,
but as the memory of stars begins to fade, and then as it becomes
hated, the transition from an Elven soul to an Orc's is complete. I
could feel sympathy for the Elf -- but how can one feel sympathy for
an Orc? Even though it is the same creature.

Very compelling and thought-provoking writing... and enormously
disturbing, as well.

Title: The Clear Ringing Of Silver Trumpets · Author: Lithilien
Quicksilver · Genres: Drama: Featuring Boromir or Faramir · ID: 278
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 17:10:03
Spoilers!
The author does a great job here of bringing us Boromir's thoughts
still somewhat muddled by the ring even after his ephiphany. A tough
balancing act will managed.

Title: Of First Impressions and Old Friends · Author: Dreamflower ·
Races: Cross-Cultural: Frodo and Faramir · ID: 146
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 17:19:23
Spoilers!
If nothing else, this is a remarkable exercise in persepective, but
the different tellings of similar events combine to make a charming
and entertaining tale.

Title: Meant to Be · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Other Beings · ID: 137
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 17:34:17
Spoilers!
I was so pleased when Pearl wanted to write the story of Tulip's
beginnings, and how appropriate since she is the person who gave
Pippin's little knitted piglet material form in the real world! And I
adore the POV she chose to use. I think this is the type of story
which really must be told in the first person because it makes it that
much more intimate in tone. When the idea for Tulip was running about
in my thoughts I knew I wanted the kind of special toy for wee Pippin
that would stand out as a solid character in her own right, and one
that would be able to challenge Pippin's own pov as often as agree
with it. And so Tulip was born and introduced in the first chapter of
my faerie story, ready to accompany him on his adventure in the woods.
Tulip became the voice of conscience as much as a treasured companion,
often taking on the persona of Eglantine Took and helping to prevent
Pippin from stepping too far over the line into mischief or danger.
She was simply a "knitted piglet", as described in my tale, and I
hadn't envisioned her very far beyond that except for giving her green
eyes, like her lad, albeit embroidered ones! When Pearl wanted to
write "Meant to Be" she informed me that Tulip had to go through a
longer process in order to come out looking appropriate. Not being a
knitter (although I wish I was) I had never heard of the "felting
process", which she explained to me as a way of giving the creation
more of the appearance of a plump, stuffed piggy, rather than looking
flat, sort of like a knitted doily! Lol!!

In "Meant to Be" Pearl does a marvelous job of describing not only the
felting Eglantine would have needed to do, but carries it a step
further and describes Tulip's feelings as she is being created. An
aspect that Pearl included, and which I found particularly poignant
(and amusing!) was the actual breath from Eglantine, whether on
purpose or by chance, that brought Tulip to life and symbolised her
special connection to Pippin's mum.

So, thank you, Pearl, both for knitting and felting my dear Tulip, and
for writing this lovely story!







Title: The Nightingale · Author: Maeve Riannon · Times: First Age and
Prior · ID: 404
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 17:55:33
Spoilers!
This is such a gem of a story simply because it has so much: first we
perceive Melian and the world through Dior's eyes, the first known
half-elf and how he tries to make sense of the world around him. Then
the perspective shifts to Melian who at first sight seems to be rooted
in the present, but as the end comes near one starts to realise that
her perception of time is different. I could go in more detail, but I
rather leave it up to others to discover it themselves. However I find
the themes which Maeve is exploring here well done: time and the
meaning of it for different races, but also how different races might
come to love another and how they can find the way to the hearts of
another. He knows that his parents managed to achieve to cross that
bridge and we as a reader know that he will eventually marry Nimloth.
I love the light touches upon their budding romance in this story.
However Dior tries to understand what his grandmother tries to tell
him as he tries to make sense of her role in his life and that of the
Doriathrim. Besides that all, there is of course Galadriel, the
discussion of Luthien's journey's, cakes, fierce dragon's and Túrin.
How Maeve wove this all into this magnificently written story, do read
this story to find out! I hope that many will be just as charmed by
her storytelling as I was and still am.

Title: Shelter From the Storm · Author: SlightlyTookish · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Friendship · ID: 315
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 18:09:10
A very pleasant vignette. I always like to see Pippin/Boromir fics,
those two 'princes' had so much in common.

Title: My Legacy · Author: spookystoy · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 407
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 18:10:32
Spoilers!
Meetings after so many ages that have passed are intriguing to write,
especially when it is about an absolutely estranged relationship
between father and son. I think that alone is a challenge, however
Spookystoy picked up the gauntlet and managed to capture such palpable
tension in just hundred words. Sometimes when I reached the end I
really blinked and thought: yeps a true drabble! What she does so well
in this piece is capturing both sides: Celebrimbor anger and resent
towards his father. But this ficlet also carries Curufin's fatherly
pride and in a way possessive feelings as a craftsman. This line
reflects it so well: ["For better or for worse, you remain my
masterpiece." ] This drabble reflects a relationship gone wrong,
somewhere, but a love of a father always will remain. I can however
imagine how Celebrimbor would have flinched at such proud words after
all he, as his father's [masterpiece] has done during the events in
Eregion. Those Fëanorians, you put them up for ages in Mandos and
still their pride, well, Curufin's particulary, remains undiminished.
Well drabbled Spookystoy, especially since it is one of your first pieces!

Title: Flame of Life · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 114
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-28 18:13:42
Spoilers!
This may be one of the most difficult subjects I have ever seen
Imhiriel tackle in drabble form, and at the same time one of the most
inspirational. The Imperishable Flame is hardly a commonly or
thoroughly-explored character in either Tolkien's writings or fanfic.
Yet the author takes what little is from the Master's pen and combines
it with similar mythological/religious themes and characteristics from
the real world. The result is a marvellous and thought-provoking
commentary on life, creation and the search for meaning.

I love how it is brought out that the power of the Flame is not good
or evil in itself, but is dependent upon the will and intention of the
one seeking or creating. (A sense of that bond that exists between
making and destroying...) The Flame is not attainable, but it is
essential. All this and more is brought out beautifully and movingly
by the careful wording and phrasing, the structure and content; well I
can believe via language and tone that this is the true voice of the
Secret Fire.

This is definitely one of those pieces that invite not just rereading,
but intense contemplation about applicability to life in general, of
our own intentionality and goals. Superbly done!

Title: And all was made ready · Author: Dreamflower · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Friendship · ID: 427
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 18:14:08
Spoilers!
Dreamflower's story of Aragorn's Coronation is told through the eyes
of our four famous hobbits and is delightful and stunning in its
descriptive scenes of what is happening around them as they prepare to
enter the Great White City. This story was written for the Gen-Fic
group's very first challenge and what a wonderful addition it was to
all the fine stories contributed. Dreamflower, in her usual adept
style makes her readers feel as though we were actually there for the
coronation in person! Such magnificent scenes she paints - from her
description of all the bells in Gondor ringing, to the mind's eye
associations each character makes as they prepare to crown the new
king at long last! Even the details of the clothing they wear are
woven with care and again made me feel as if I were a part of the
crowd watching with pride as our triumphant Hobbits and Men accompany
Aragorn to his destiny.

Frodo is hesitant to be the centre of attention, yet determined to
once more do what is expected of him. Sam, while thoughtful and
ever-vigilant at Frodod's side, is concerned over what his old Gaffer
would think of him all dressed in his finery! Pippin is filled with
pride for his eldest cousin's accomplishments, and wants to make sure
everyone knows about what it really cost to defeat Sauron and save
Middle-earth. And Merry is ever watchful of his youngest cousin,
amazed by the maturity he sees in the youth and marvelling at what
they have all been through.

"And All Was Made Ready" is simply a must-read for anyone who wants to
feel as though she was actually there on that special day!

MEWD, Dreamflower!

Msg# 9583

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 28, 2008 (Part Three) Posted by annmarwalk November 28, 2008 - 18:14:00 Topic ID# 9583
Title: The Right to Bear Arms · Author: Pearl Took · Genres: Humor:
Elven Lands · ID: 653
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 18:16:46
The thing I liked most about this is how quickly Boromir reverses his
opinion when honestly bested. A true and noble quality I think.

Title: The Myth of the One Ring's Power · Author: Dreamflower ·
Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 532
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 18:18:39
As usual, Dreamflower is able to present a thoroughly thought out and
logical premise for her arguement about the One Ring's power, that I
would be hard-pressed to dispute. She is a master of the essay and I
am a true fan of each one she has written. I find them all highly
informative and exceptionally challenging to ponder. I do hope she
will continue to add to her delightful collection!

Title: The Flute · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring War ·
ID: 150
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 18:23:15
Pippin has a very special flute, indeed. This is a very lovely and
touching story that definitely will pull at your heartstrings!

Title: Feet That Wander · Author: Linaewen · Races: Cross-Cultural ·
ID: 576
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 18:27:22
Spoilers!
I found this piece very well done. I think it would be easy, when
writing Tom Bombadil to overdo it, make him too cute, give him too
much song and rhyme. Similarly, one could make Boromir too vexed, too
grouchy, too xenophobic. But the writer here shows great restraint
without showing it, as it were. The characters are well drawn and not
overdrawn, and their conversation remains light and appropriately
superficial, yet thoroughly satisfying.

Title: Rude Awakening · Author: Lindelea · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 692
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 18:30:55
Spoilers!
Poor Pippin! And Merry too, for his fright at awakening to strange
noises in the night and wondering just what is going on! I have seen
quite a few stories where Pippin is portrayed as a sleepwalker and I
have written it in some of mine, also. I find this an interesting bit
of fanon, but not really a surprising one. Many people who go through
traumatic events have periods of both sleepwalking and sleeptalking.
And in this circumstance it somehow seems to fit Pippin's character,
at least in my eyes. Lindelea's story is a heartwarming glimpse of
post-Quest Pippin and Merry as they heal from all the turmoil and
trials they have been through. I always love stories in which their
caring relationship shines, as it does in this rather comforting tale!
Well done!!

Title: Tonight We Are Alive · Author: Eyborg · Races: Dwarves · ID: 504
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-28 18:33:22
Spoilers!
What I love about this story, and the reason I nominated it, is how
singular and universal its characters are at the same time. Embla and
Kili are clearly dwarves after Tolkien's model, and yet they feel as
any one must feel, on the eve of a long and potentialy permanent
separation. Lovely.

Title: Wizards' Pupils · Author: Altariel · Races: Men: Minas Tirith ·
ID: 108
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:31:22
Spoilers!
In this story Elboron tells his son a story of his youth of a story he
got from his father at the time. It sounds a bit convoluted, but the
first person narrative fits this scheme perfectly.

After a year in Rohan Elboron comes home and gets a new tutor, whose
lessons not always sit well with him. He asks his father for advice
and Faramir tells him the story of his encounter with Curunir on his
visit to Minas Tirith.

I love Faramir's description of Saruman's voice and that they all fell
under his spell until the bird breaks the spell, for him at least. Was
that bird sent by Mithrandir? The difference between the two wizards
is startling. It is chilling to see Denethor distancing himself from
his son. From this account I got the impression that it more or less
just happened in the beginning without Denethor doing it on purpose.

I was glad when I saw the little side note about Faramir taking up his
sword again, which showed me that in your universe Faramir got over
his trauma after some time.

Title: Horse Sense · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres: Humor:
Elven Lands · ID: 22
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:31:54
A delightful little vignette capturing the moment of departure from
Rivendell through the eyes of Bill the pony. I like the pony-ish
thoughts running through his head combined with the comments of his
new companions.

Title: Beggar's Night · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Humor: Shire · ID: 15
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:32:36
Spoilers!
A funny little vignette. I have my doubts about Eowyn and Faramir
losing their way even in a foreign country ;-). I love Gandalf's
disguise or non-disguise.

Title: Healing · Author: Bodkin · Races: Elves · ID: 419
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:33:11
This is a beautiful piece and to me captures the slow, long sundering
of the elves from Middle-earth. The language of the story has a poetic
feel to it. The passing of Arwen was heartbreaking and fit into the
general mood.

Title: The Captain's New Clothes · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 421
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:33:41
Spoilers!
LOL! Poor Faramir. This well-meaning aunt is obviously the bane of his
existence. I love the explanation you give for this awful picture. You
never gainsay a generous aunt, and Faramir cares too much for his men
to deprive them of the more useful goodies.

Title: Tide of Destiny - Part One: Choices · Author: Lady Bluejay ·
Genres: Drama: Incomplete · ID: 159
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:41:32
This is an epic tale. We follow Lothiriel and Eomer from an early age
in two separate strands of the story up to the Ring War. The author
let us see Lothiriel and Eomer grow up and have experiences, which
form their characters. Each of the strands of the story is a riveting
read. The two so very different cultures come to life and form a
colorful picture of their people.

I like the characterizations of Lothiriel and Eomer. These two come
across as strong personalities. Both are not perfect and I can't wait
to see how they deal with each other when they are married.

Title: When the King Came Back · Author: Cathleen · Times: Fourth Age
and Beyond · ID: 514
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:43:53
Spoilers!
This is a great gapfiller for the time when the hobbits, and here
mostly Pippin, come back home. I like the portrayal of his parents,
especially his father. The festering anger about his son just sneaking
off without a word to anyone and how this fit the Pippin of a year
ago, and then this new Pippin all grown up and kind of a stranger. I
like it that his father has some difficulty reconciling the son he
knew with the son coming home from a war. The reconciliation scene was
touching and held just the right amount of emotion.

Title: A Warm Sun Shining · Author: shirebound · Races: Hobbits:
Post-Ring War · ID: 727
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:46:25
Spoilers!
This is a lovely little piece and the kittens give it just the right
touch of cozyness. I love it that stroking the kittens gives Frodo a
lifeline to reality. I can attest to the soothing effect stroking
kittens has when one is upset.

Title: A Dream Come True · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Romance:
Gondor · ID: 162
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:47:07
Spoilers!
This is a different spin on the Eomer meets Lothiriel scenarios. The
camp at Cormallen came to life. I could see the camaraderie between
Eomer and his men and the atmosphere added with the beer and girl. It
made the right contrast to the dancing girl Eomer encountered later.
Eomer is lucky that Lothiriel isn't holding a grudge.

Title: Dark Dreams · Author: Avon · Races: Men: Steward's Family · ID: 282
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:47:38
Spoilers!
This is such a tender moment between uncle and nephews. Imrahil
obviously knows how to handle kids. I love his poetic suggestion of an
outing to the sea to watch [seahorses].

Title: Rivendell International Airport · Author: Primsong · Genres:
Humor: Elven Lands · ID: 345
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-28 19:48:24
This is hilarious. I laughed until I had tears in my eyes. The
security check was great. The story captured the feelings evoked by
unreasonable security guards at airports perfectly. Gimli got lucky
that they didn't lose patience with him earlier.

Gandalf knows how to bedazzle people. He and Sam at the luggage
check-in were great.

I love the banter between the Fellowship and the dialogue between the
guards and whoever has to go through security next.

Title: Deliverance · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 285
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-28 20:23:44
What I loved most when I first read this drabble months ago is still
what strikes me hardest. Yes, the technical aspects are flawless, and
it is one of this author's specialties: a glimpse into a lost corner
of Tolkien's creation that sees little fanfic traffic. The
descriptions are marvellous in their brevity: although we don't know
the facts behind the journey (and "landing"), we get just enough
detail to feel sympathetic and to understand the specific situation.

The multi-layered thematic meat of the drabble actually starts with
the title, however. There is an obvious deliverance taking place, of
course: the mariner will see home again, after all hope of doing so
has left him. But on a deeper level, there is a deliverance *from
himself*. Imhiriel takes this one rash and unforgiving test and
provides an open door to look at the results of doing the same in this
world. All the energy, money and time spent on a terribly risky
journey - for what? A sighting of the unattainable, or perhaps
bragging rights?

The gentle redirection of the mariner's attention is also a gentle
reference to the Valar, who I like to think are - in their
ever-indirect way - offering guidance to the lost, of both body and soul.

Title: If I Had One Wish · Author: Ellie · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 658
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 20:29:13
Spoilers!
What would be your wish? Such a question could and most likely would
have been asked to Indis after their loved ones departed for the dark
Middle-earth. Indis dreams of unison, her own sons united with their
half-brother, grandchildren aplenty... this all pictured in a warmly
written scene that I so wish to be true if it was not for deaths, lies
and betrayals. Ellie does such a great job at writing Indis and paints
a warm portrait of Finwë's second wife in this achingly sad story. I
had a good chuckle at one of the Ambarussa producing a set if daughter
twins, playing with their great grandfather. Yet this is not meant to
be, and the end is well timed, leaving her daughters in law with the
knowlegde that it was so close in reach. Masterfully written Ellie,
now if we could only turn back time for them.

Title: Feeling Safe · Author: shirebound · Races: Hobbits · ID: 633
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 20:35:28
Spoilers!
A sweet little tale in Shirebound's soft and gentle style of
storytelling. Frodo's cousins explain to Strider just why they are
sleeping so close to one another. It isn't just for warmth, and Merry,
Pippin, and Sam demonstrate just how watchful they are over the
Ringbearer as they keep him safe from a dangerous, new habit.

Title: The Five Rules of Cooking · Author: GamgeeFest · Races:
Hobbits: Childhood · ID: 523
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 20:42:28
What fun as a young Merry and Pippin enter a cooking contest at the
Faire! Gamgeefest has a delightful way with writing hobbits!!

Title: Celevon a Mallen · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 279
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-28 20:44:07
Tanaqui is a superb drabblist, and has shown her skill before in being
able to carry a theme and specific characterizations through multiple
drabbles - even though they are written at different times over the
course of a year. Her several series entered into the MEFAs all read
as if she wrote them with the end purpose of being collected together.
Even among such exalted company, however, ["Celevon a Mallen"] is an
especially beautiful set concerning the intertwined lives of one of
Middle-earth's ultimate "power couples".

Celeborn is one my favorite Elves, and ironically became so not
through Tolkien's own enigmatic treatment of the character but through
marvellous works by talented fanfic writers. Tanaqui takes all that
I've grown to associate with Galadriel's husband and expands on
several key moments in their long lives together. Each one is an
incredible mini-story on its own, rich with atmosphere, evocative and
emotional writing and gorgeous turns of phrase; bound together, the
impact is indelibly heightened.

And I would really be remiss if I didn't mention the excellent titles
that the author uses: every one of them a perfect encapsulation of its
drabble, while also illuminating and enhancing the content and
harmonizing with the whole series. A wonderful, wonderful addition to
any Celeborn/Galadriel fanfic library!

Title: No Regrets · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 490
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 20:49:46
Spoilers!
Ah what a gorgeous little piece and so true to Faramir's nature. Yet I
can't blame Aragorn for prompting such a question, after all so many
of Faramir's house had such high ambitions. The question has a
political nature and the diplomatic Faramir answers as well him. The
Steward however is obviously happy with his wife and his beloved
country - the hills of Ithilien at that - restored and made beautiful
again. This piece is wonderfully written where dialogue and narrative
go smoothly hand in hand in a wonderful portrait. Skilfully drabbled
Linda!

Title: The Least of Rings · Author: Marta · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Drabbles · ID: 621
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 20:52:15
I've never really looked at that many drabbles because usually I just
prefer a story that I can take time getting into. But I found Marta's
piece spectacular and now I think I'm a drabble convert! Her work has
shown me how much one can say without saying it in as many words, but
instead by leaving the greater part of the story in the reader's
imagination. Terrific!

Title: Dark Dreams · Author: SlightlyTookish · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 550
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 20:58:17
This is a gentle story that speaks of the constant love and friendship
Merry and Pippin have shared all their lives, and will continue to
share forever. It's always lovely to see Pippin take on the part of
comforter as he looks out for Merry on that dreaded anniversary of
Merry and Eowyn's encounter with the witch king. I wonder if Eowyn has
a difficult time on the anniversary as well?

Msg# 9584

MEFA Reviews for Friday, November 28, 2008 (Part Four) Posted by annmarwalk November 28, 2008 - 18:16:28 Topic ID# 9584
Title: A Midsummer Day's Dream · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 422
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 21:00:12
Spoilers!
Oh this ficlet or vignette brings tears to my eyes. I so wish that
everyone could pass on so peacefully as Faramir does. On a Midsummer
Day where the veils between the worlds are so thin (to me it read as a
great companion piece to [the Burning of the year]), his loved ones
beckons him to pass on to the world beyond Arda. It is such a great
feeling to see that so many waited for him, but also it is fantastic
to know he is able to let go in such peace. This is a gracefully
written story in many aspects: from voice, language, flow and
perspective. You leave me in awe and tears Raksha!

Title: Frogdom · Author: Neilia · Genres: Humor: Elven Lands · ID: 192
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 21:06:15
Spoilers!
I'm enchanted with the notion that Gandalf finally did turn someone
into something, and who better, or more likely, to suffer this fate
but our beloved, cheeky little hobbit? This time he has bit off a bit
more than he can chew and must endure the life of a frog for a day. A
very creative, clever little tale, Neila!

Title: Yrch Song · Author: Phyncke · Genres: Poetry · ID: 564
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 21:06:17
This poem is bawdy and full of humour, and at the same time it is so
easily to believe that the Orcs would have had a marching song like
this. Now why did this not pop up in italics in Tolkien's works? j/k
Technically this poem has a good balance, a cadence if you will surely
I can imagine this would go on repeat very often. This is gapfillerish
in some way, well done Phyncke!

Title: Five things that never happened to Nerdanel · Author: Meril ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 389
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-28 21:17:05
Spoilers!
This nearly reads as a character portrait, but then it feels where
Allie explores the weaker sides of Nerdanel's decision at one point,
leaving me to think: Nerdanel is an immense strong character! These
five scenarios are all interesting to explore in longer stories and
most certainly has awoken the plot panda's nearby. I can't help but to
wonder how Fëanor would have reacted to all five points, especially
number three might have brought him closer to his father since
Nerdanel would be the second elf to forsake her body after childbirth.
Well done Allie, this made for an immensely intriguing read.

Title: If You Could See What I Hear · Author: Cathleen · Times: Mid
Third Age: Eriador · ID: 614
Reviewer: Shireling · 2008-11-28 21:29:33
Spoilers!
This is a truly magical tale , in every sense of the word.Cathleen
takes us into the world of a young Pippin and his family as he is
drawn into an adventure that will have repercussions long into the future.
Pippin and his knitted companion and guardian, Tulip, set out on a
walk that takes them deep into the forest where they encounter the
fairie folk and both Pippin and Paladin learn about their Tookish
fairie heritage.

Cathleen's storytelling draws the reader into the fear and panic of
pippin's family and friends as the hours of the little Took's absence
unfold. Her description of the otherworldliness of the fairie kingdom
is vivid and magical. Paladin and Pippin each have their own lessons
to learn from their encounters and yet it is only many years into the
future, when the quest is over and the travelers return, that they
come to comprehend the gifts given to them

Title: A Fair Trial · Author: Maeve Riannon · Genres: Humor: Valar &
Maiar · ID: 403
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-28 21:47:10
Spoilers!
I laughed hard when I first read this story, and it has lost nothing
of its power when read again. The idea of Melian and Sauron being
tried both for their "crimes against the Valar" after the war of
wrath, the things they are accused and the way they escape is a
fitting parody of modern bureaucracy, and Eonwe gives a perfect image
of a humorless attorney out to bring the suspects down. The plethora
of references and sparkling ideas in this little gem is stunning, and
gives a very, very different image of Melian's and Sauron's activities
- and indeed, of the whole story of the oh-so-noble Valar - in the
First Age. And te waay the story ends is quite amusing, too - and
gives a very different light on the Third Age...

Brilliant little fic, with great humor and a very cheeky approach.
Greatly done! It's a delight to see it finally nominated, here. :)

Title: Trinity · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Modern Times · ID: 51
Reviewer: SurgicalSteel · 2008-11-28 21:48:43
This is an absolutely fantastic story, and it made my inner science
geek delighted to read it!

Title: The Last Words · Author: Rhapsody · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 409
Reviewer: SurgicalSteel · 2008-11-28 22:03:52
This was an amazing concept, and was really well written. I hadn't
thought of Nerdanel as having a rival for Feanor's affections - but
this just seems really right and true to me.

Title: Fine Art for Future Generations · Author: stefaniab · Genres:
Humor: Gondor · ID: 561
Reviewer: SurgicalSteel · 2008-11-28 22:06:22
This story should carry a beverage warning. Absolutely hilarious!

Title: Old Man Willow · Author: Nath · Races: Other Beings · ID: 314
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-28 22:06:30
Spoilers!
This is a stunning and powerful Alternate Universe that gives a
completely different approach of what might have happened if another
had taken the One Ring. Rarely we see the perspective of non-human but
conscious beings told as poignantly and as compelling as we do here.
The idea of how the power of the One Ring might corrupt, and also be
enhanced, a being that is not walking on legs is a very interesting
thought, and it is brought across here very intensely. I like the
ending, too. Chilling!

Title: Dead Steward's Gift · Author: stefaniab · Genres: Mystery · ID: 572
Reviewer: SurgicalSteel · 2008-11-28 22:07:52
The mysterious bits were suitably scary and/or creepy, and Faramir's
characterization was well done. A nice movie-verse explanation of what
happened to the Anor-stone!

Title: The Captain's Mare · Author: The Lauderdale · Races: Villains ·
ID: 575
Reviewer: SurgicalSteel · 2008-11-28 22:12:21
That was quite definitely disturbing - but I actually found myself
sort of feeling sorry for the Orc!

Title: Full Brothers in Blood · Author: Oshun · Genres: Humor · ID: 212
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-28 22:12:31
Spoilers!
[Full Brothers in Blood] is a wonderful study/contrast between
Findekano and Turukano, later known as Fingon and Turgon. Little
Turukano both idolizes his brother and envies his relationship with
Maitimo, which later leads to a rift between the brothers. But in this
story the two are still young, and Turukano is determined to spoil his
brother's visit with their tall, handsome, favorite cousin. But
Findekano is not easily ruffled, and Maitimo is so charming even
Turukano manages to fall under his spell a little, though grudgingly.

This is an unusual story, in that we see Turukano and Findekano as
youngsters sharing time with family and interacting as brothers often
do, with a mixture of affection and competition. It's also unusual to
see the action from the eyes of the younger sibling, feeling
overshadowed and jealous of his older brother. In this story Oshun
gives these brothers depth and history that makes us see in them the
men they will become and how their youth, growing up in the golden age
of Silmarillion history, informs their later choices. Oshun manages to
give these characters depth with each of her stories and her scenes of
life in a large family are always a pleasure for those of us who have,
if not large families, certainly very boisterous ones.


Title: My Shining Stars · Author: Oshun · Races: Elves: House of
Elrond · ID: 371
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-28 22:26:59
Spoilers!
This is possibly the best take I've seen to date on Elrond's
relationship to Maitimo and Macalure, the two Elves who raised him and
his brother Elros after the departure of their parents. It is a
difficult thing for a child to feel the kind of abandonment Elrond
must have felt and the attachment he forms to his two would be captors
feels authentic. Elrond is not the type to engage in self-pity or to
be maudlin about his circumstances. He has faced the frailties of his
biological parents and sees his foster parents as more than the
legends that time has made of them. Through it all, he has become his
own man, done his own deeds of valor and has the hope of a fond
reunion with the two Elves who fostered and nurtured him in his youth.
I have to admit I like Oshun's version of Maitimo and his brothers, of
their motivations and reasoning, which is so different than the
interpretations often seen in fanfiction. Here, Elrond's affection for
Maitimo and Macalure is believable and his wish to see them again in
Valinor at the end of his final journey is touching.

Title: Early Winter at Himring Hill · Author: Oshun · Genres: Romance:
Elven Lands · ID: 79
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-28 22:34:35
This is a nice little vignette about Findekano and Maitimo meeting
again after a long absence from each other. Even in this short piece
the unique and fun to read personalities of the protagonists shine
through. Their true affection for each other means that no parting can
ever truly diminish what they have together. It is always a pleasure
to read about these characters, whatever their circumstances, and
Oshun always makes it a good read while keeping the situations close
to canon. I admire her ability to weave her version of these
characters into canon events and still retain the qualities that make
us want to follow their exploits through each new adventure.

Title: Eight Weeks · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 273
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-28 22:36:51
Week One – I loved the first line.

Week Two – I loved the last line.

Week Three – I loved the first paragraph.

Week Four – Oh dear! I loved the entire thing (Proverbs of the Sindar
indeed!)

Week Five – I loved the last line

Week Six – Ah, this was penetrating (poor Boromir – I fear there is no
hope)

Week Seven – Oh dear, courtesans and bribery now.

Week Eight – Well, as I said, poor Boromir – he never stood a chance.

A delightful rendition of Faramir and Denethor's combined campaign
against a new `oddity' of Boromir's! Nice to see the two of them
working together, even if it happens to be `against' Boromir. The
eldest never stood a chance!


My favorites were week 5 and week 8.

Title: And Whisper You to This Earth · Author: Lady Elina · Genres:
Romance · ID: 151
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-28 22:54:35
Spoilers!
A gem, starting (but not ending) with the title and the significance
it will bear later on. This is a lovely, if bitter story that outlines
the differences and similarities of elves and men, all wrapped in
gorgeous writing, thoughtful and believable characterization and an
interesting framework. I loved the gradual buildup, the unusual
pairing, the leitmotif-like return of their touches and the phrase
['it is well known that Elves do not take mortal lovers'], and the
stone - an ingenious and beautiful idea that reminded me of Legolas
describing the lament of the stones of Eregion: Why shouldn't the
elves have stones to bear their laments and stories? Wonderfully done.

Title: I Married for Love · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Genres: Poetry ·
ID: 661
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-28 23:06:56
The rhythm of this poem draws the reader in, especially if read out
loud, and in doing so reveals Indis' story, her fate, and her
relationship to Finwe and her family. The verses establish a strong,
pervasive sense of Indis' character and and the narrative, describing
events and stating facts rather than feelings, nonetheless built up to
an emotional climax that left me a little teary-eyed. Very well done
indeed.

Title: The Farmer's Son · Author: Lindelea · Races: Hobbits:
Incomplete · ID: 509
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 23:23:04
Spoilers!
I'm cheering Lindelea on as I anticipate, and rather impatiently, I
might add, more of this wonderful story! While I've always enjoyed her
writing style and creativity, her Paladin Took had not been one of my
favourite characters - now, I love Pad and enjoy reading about him
very much, but my view of him has been much different. This is one
reason I'm so enthralled with this story. I am very impressed with
Lindelea's talent as an author, and now I get to see her apply that to
a new version of the Shire far removed from her former very critical
Paladin Took. In "The Farmer's Son" the Took's remain on the farm in
Whitwell despite the fact that Paladin is now the Thain, and he is
down to earth and yet not lacking any spirit. This is evidenced in the
way he expresses himself, and I'm enjoying the tender moments he
shares with Eglantine. The "Time of Troubles" is a very distressing
point in this family's life, after all - they have discovered their
youngest is missing, and only have little glimpses into what is up
with Pippin's disappearance with Merry, Frodo, and their friend Sam.
They fear for all of them, and now strangers, men, are being spotted
in the Shire. What is going on?

Another aspect of this new version is the Took Sight. In my opinion,
Lindelea has been touching upon it in a subtle, yet exciting way, and
I can feel the tension in Paladin's refusal to talk about what he's
sensing. I'm very much anticipating each new chapter and wondering
what will happen next. Whatever does, I know I can depend on it being
both entertaining and suspenseful.

Most excellently well done, Lindelea!!!

Title: Clear Conscience (The Clear Shot Remix) · Author: Dreamflower ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Angst/Tragedy · ID: 680
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 23:30:52
What might have happened if Boromir had met Frodo many years earlier?
In this excellent remix Dreamflower explores that question and more,
handling it with her usual skill and care. Remixes are never easy, as
I found out when I tried one, and what the writer has achieved with
"Clear Conscience" is not only a different, 'what if' view, but a real
tribute to the writer of the original fic she modelled her remix on.

Title: One Step More - The Heroism of Frodo Baggins · Author:
ConnieMarie · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 395
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 23:40:51
I am so in awe of another of Connie Marie's beautiful essays that I
don't know quite what to say here, other than this is extraordinary,
her insight into the character is exceptional, and her writing simply
blows me away!

Title: 25 Rethe, S.R. 1422: The Three Travellers Remember · Author:
Dreamflower · Genres: Poetry: Drama · ID: 679
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 23:43:47
Awesome, Dreamflower! *Applauds* You are such a talented lady, and
this is beautiful!!

Title: O Merry Mine · Author: Larner · Races: Hobbits: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 636
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-28 23:57:19
Spoilers!
Larner's story is a joyous look at the relationship between Frodo and
his younger cousin, Merry. I love the way she has woven this tale so
intricately and perfectly from beginning to end. The comparison Frodo
makes to young Merry when Pippin is born is so sweet. Little ones
never can really imagine themselves as ever being that young, and to
be remembered as having been a "stinky" infant just like his little
cousin gives Merry pause for thought. All the way through this tale
one can feel the love with which it is written, that the writer truly
cares for the characters she is writing about and wants them to be
presented at their best. The ending is very touching, and yes,
perfect. I can't really imagine these lads as anywhere else but always
together. Excellent work, Larner!! *Applauds*

Title: The Secret of the Wooden Wall · Author: Lily · Genres: Mystery
· ID: 630
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:10:14
Spoilers!
I love Lily's writing and her talent for crafting stories about
hobbits that I find so well-thought out and clever. She has taken to
writing quite a bit about Merimac and they are also entertaining
tales. Naturally, I feel her stories that include Paladin Took are
among some of her best because he has come to be one of my favourite
characters to explore and I enjoy seeing the way others have written
him, particularly a talented writer such as Lily. In this story
Paladin's Tookish Sight figures heavily in the intrigue, and the Sight
is another of my favourite elements in lotr. Lily has created an
exciting little mystery with wonderful, ghostly overtones, and an
interesting exploration of the past at Brandy Hall. I do hope Lily
will include Paladin in more of her stories when she has time to write
again. MEWD!

Msg# 9585

URGENT!!!!! Help! I pasted my review of Wars of the Valar into the w Posted by Berni Crumb November 29, 2008 - 9:55:33 Topic ID# 9585
Anyone on the Admin Team, Help!
I was finishing up my reviews of Fiondil's Wars of the Valar and of BRIDGE:
Pá Valaraucar ar Námier in Word, and had opened the MEFA site to paste them
in, and I got distracted by my kids when clicking on the link. I ended up
posting the review for Wars of the Valar under BRIDGE: Pá Valaraucar ar
Námier instead! *headdesk*
Can you please, please, please delete the review so I can paste the correct
text for the review of BRIDGE in before the deadline tonight? While I want
Fiondil to have as many points as possible for the fic, I don't want him to
get them because the wrong text got put in place.

I'd appreciate an email back to let me know I can paste in BRIDGE'S review.
Thank you very VERY much!


Vorondavë ar linalmië,
Rhyselle

Fantasy remains a human right: we make in our measure and in our derivative
mode, because we are made: and not only made, but made in the image and
likeness of a Maker. -- J.R.R. Tolkien, On Fairy-Stories, 1939


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 9586

Re: URGENT!!!!! Help! I pasted my review of Wars of the Valar into t Posted by Tanaqui November 29, 2008 - 10:03:26 Topic ID# 9585
Hi Rhyselle

I've set the status on your review for BRIDGE: Pá Valaraucar ar Námier
back to hidden so you can edit it again. (If I picked the wrong story to
re-set, let me know and I'll change the status on the other story.)

Tanaqui
MEFA Tech Support

Berni Crumb wrote:
>
>
> Anyone on the Admin Team, Help!
> I was finishing up my reviews of Fiondil's Wars of the Valar and of BRIDGE:
> Pá Valaraucar ar Námier in Word, and had opened the MEFA site to paste them
> in, and I got distracted by my kids when clicking on the link. I ended up
> posting the review for Wars of the Valar under BRIDGE: Pá Valaraucar ar
> Námier instead! *headdesk*
> Can you please, please, please delete the review so I can paste the correct
> text for the review of BRIDGE in before the deadline tonight? While I want
> Fiondil to have as many points as possible for the fic, I don't want him to
> get them because the wrong text got put in place.
>
> I'd appreciate an email back to let me know I can paste in BRIDGE'S review.
> Thank you very VERY much!
>
> Vorondavë ar linalmië,
> Rhyselle
>
> Fantasy remains a human right: we make in our measure and in our derivative
> mode, because we are made: and not only made, but made in the image and
> likeness of a Maker. -- J.R.R. Tolkien, On Fairy-Stories, 1939
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>

Msg# 9587

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by Marta November 29, 2008 - 14:33:32 Topic ID# 9570
Hi Nath,

Excellent - I'll send you some information privately.

Marta

nath kuijpers wrote:
>
>
> Hi Marta,
>
> Yes, I'd be willing to lend a hand.
>
> Nath
>

Msg# 9588

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 29, 2008 (Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 29, 2008 - 20:32:04 Topic ID# 9588
Title: Pip-napped! · Author: Dreamflower/Lindelea CoAuthors · Genres:
Adventure · ID: 669
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:16:12
I know this story was written for Dana because she wanted a story
where Pippin is "Pip-napped" and the partnering of these two wonderful
writers is an awesome combination! This story has a little of
everything to offer - comedy, a little drama, a sweet portrayal of
Diamond Took and Pippin as newlyweds, and still more! Bravo ladies!

Title: A Promise · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Childhood · ID: 149
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:20:19
As is the case with so many of Golden's stories, this one left me in
tears. I'm very partial to dogs and cats and sensitive to the thought
of losing one. Golden has filled this story with lovely images, some
happy and some sad. But as always, she brings the story to a beautiful
and fitting conclusion. Lovely, Golden!

Title: On Canon and Fanfic · Author: Marta · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 123
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:22:29
I very much enjoyed Marta's thoughtful essay and found it to be very
well done. It really made me think, too!

Title: I Give You a Rainbow · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits:
Friendship · ID: 571
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:27:43
Spoilers!
This is a very sensitively told story about a little one who is
"different" than the rest of the children. Pippin, of course, is
portrayed as a wonderfully caring youth and a true friend to the
little lass as he teaches her about colours. He also learns something
about himself along the way. I think Golden is becoming the master of
tackling tough issues in her tales and pulling them off with a flair.

Title: Summer's End · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits: Post-Ring
War · ID: 380
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:35:35
A truly touching tale revolving around Frodo's last days in the Shire.
Pippinfan brings the characters to life, each in his or her own
special way, and leaves me yearning for more time for them all to
share. It hurts to see Frodo so melancholy, looking at everyone in
such a way as to take them each into his heart where he can hold them
close forever and treasure the memories. Beautifully conceived story.

Title: Yule at Great Smials · Author: Dreamflower · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 566
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:40:58
Pearl Took asked for a story in which there were fireworks at the
Great Smials, a young Pippin and Gandalf in attendance, and I know
that Dreamflower had a bit of fun finding a way to make it all work! A
lovely, sweet, and highly entertaining tale of merry-making in the
Shire during Yuletime, and involving some of my most favourite
characters. Thank you Dreamflower!

Title: For the Want of ... · Author: Larner · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor · ID: 681
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:46:34
I like the way Larner has portrayed the growing friendship between
Peregrin and Faramir. There must have been some real mutual respect
between these two characters and since Pippin named his lad for
Faramir, I think there must have developed a fast afriendship between
them. Wonderful story!

Title: Pippin-Frog For A Day · Author: Neilia · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Incomplete · ID: 115
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:49:05
What could be more fun than a cheeky little green Pippin-frog??
Wonderfully clever tale, Neilia! More, please!

Title: Dangerous Folk · Author: Budgielover · Genres: Adventure · ID: 546
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-29 00:55:43
Budgielover has given us a thoroughly exciting,
on-the-edge-of-your-seat kind of tale in "Dangerous Folk". A very
enjoyable and gripping story!

Title: Sing All Ye People! · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Late
Third Age: Gondor · ID: 249
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 00:57:46
A splendid rewriting of one of the most solemn and elevating scenes in
the whole book! (probably the most!)

To me, the Eagles and this song always seemed... Biblical. And I'm
sure Tolkien meant that, seeing that he had Sauron to be overthrown on
March 25 (Annunciation - the beginning of the redemption brought by
Christ).

And you capture all that sense of awe and spiritual elevation! Faramir
reacts exactly as I would expect him to, and the fact that he thinks
of Eowyn and that their love is possible in the new situation is soooo
beautiful! Congratulations for a very good drabble!

Title: Refuge · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Elves: Noldor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 423
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 01:11:04
I had not read this story of yours before, so I'm grateful to the MEFA
contest for the chance of finding it.... Because this drabble was
indeed worth reading! The extremely dramatical situation is
counter-balanced by the calm, balanced writing.

I very much liked the characterization - you managed to assume
Elrond's indirect point of view very well and your brief portrayel of
him is very in character and believable. He is definitely the brave
character he will grow up to be, but is still clearly a child. The
fear he himself feel while trying to comfort his brother is
beautifully expressed by the first image of them: from your short but
very poignant description, I can actually picture a very young Elrond
with a dagger in his hand and huddled in a corner with his brother!

At the level of writing, I also noted the use of powerful colours:
bright-red (blood, flames) contrasting with the green of the carpet
and the gray of the smoke... Also, vivid complex imagery here: [Home
stinks of blood and smoke and rising flames. Home is gone.]

Excellent drabble, thank you!

Title: Reflections in the Smoke · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times:
Late Third Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 294
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 01:25:28
I remember the sense of melancholy I got when I read this little piece
for the first time. Now, after reading it again, I got the same
feeling once more.

Shorth as it is, your drabble deserves an important role in the fandom
- it addresses a situation that is often overlooked in fanfiction. The
great task accomplished, all the major heroes must have gone through
this moment.

I think you're right about the "purposelessness" part. For such a long
time (in human years), Gandalf had pursuied the mission he had been
sent for, and he no doubt felt useful now... Although he still had
something important to do: help Aragorn find the salping of the White
Tree...

Great writing, very efficient use of the free indirect style and the
smoke imagery, and excellent contrasting of names! The call of the
wind and the referince to Ulmo's waters help to remind the readers of
Gandalf's true divine nature.

All in all, another wonderful drabble!

Title: Scholarship · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 43
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 01:30:31
This was very cute, funny and intelligent in the same time! That kind
of story that makes the reader go from smiles to giggles to a wide
satifsied grin at the end! And definitely well-written, with all those
small delails that make up a very atmospheric background! :)

I liked your Elboron - as a character, he's very realistic, consistent
and, most of all, so clearly Faramir's son! And father!Faramir lives
up to my expectations as well!

I loved the relationship between them: warm and open, but in character
with Tolkien's world. (I've seen quite a few family stories with good
plot, that were spoiled by the fact that the authors tended to
modernize the relationships (and the dialogue!) too much...) The
dialogue was excellent, and very appropriate as well.

As for the fact that Elboron asks for tutoring in Varasi using *the*
parchment as support text... wow. Honestly, I would never have asked
my Mum to help me translate Ovid's 'Ars Amandi'! Teen curiosity and
scholarly pursuits form a great combination, and I think both Elboron
and Faramir had a great time during the lessons!

Excellent story, trully a pleasure to read!

Title: Your Father Loves You · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men:
Pre-Ring War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 424
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 01:43:55
Another delightful little piece of fanfiction! Very in character with
Denethor - he is harsh but caring and he has in mind an unsecure
future for both his children. His love for Finduilas and Boromir is
palpable, and we can also see how he begins to love Faramir as well...
His determination to protect him, at least for the moment, is touching
and beautifully expressed.

Indeed, a bittersweet ficlet, especially as we all know how things
will evolve...

Title: Summer's Lease · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Romance:
Gondor · ID: 650
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 01:57:52
A very atmospheric and extremely beautiful and well-written ficlet!
The descriptions are excellent - both those of the nature and the
beauty of the garned and the early summer, AND those of the characters...

Well, I have to admit that I did enjoy the vivid and plastic
description of the male anatomy... (especially Faramir saw through
Eowyn's eyes - sensuous and filled with love...) Very effective use of
the point of view, it's interesting to see Eowyn examin and compare...
Though I have to agree with her, I'll choose Faramir as well... His
physical portrait is well-drawn (though I like to think that he growed
a beard at least from time to time) and his reaction to seeing his
wife join them is well-described as well. The strong feelings that
exist between them are visible, and I do hope that Legolas excused
himself and got back to plantig trees to give them some privacy.... :)

Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 02:11:09
Spoilers!
This was one of those fics that left me speechless and only able to go
"wow"...

At first, I was a little confused by the shift from one character to
the other, but by the time I realized where you were taking this, I
was already admiring the beautiful style! I *loved* it, what an
inspired idea!!! :)

Tolkien was very clear about the fact that, within his universe,
everything happens for a reason, and I am please to see how well you
were able to connect things in order to write about Eowyn's birth in
light of her future destiny. It is wonderful how three different
characters feel it: the Witch-King of Angmar is foreboding his
distruction but cannot (or will not) understand it, Glorfindel can
feel the approaching victory even if his vision is not quite clear,
and Eomund has a sort of vision himself - he [can only see the
snapping of banners in the wind and hear only the clatter of swords.]
even if he is not aware of the larger context of his daughter's future
glory... Excellent!

Impeccable writing, as always, and amazing use of the weather and
especially wind motif! Great drabble!



Title: Legacy · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 500
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 02:17:03
Beautiful. I loved it, especially the way you wrote from Elboron's
perspective - we can feel that he has something of Faramir in him, and
a resemblance to Boromir as well. Not only Elboron's characterization
is well-rounded, but also the portrayel of Boromir through Elboron's
eyes - the next generation of men did not have the change to proove
their courage the way their parents did, and they would probably feel
a great admiration for the heros of the War of the Rings... Excellent
drabble!

And your dedication is simply heartbreaking, both for the fandom and
for real life! *sigh*


Title: The Fire of Hope · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men:
Pre-Ring War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 625
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 02:21:08
A wonderful look at a younger Aragorn, determined and clearly in
love... *sniff*

The book Aragorn betrays nothing of his love for Arwen; the movie
Aragorn is *very* romance-oriented, being sentimental but not overly
so. Your young Aragorn was well-balanced, though I'm certain that
becoming King meant much more to him than a means of conquering
Arwen's hand.

Am I wrong to think that this happens before their troth? Because from
this: [She had looked upon him as if he were a clever child when he
spoke his admiration. Ah, but he was patient.] I gather that, as this
point, his love for her was still one-sided...

I also *loved* the description of the peaceful and secluded life of
the people of Bree and their ignorance... Powerful contrast and great
writing!!

Title: Before the Black Gate · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Late
Third Age · ID: 45
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 02:23:43
Wonderful! When I read the title and saw the protagonist of this
ficlet, I was prepared for an angsty piece, but you knew better than
that!! This was very in character for Pippin (he is a lot braver than
he used to be, but remains the Hobbit who values the joys of life) and
Beregond's appearance was fitted. Great characterization and a
well-chosen moment for this vignette! I loved it! :)


Title: Moonset over Gondor · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 652
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 02:34:33
Well-written and very atmospheric! The night imagery was somehow
Romantic, especially because of the general air of melancholy and
bittersweet rememberance...

I always thought that the meeting of Faramir and Frodo was crucial not
only in the plot of the whole novel (since Faramir's decision to let
the halflings go on their way was essential to the final victory) but
also a turning point in the personal destinies of the two characters.
Frodo, who had recently lost faith in human nature due to Boromir's
fall, is given a great example of the good that still lies in men, and
is thus reminded of the purposefullness of his mission. Faramir, on
the other hand, is clearly positively impressed by the small hobbit
and gets a chance to prove his quality...

I also loved the tenderness between Faramir and Eowyn, the love and
the feelings of companionship between them... :) Lovely!

Title: Messengers from the West · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 98
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-29 02:48:04
Spoilers!
A charming vignette about a singular, well, make that a double
birthday surprise for Captain Thorongil. I love the image of the two
black stallions with the two brothers; and the Elf-twins visiting
their foster-brother incognito is well-written as one would expect
from Jay.


Title: A Midsummer Day's Dream · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 422
Reviewer: The Little Dwarf · 2008-11-29 02:56:28
Spoilers!
This brought tears to my eyes. Literally. And I don't normally cry
when I read fanfiction, mind you!

I've thought of Eowyn's death and how it would affect Faramir, and
I've also imagined Faramir as an old man, but I've never read or
imagined his own passing. So I think that, from now on, this ficlet of
yours is canon for me!

It was heartbreakingly expressive, every word in it held so much
emotion! I don't have to mention the perfect writing, but the
appearance of the deceased ones is so beautifully drawn! The whole
scene is very atmospheric and evocative of both the glorious past and
the calmer present. It doesn't really matther wheather the apparitions
that Faramir can see are memories or spirits, beacuse, as you said,
life and death are only divided by a very fine line... And at this
particular moment, the protagonist is exactly on the ultimate threshold...

Faramir's attitude and his calm acceptance of his own passing is very
in character. He leaves behind many loved ones, but he also knows he
will soon be reunited with others that he loved... And I think it is
only fitted, if Aragorn willingly takes out his crown and goes to lie
on his funeral bed, that, by contrast, Faramir should pass away almost
imperceptibly, in the middle of his garden...

This is surely one of my very favourite LotR stories ever, not only
for the perfect construction of the brief plot and the wonderful
characterization, but also for the flawless prose... Excellent work!

Title: Gone Amiss · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama: Ring War
Drabbles · ID: 44
Reviewer: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · 2008-11-29 02:58:37
Spoilers!
The thought of having to bring news of Boromir's death to Denethor
must have been especially horrible for Aragorn since he knew Denethor
and since he felt responsible for the death. I like that Aragorn
realizes that he will have to explain how he survived unscathed while
Boromir was slain, because that is exactly what Denethor asks Peregrin
in the book.

The oath that Aragorn uses in the drabble--[Stars and Stones and
Tree!] is not familiar, but it sounds like something they would say.
Very nicely done!



Title: Surprise Inspection · Author: AmandaK · Genres: Humor: Gondor ·
ID: 207
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 03:11:25
Spoilers!
This reminds me of the horrid pre-school/law court/performance
whatever of great significance dreams, where you find yourself
suddenly at the appointed venue without a stitch of clothing on.
Except in this case, no one will be waking the lieutenant or his
soldiers from the nightmare.

Fortunately, Boromir isn't without sympathy, and it would appear that
despite festivities, none of Gondor's soldiers would be caught with
his trousers down should there be an attack.

AmandaK gives us a light-hearted interlude in the tedious discomfort
of warfare - an enjoyable read!

Title: Loving a Book Lover · Author: Avon · Genres: Romance: Drabbles
· ID: 721
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 03:14:35
Oh dear! Faramir may have had years learning to shut out Boromir's
wiley efforts to get him away from his books, but he clearly isn't yet
so wise in the ways of matrimonial warfare. Eowyn has weapons he
apparently hasn't though to defend himself from.

Poor man. I'm sure he'll get over it. Amusing interlude, Avon!

Msg# 9589

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 29, 2008 (Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 29, 2008 - 20:33:40 Topic ID# 9589
Title: Summer Nights · Author: Marta · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 344
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-29 03:15:00
Spoilers!
Marta is a master of elegant language; and she does not disappoint
here, where in a hundred words, sinister signs in the heat of summer
give way to the start of the Ring War in Gondor. I absolutely love the
last line- [A lone arrow fled its bow, an orc's cry split the sultry
air: war had finally arrived.], it's exquisite!

Title: Scholarship · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 43
Reviewer: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · 2008-11-29 03:18:14
Spoilers!
In this fic, Faramir comes face to face with his son's coming of age.
The setting under the cherry blossoms, symbol of youth and transience,
is perfect, and Elboron is adorable in his forthright awkwardness.

That the boy and his father can speak so openly and with such trust is
so different from Faramir's dealings with Denethor. Faramir wisely
realizes that, if he rebukes his son, the lad will find another
teacher who may not be so learned or so honorable. And even if, as
Faramir no doubt hopes, Elboron does not indulge in these pleasures
outside of marriage, some day Elboron's wife will benefit from this
teaching! How very much like Faramir to remind his son of his
responsibility to protect those who are vulnerable because of their
age or sex. And I was glad to see that his son seems to take the
advice to heart.

I love the invented languages and the Rhunic version of "Kama Sutra,"
though the captions don't sound very helpful, lol. This is yet another
marvelous piece of writing from the pen of Raksha.



Title: Moon Over Water · Author: Avon · Genres: Drama: Final Partings
· ID: 518
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 03:21:05
I think what I like most about this story is that it doesn't attempt
to explain everything. Avon presents a magical, mystical scene - one
that fits beautifully with Middle-earth - and then simply lets it go.
What is occurring and why is never explained, nor is Boromir's behavior.

The ending therefore comes as a surprise and a kind of reward for
Faramir, who seems to hold onto his sense of the reality and perhaps
the importance of the Night of the Gallants long after Boromir
relinquished both.

The writing is, as ever, beautiful. Thanks, Avon!

Title: Before the Black Gate · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Late
Third Age · ID: 45
Reviewer: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · 2008-11-29 03:23:45
Spoilers!
Poor Pippin is truly a stranger in a strange land, very far from the
woods and fields of the Tooklands. I like the hobbit's eye viewpoint
of this fic--Beregond towers over him. Yet despite their differences,
it is clear that they are friends. Beregond is looking out for him,
considerate of a hobbit's need for a good breakfast. The need for
short rations is a nice realistic touch; certainly they couldn't
forage in those desolate lands, so they would have to carry provisions.

[He hopped up briskly, ready as he would ever be for what was to come.]

I especially liked this line; it seemed very hobbit-like and reminded
me of Samwise's commonsense heroism. A fitting fic to honor the battle
before the Black Gate.


Title: The Prisoner of Time · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 313
Reviewer: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · 2008-11-29 03:30:44
Spoilers!
Ooh, a chilling but plausible AU! Denethor has enough wisdom to turn
away from immolation but not enough wisdom to accept the restoration
of the King or even Aragorn's help to heal his remaining son. This
fits very well with canon, where Denethor does waver before the end
and Imrahil does remark that Denethor's mood has been "strange."
Personally, I find this version of events, where Denethor's fall is
only partial, more believable than canon.

Having Denethor realize that he doesn't know the words to the
fashionable, new songs is a nice touch. He realizes that the world
outside is changing even if he refuses to change. How his own
irrelevance must have galled him, almost as much as Aragorn's kindness!

An original view of an often-discussed subject.



Title: In absentia · Author: Robinka · Races: Elves: House of Finwe ·
ID: 84
Reviewer: Alassante · 2008-11-29 03:32:23
Robinka has taken a turning ponit in Maedhros' life and written it
with the understandable emotions of a once strong warrior - now
weakened. Her imagery is wonderful and I loved Fingon's love for his
cousin. Maedhros had very realistic and authetic Feanorian pride as
well. I don't like it when Maedhros is written as a perfect hero - for
he was flawed like all of the Feanorians. I really enjoyed her take on
this point in time of the First Age.

Title: Bears With Honey · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 243
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 03:33:01
Spoilers!
Most sane people - women or otherwise - would probably run screaming
if someone close to them suddenly changed into a bear or something
large and fanged and furry. Mrs. Beorn, however, is made of much
sterner stuff, and even finds advantage in the occasional fit of
unearthly transformation. I love the absolute ordinariness that
Gandalf's Apprentice brings to this little interlude - the language
and the affectionate, down-to-earth atmosphere of the piece make it
evident that this is simply one of those days when it's a good time to
break into that stash of honey while Mr. Beorn is away and won't be by
to commandeer it.

Great fun, GA!



Title: Incarnation · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Drabbles · ID: 242
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 03:36:51
Humorous juxtaposition of immortal endurance and the indignities of
the flesh. That Gandalf gets berated by Pippin, of all people, no
doubt just makes the day extra miserable and ironic for him.

And you know, I'm sure that the Valar mean well, but they don't have
bodies, so I'm inclined to think that there's a reason they overlook
these little 'trials' that our bodies put us through. One hopes Olórin
will put a memo in Manwë's cosmic inbox about the oversight...

Title: The Sky Is Over · Author: Robinka · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 83
Reviewer: Alassante · 2008-11-29 03:40:28
I can honestly say that I have not read any stories with Finrod and
Galadriel's sibling bond explored so this was a rare treat. Robinka's
choice of quote to write about is wonderful one for everyone loves the
story of Finrod's love for Amarië. I liked her focus on Finrod trying
to retain the warmth of his sister's touch. Beautiful thought and a
wonderful drabble. Good job Robinka!

Title: House of Ransom · Author: Robinka · Races: Elves: Drabbles ·
ID: 657
Reviewer: Alassante · 2008-11-29 03:43:27
Since I cannot stand Turin, I particularly liked Robinka showing how
stubborn and foolish he was through Beleg's eyes. Poor Beleg went
through so much for his friend and ended up being killed by him, which
is so heartwrenchingly sad. But it is nice to see a nice display of
Beleg's loyalty to Turin, only out of friendship. Once again, a
beautifully written piece by Binka.

Title: Love at First Sight · Author: Gwynnyd · Races: Elves: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 432
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 03:43:57
Spoilers!
I think I've been reading too much psychoanalysis, but my brain
immediately leapt to a very different first love scenario, the second
Míriel was brought into the picture.

So for me, this drabble read like a protracted drawing out of what
should be a very awkward moment of humor, potentially something
darker, until those last few lines, at which point the whole picture
upended itself and slid out of the frame to make way for a very
different situation. Which was delightful, whether or not that was
what Gwynnyd intended.

The image of gummy-mouthed baby Feänor raptly staring at the Light was
just terrific.

Title: The Other · Author: Dana/Lindelea CoAuthors · Genres: Horror ·
ID: 27
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:47:45
Spoilers!
I was quite stunned by this truly amazing collaboration. In this
chilling AU, it seems that the Brandybucks suffer from a horrible
curse, that comes all unexpectedly upon them every few generations,
ever since one of them made it back alive from the war against the
Witch-king of Angmar.

And now, ironically, the curse has visited itself upon Meriadoc, who
was one of the Witch-king's slayers--a really intriguing bit which is
allowed to pass without comment, which the reader appreciates all the
more for its subtlety.

We see Pippin's growing horror as the true state of things gradually
becomes apparent to him, and his despair as the only solution is
presented to him.

It is clear to see the hand of both of the authors in this story. Dana
has a way with writing darker themes with compassion and
believability, and a knack with horror AUs, as her story ["Turned
Earth"] proved, while Lindelea is skilled at constructing solid plots
and building up the suspense for truly trying cliffhangers. Both of
them know how to use angst skillfully, without going overboard on it.
There are certain turns of phrase in which I think I can spot the hand
of one or the other in, but the narrative itself is seamless, and I
have no clue as to which of them actually *wrote* which part.

The denouement is presented as a very plausible ending--it played out
beautifully, indeed! (And I adored the inclusion of Aragorn.)


Title: Reflections in the Smoke · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times:
Late Third Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 294
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:47:59
Apart from hobbits, Gandalf is my favorite character in the stories of
our heroes. We are seldom allowed to see what he is thinking, unless
he chooses to tell us. That makes it all the more interesting to read
fic from his POV. There are so many possible interpretations of his
actions and words. This little bignette, in which he ruminates on his
task has a tone of melancholy and resignation about it wholly
appropriate to the circumstances. Indeed, he's earned his rest.

Title: Homecoming · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 706
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 03:48:20
Spoilers!
With everything Boromir gets put through in the Unabeauverse, the poor
man would need years of therapy to have a chance at a peaceful life -
almost as many as his poor brother, to say nothing of dear Denethor.
So it's good to think that in an AU, in some utopia within fictional
space, he actually gets a future where he could end happily and in old
age, with the one he loves.

Thanks, Isabeau!

Title: Symbols of Love · Author: Larner · Genres: Adventure · ID: 130
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:48:38
This is such a touching story! I could just imagine the quilt as
Aragorn describes it so affectionately!

Title: With Many "Fond" Acknowledgments · Author: Thundera Tiger ·
Genres: Humor · ID: 472
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:48:52
This story had me chuckling all the way through it! I could so
identify with poor Sam's dilemma. And Faramir was just sneaky! Poor Sam!

Title: Five Turnings of the Year · Author: Dana · Races: Hobbits:
Post-Ring War · ID: 685
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:49:11
I will have to confess to more than just a little bias for this lovely
set of vignettes. Not only did I beta them, but Dana was kind enough
to include some little inside touches which were meant just for me
(such as the names of songs and dances), which always make me grin.

But these ficlets are marvelous. Five different Yules: the year before
the Quest, the year of the Quest, and the three following the
Quest--including at the last, the Yule after Frodo has sailed. Each is
in Pippin's point-of-view, and his personality just shines--you see
not only his good cheer and optimism and determination, even in
difficult circumstances, but also the depth of his heart--in his
kindness for others and his love for Frodo. As always, Dana's prose is
tight and evocative--she has a knack for getting deeply inside not
just the head of the characters, but their hearts as well.

What I love most of all is seeing this exploration of the friendships
of our Travellers in all their nuances and permutations: Pippin and
Sam, the hobbits and Boromir, Pippin and Merry, Pippin and Frodo--and
most of all how Frodo's absence affects those remaining. I have to say
that the last one made me tear up along with the hobbits--yet it made
me smile as well!

Title: Tulip's Tale · Author: Cathleen · Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 615
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:49:25
One of the things about Cathleen's OC, Tulip the Knitted Piglet, who
is little Pippin's devoted companion--is how much of her personality
comes from the perceptions of her devoted little master. Pippin is his
sweet and chattery self in this little vignette. I love the
affectionate reactions of his cousins to his breathless recital in this.

Title: Call of the Dream · Author: Queen Galadriel · Genres: Poetry:
Drama · ID: 402
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:49:40
Queen Galadriel is a young author, but her heart is anything but
young--she has a way of clearly plumbing the depths of Frodo's
post-Quest angst, which shows up even better in her poetry than in her
prose. She has written several poems, but I think that this one is
probably her best one ever.

This poem is very skillfully and carefully modeled upon JRRT's own
poem ["The Sea Bell"] using a very difficult rhyme and meter scheme,
in which every third line contains an internal rhyme at the caesura. I
am one who truly loves structured poetry, as opposed to free verse,
and the poet has managed to use the form without a single mis-step.

The imagery, also, is very true to Tolkien's own. Queen Galadriel
riffs off many of those images, giving each a slight twist.

For example: in the original ["Then I saw a boat silently float/ on
the night-tide, empty and grey./ `It is later than late! Why do we
wait?'/ I leapt in and cried `Bear me away!' "]

While Queen Galadriel uses that final phrase here: ["But I found
myself on a lonely shelf,/ And there were none beside me./ By a golden
gate a ship did wait./ To it I cried, "Bear me away, "] There are many
other instances which she mirrors his imagery without copying it. It
is very evocative. The sea, the sand, the sounds are all conveyed in
well-crafted phrases.

She captures Frodo's loneliness, and his longing and deep love for his
friends, from whom he now feels separated by his experiences in lines
so poignant that they make my eyes sting--and all this without losing
the structure of the poem.

Title: Long Memories · Author: Bodkin · Times: Second and Early Third
Age · ID: 310
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:49:54
I have long enjoyed Bodkin's tales of Fourth Age Valinor, even with
not a hobbit in sight, and this story which explains just why (other
than the usual fatherly overprotectiveness) Legolas' father-in-law
Taryatur has such a dislike for him.

["Long Memories"] indeed! I suppose that being immortal brings about a
whole different level of carrying grudges.

Title: The Five Rules of Cooking · Author: GamgeeFest · Races:
Hobbits: Childhood · ID: 523
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:50:15
This is such a sweet and hobbity story! While GamgeeFest's favorite
hobbit is Sam, she does a very good job on the others as well.

I have to say, I just love her young Pippin--he's a little hyper
(which is always fun) but he's cheerful and helpful, and when he gets
into trouble it's almost always not out of mischief but out of being a
little over-enthusiastic. And Merry is delightful in this--competitive
and bright, and he has confidence in Pippin's ability to help him win,
which is very Merry. Frodo is delightful as well, keeping a wise eye
on his younger cousins.

And of course there are Gamgees as well.

The cooking competition seems very hobbity; I can easily see such a
thing in the Shire. And the stew sounds wonderful.

Title: Tulip Takes a Tumble · Author: Cathleen · Genres: Humor · ID: 616
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:50:54
Spoilers!
Poor Pippin, in trouble again because he would not listen to his
little Tulip. His father tells him a story of his own childhood
naughtiness. I love the warm picture of little PIppin snuggling with
his father and listening to the story.

Title: The Birthday Blessing · Author: Larner · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 687
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:51:14
Spoilers!
How beautifully touching, that all three Trees bloom at once, in Sam's
honor! I love the notion!


Title: Maglor's Song · Author: Robinka · Genres: Poetry: Drama · ID: 398
Reviewer: Alassante · 2008-11-29 03:51:30
What a wonderful poem! I have not read this before and it was just
beautifully written. Robinka has a special talent with poems I think
the first thing I ever read of hers was a poem about Haldir. This is a
beautifully tragic and haunting piece about Maglor that really speaks
to his pain after losing everything, including his family, the
Silmaril, and his special gift of song.

Title: Of Old It Was Not Darksome · Author: EdorasLass · Races:
Dwarves · ID: 70
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:51:31
Sometimes you read a ficlet, and find yourself saying *Yes!" Yes,
because this is how it could be, should be. Yes, Gimli *would* go to
do such a task, and yes, he would react that way if they found such a
memento.

Msg# 9590

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 29, 2008 (Part Three) Posted by annmarwalk November 29, 2008 - 20:35:30 Topic ID# 9590
Title: Letters From Faramir · Author: agape4gondor · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Boromir or Faramir · ID: 425
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:51:48
I really liked the concept of this, of Faramir keeping up a
correspondence with his brother, even after there was no chance that
Boromir would ever read them. I loved the ones in which Faramir
dictated them to Pippin. The letters were sad and funny, angsty and
happy. The final letter was just perfectly lovely.

Title: Labour Pains · Author: Aratlithiel · Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 483
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:52:12
I laughed so hard that I not only cried, but my stomach hurt. This is
one of the funniest AUs I've ever read. And it's all too believable!

Title: A Moment Away · Author: Elen Kortirion · Races: Men: General
Drabbles · ID: 474
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:52:30
Spoilers!
What a touching notion, that Morwen Steelsheen would keep watch over
her granddaughter at such a time!

Title: Pippin and the Incredible Shrinking Piglet · Author: Cathleen ·
Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 241
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-29 03:52:51
One of the things I love about Cathleen's Wee!Pippin and Tulip
universe is the sweet relationship he has with his older sisters. Yes,
they do fuss a bit with one another, but it's clear that his older
sisters cherish their baby brother and do their best to spoil him. I
love Pearl as the indulgent older sister in this one!

And Pippin's childlike worries about Tulip shrinking away are so cute!

Title: Tying Notes · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Late Third Age: Gondor
Drabbles · ID: 378
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 03:59:31
Spoilers!
I'm not a musician, and am more or less musically illiterate, alas; I
thus appreciated the explanation of what a "tie" is, and was glad to
see that I wasn't wholly wrong in my guess at how the title fit in.

What I most appreciated, though, was the way the POV worked out. At
first, I assumed I was in Faramir's perspective, but that last line
turned it around and made it a host's perspective. That transformed
the description from one that emphasized how different the Haradrim
are into a description that comes of a host's careful attention to the
details of providing welcome and hospitality of an important guest.
That shift imbued the piece with a sense of hopeful waiting and
watching to see if said guest feels in fact welcome and wanted.

Nicely done, Imhiriel!

Title: Cold Be Hand and Heart and Bone · Author: Imhiriel · Races:
Villains: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 286
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 04:03:10
Spoilers!
Imhiriel manages to find one thing scarier than a barrow-wight on its
home-turf. The 19th century fear of being buried alive gets a revival
here, though in point of fact, the drabble is ambiguous: is the Prince
alive and about to awaken to a barrow-wight that will remedy his
condition? Or is the Prince stirring because of the barrow-wight's
incantations?

It's not looking good, whichever way you view it. Gets a nice "Ew...!"
reaction from this reader. Good job!

Title: Forsaken · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 369
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 04:06:32
Spoilers!
Great choice of moments, Imhiriel! That episode in Nargothrond, when
no one would stand by Finrod but a few companions was just bitter - as
is so much of the Silm. Finrod is a warrior who has managed to
overcome the basic fear of death enough to risk it voluntarily, so his
death, however "ignominious", seems likely not to rank as high on the
list of pains as betrayal.



Title: Wars of the Valar · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Longer Works · ID: 3
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 04:32:47
Spoilers!
Namo is my favorite of the Valar for precisely the reason that his
foresight would seem to present such burden, and his role in Arda is
one that is hard to understand sympathetically. I am enjoying
Fiondil's novel immensely for its portrayal of this mysterious Vala
during what amounts to Namo's "childhood": his growing understanding
of his role and his powers, his feelings of inferiority compared to
his more powerful brethren, and, of course, his flourishing love for
Vaire.

The mixture of canon with science--particularly astronomy--appeals to
this science geek immensely! It is an ingenious presentation and, at
times, alternatingly clever, funny, and beautiful. Likewise, when
Fiondil takes readers "down to earth" (literally!), the descriptions
of the different worlds he imagines are lovely.

I started this novel uncertain that someone could write this era of
the Legendarium convincingly and while sustaining interest. Fiondil is
proving me wrong--thank you! :) I really look forward to reading more
of this.

Title: Duty, Honour, Country · Author: Rhapsody · Races: Elves: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 81
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 04:37:31
Spoilers!
["None shall understand me"]: This thread runs throughout Rhapsody's
drabble series about Maglor. Maglor is frequently depicted in stories
as being the softest of the Feanorian brothers, a view that I contest
and know Rhapsody does as well. In "Duty, Honor, Country," Rhapsody
thwarts two persisting fanons about Maglor: that he was evil, driven
solely by his oath, and that he was a wimp unwilling to face his duty.
Rhapsody writes Maglor with a voice of resolution, one with which I
can easily imagine him speaking as he faced his obligations to his
people and his family. Lovely work, Rhapsody!

Title: Out of the Blue · Author: Jael · Races: Elves · ID: 205
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-29 04:49:52
Spoilers!
The second in Jael's series of Elves in the modern day, [Out of the
Blue] is a fun, humorous follow up to the excellent [Not Fade Away].
In this installment Thranduil is again beset by those who think that
no one with his alter ego Aaron Rivers' money and influence can be
entirely on the up and up. This time a complaint is lodged with the
local Child Protective Services agency by the inept FBI agents Duncan
and Fitzhugh. An overworked and underpaid worker named Jane is
assigned the case and gets more than she bargained for at the strange
Mr. Rivers' compound. The events unfold through the point of view of
this worker as she meets the family and the precocious offspring of
"Leif", the child suspected of being abused and brainwashed by his kin.

The story has many funny touches, such as the youngster Galen's
archery lessons, and "Hal" the guard's obsession with NASCAR and
attraction to Jane. There is also a bite your nails moment as Galen
innocently mentions the fall of the towers which leads Jane to wonder
if there isn't something more sinister at work among the Rivers clan
than is readily apparent.

Jael's modern Elves stories are filled with a myriad of delightful
little moments and insights that make them excellent reads and stand
up to multiple rereadings as well. A day in Chicago with the Rivers
family is always a great way to spend an afternoon.


Title: A New Day · Author: Oshun · Genres: Longer Works · ID: 35
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-29 04:51:23
"A New Day" is part of Oshun's ongoing tales of Fingon and Maedhros
(pardon me, but try as I may, I can't navigate the Quenya names), a
quasi-love-story-political-drama. It might most pithily be described
as the Silmarillion as told in the bedroom—or Tolkien a la Henry
James, the intimate story.

Oshun's specialty is to delve deep into the minutiae of Middle-earth
and give them a deeply personal spin. Thus on page one we find out how
Fingon experiences the new Sun, as opposed to the seemingly kinder
light of the Two Trees. It is very much an otherwordly sensation,
rendered in mundane terms. In this way Oshun makes Middle-earth very
much her own place. She achieves what I think of as the very best
fanfic: it's recognizably Tolkien's world, but also entirely Oshun's.
This is the melding of the legendarium with the author's own vision.
Thus we also learn what that new Sun did to Maedhros's brilliant red
locks as he hung on Morgoth's walls.

I am not a big Elf buff, but Oshun draws me in and makes me see the
all-too-often missing "human" side of these immortal beings. In this
case, Maedhros is going through a quite understandable episodes of
PTSD as he attempts to bring the madness that is the Noldor under
control. The reader ends up feeling sympathy and admiration for the
character, as well as enjoying the well-written and erotic love scenes.



Title: Fit for a King · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 217
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-29 05:02:55
Spoilers!
There's a very funny punchline at the end of this piece, but I have to
say that I don't think it would have been nearly so effective without
the excellent setup. Knowing the ending, I love how the title has a
double-meaning.

The easygoing atmosphere is thoroughly set: First, there's Aragorn's
casual "Ranger" persona, followed by Eomer's knowing smirk. Faramir
comes across as slightly more formal in a sense - what I would expect,
actually - but we get a nice taste of the whole "master of beasts and
Men" thing. (In truth, I will confess up front that one of the most
appealing aspects about this drabble is the divine image Imhiriel
constructs of these three particular nobles lounging about together.)

Wonderful description of the horse and his attitude towards the
two-leggers who are appropriately admiring him. And the last line is
terrific, both by the clever application the author makes from past
history between these two, and by Eomer's gleeful delivery of the
news. I can just picture this playing out frequently in future
communications between the kingdoms!

Title: Cuts Gone Wrong · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Mid Third Age:
Eriador · ID: 156
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-29 05:03:34
If you're wondering if you want to read this story, there's only one
thing you need to know: It's Dwimordene. And nobody writes Aragorn better.

Here we have a young Aragorn in trouble with a Bree farmer--in and of
itself a dramatic situation fraught with interest. Add to that a long
riff on Ranger business, full of fascinating detail and references to
Middle-earth far and wide, so that you imagine yourself there at the
table with them, beer and pipeweed in hand, and we fans of the
Northern Dunedain are in heaven. I won't say more for fear of spoilers.

Of course, I especially love this one because it was a birthday gift
for me.


Title: The Blessing of the Waters · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Romance: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 61
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-29 05:04:32
["The Blessing of the Waters"] is a gentle but bittersweet look at one
of the last happy moments between two long-time partners. Their joy is
presented against the husband's long record of deep, aching losses of
so many of those he has loved. This serves to both sweeten our glimpse
into his current contentment and happiness and to throw the ending
into stark contrast, heightening our understanding of how it must have
impacted him.

There's so many beautiful descriptions that evoke the emotions of the
reader: it really feels like we share this intimate moment, can know
both the passion and ease between these two. (I particularly liked
this sentence: ["She fit easily into my waiting arms, with grace and
the comfort of long practice."] It neatly and perfectly illustrates
the length of their bond.) The water theme is gorgeous and
well-utilized, tightly knitting together many strands of the man's life.

Title: Handy With A Sword · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 437
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-29 05:05:16
This is a wonderfully entertaining series that touches on one aspect
of Eowyn and Faramir's relationship you don't see explored too often!
I like it best, though, for how it gives Eowyn's shieldmaiden skills a
chance to shine - and perhaps helps develops a better appreciation in
Faramir for certain facets of her personality.

The author does a good job with the action descriptions while
observing the limitations imposed by the wordcount, and each drabble
both stands on its own and flows naturally within the series. Stellar
interactions throughout, and an absolutely perfect capper with the
final drabble.

Title: Full Brothers in Blood · Author: Oshun · Genres: Humor · ID: 212
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 05:07:56
Spoilers!
Turgon does not often get a starring role in Silmarillion
stories--surprising when one considers the importance of his character
to the histories--but he is often overshadowed by his impetuous
siblings in his family and his handsome, courageous lords in his own
city. It is perhaps fitting, then, that Oshun's story about Turgon
shows a young boy trying to find his place in the world and always
certain that he's somehow not good enough to be noticed among the many
notables in his family.

In "Full Brothers in Blood," Turgon is still a small child, and most
of the story is from his point-of-view. Reading it, I have many
flashbacks to childhood and the uncertain and irrational way that
children tend to look at the world. Certain details of this story are
brilliant for getting a child's PoV exactly right: for example, his
urge to blurt out anything to keep Fingon's interest, his inability to
perceive the horrid tone in which his excessively polite words are
uttered, the fragile hope of such small joys in life as a good dessert
or a fun afternoon. At the same time, in the dynamics between the many
members of his family--which Oshun always writes exceptionally
well--one can see how Turgon will develop into the character we know
in The Silmarillion, a character who is not entirely sympathetic as
Tolkien writes him but who becomes much more relatable after a story
like Oshun's shows the many small hurts and misunderstandings that
shaped the adult he would become.

A brilliant story of character and family dynamics, "Full Brothers in
Blood" comes with my highest recommendations!

Title: The Revenge of Curufin's Horse · Author: Moreth · Genres: Humor
· ID: 139
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 05:16:32
Spoilers!
I sometimes wonder how events, songs, and conversations that stood no
chance of being overheard made it into the loremasters' accounts. In
Moreth's vignette, she describes one way that the "Song of Parting"
made it into (in the author's own words) the public domain, and how
Celegorm and Curufin get their small comfort after being humiliated by
Beren and Luthien. Original and clever--definitely worth a look and a
laugh!

Title: Solid Frodo: Hobbit Espionage Action · Author: Princess Artemis
· Times: Modern Times · ID: 413
Reviewer: permilea · 2008-11-29 05:20:07
Spoilers!
Hobbits + War Video Game? Wha?

I don't remember what led to my first reading this story years ago, in
the flush of my movie-inspired LOTR obsession. It was probably in the
favorites list of one of my favorite LOTR authors. I doubt it would
have ever caught my attention without such a recommendation. And that
would have been a shame.

This story is funny, adventurous, and frightening. You Frodo h/c fans
-- there's stuff for you. Want Sam's love and loyalty and good hobbit
sense? You got it. Pippin's curiosity and mischief, Merry's
practicality and cleverness? All here.

The thing about this story is, they are still hobbits. The author,
with great skill, humor and impressive LOTR-savvy (yes, she knows her
Tolkien!), has inserted them into a tale where their hobbity nature
shines even more. Frodo is still Frodo -- "the broodingest hobbit
ever" (as Merry says in the story), burdened by the ring, fiercely
protective of it and his fellow hobbits, a reluctant hero. Sam is
still Sam -- fiercely protective of Frodo, risking his life to lead
the others through wolf-infested regions with a wolf-cub in his arms
licking his face. Our practical Merry is the planner and scavenger,
and our Pippin is as curious and mischievous and hungry as ever. Their
banter is delightful to read.

But it isn't all banter. The world they've been plopped into is
violent, and the author does not flinch from showing that as well.

Yes, the title might put you off. Don't let it! If you adore our
favorite hobbits and love to see them not only cope but rise above yet
another quest that the 'Big Folk' reluctantly hand over to them, then
try this one. Hobbits are most unexpected creatures and they are
always surprising you. Rather like this story.


Title: Lessons from the Mountain · Author: MithLuin · Races: Elves:
Incomplete · ID: 221
Reviewer: Larner · 2008-11-29 05:22:18
Spoilers!
Although he was the last of the sons of Feanor and Nerdanel to enter
the Halls of Mandos, nevertheless Maedhros, as the eldest of the six
who suffered death as the result of their sharing in the oath made by
their father, was the first to admit the lessons he learned when
fastened to the mountainside by Morgoth and thus the first to accept
both the judgment of the Valar and the healing offered those whose
spirits were wounded perhaps worse than had been their bodies.

Now accepting his own punishment, it is now Maedhros's intent to see
his family restored as much as is possible; but how it is to be done
is the question. Even his mother has died of the grief engendered by
the knowledge of the acts of her last two sons. How is he to assist
them to heal, his parents and the five brothers who are there in
Namo's domain?

I now hope we are not kept waiting long for the final chapters of this
tale. It is very well researched and imagined, and told in beautiful
language.

Thank you for this one! And glad to see Fiondil is offering the beta work.

Title: Circle of Silver · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of
Finwe · ID: 717
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 05:36:05
Spoilers!
Keiliss writes Gil-galad and Cirdan at the end of the First Age with
such insight and compassion, and "Circle of Silver" is a fitting
addition to her work. Aside from brilliant characterization, Kei's
writing brings to life the culture of the Elves of Balar and paints a
beautiful scenic backdrop. In this story, Gil-galad learns that
Gondolin has fallen, and he is High King. It is a simple premise, but
what the story reveals is anything but simple. High King of the Noldor
seems, if anything, a perilous honor. None after Finwe held it for
more than a few hundred years, and all met violent or dishonorable
ends. Yet Gil-galad's kingship spans many *thousands* of years--years
that were not without their share of trials. Why, one might ask?

Here, Keiliss's Gil-galad still possesses much of his youthful
innocence. But he also has almost an instinct as a leader and is drawn
foremost to compassion in a way that Tolkien's writings show few of
the Noldor, especially their kings. As Gil-galad struggles to grasp
what is perhaps the most significant event so far in his young life,
he decides to start simply, with empathy and understanding, to make
life better for one person at a time.

This is a profound and lovely story, typical of this author's work. I
recommend it highly.

Title: Kementari · Author: Marta · Times: First Age and Prior · ID: 99
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 05:43:47
Spoilers!
Marta's short story, "Kementari", is a moving glimpse of Yavanna's
melancholy reflections as she spends time in solitude in the gardens
of Lorien.

She has a compelling need to create, yet her exquisite masterpieces,
the Two Trees, were destroyed by unrelenting evil, and she doesn't
believe she has the capacity to re-create them. Her sorrow is profound.

And in her melancholy, she envisions that all of the flora she has
created in Middle-earth is also at risk, and that even the Ents, the
guardians of the trees, will not be able to protect them.

Her sadness is that of any creator who sees the work of their hands
and thoughts and talent destroyed, and it is heart-wrenching to read.

Very powerful work!


Title: DISGUISE: Emissaries · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor: Valar &
Maiar · ID: 56
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 05:52:49
Spoilers!
Fiondil takes a pivotal moment not actually seen in canon and gives
the reader a different view of just what happened when the Valar
decided to send emissaries to Middle-earth to teach the Secondborn and
the Elves what to do in order to deal with Sauron. The initial
discussion between the Powers allows the reader to quickly pick up on
the established characterization of each Vala and Valië through just a
few snippets of description, speech patterns and personality. Like all
of Fiondil's fics, there is a generous amount of humor incorporated
into the tale to counterbalance the serious issues addressed therein.

Námo's report of what Isildur told him before leaving Mandos to go on
to his final destination beyond the Circles of the World is
intriguing, and an interesting way to look at Aragorn's ancestor
beyond the tendency in most fics to blame him for all the grief that
the ring caused in later days.

Like most of the Valar-verse fics, the POV is in Námo's head, and his
evaluation of the first four Maiar selected to participate in the
planned mission succinctly provides the background the reader needs to
associate the powerful Maiar with the Istari they become when they
agree to take on the tasks asked of them.

Pallando and Alatar have weaknesses of resolve the Vala worries might
mean that they fall down on the job. He sees that Curumo is proud and
arrogant, reminding Námo of the Maia who became Sauron. And he is at
least slightly antagonistic when interacting with Aiwendil, who
appears to be the only one who seems to fit the job.

The choice of sending Olórin is almost an afterthought, his name put
into the field by Námo, although it is Manwë who announces him as an
addition to the group. Although Olórin is one of the People of Manwë,
he has served Námo in Mandos, and learned from Nienna. His humility
and cheerful nature is very apparent as he accepts his new calling,
and in sharp contrast to Curumo's haughtiness.

It is when the issue of disguise comes in that the real humor of this
story comes through. After Curumo gripes about having to take on an
incarnate form, Olórin teases him about being out of practice and
proceeds to change into a variety of shapes from an elfling to a Dwarf
to a horse! In the end, it is Olórin who chooses the disguise that
they take on and offers the suggestion that will affect him directly
years later, in Moria.

["How can we truly understand them and help them and win their trust
if we do not suffer with them, both in joy and sorrow?" Olórin answered.

"In other words," Námo said gravely, "you wish to suffer the
possibility of bodily death."

"It seems only fair that we take the same risks as they do simply by
being born as Incarnates," Olórin replied with a shrug.]

The final interaction between Olórin and Námo is guaranteed to elicit
a chortle of laughter from any reader.

Title: A Fitting Occupation · Author: Radbooks · Races: Men: Pre-Ring
War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 601
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 06:04:09
Spoilers!
Radbooks' drabble series, "A Fitting Occupation", is a study of Bard
the Bowman, now King Bard of Dale, as he considers what training is
appropriate for his youngest son, Baird. Apparently, Baird does not
seem well-suited to the scholarly role of diplomat that Bard had
envisioned, so Bard must come up with a creative solution to the dilemma.

I really enjoy the glimpse we get of the father and son when they
interact; Bard's long-suffering and patient manner with his wayward
son -- honed by years of dealing with wayward councilmen and townsmen,
and Baird's initial wondering what he did wrong this time to warrant
being summoned to his father, his overreaction to the idea of being
sent away, which makes him inattentive to the rest of his father's
speech, and his confusion, then joy, when his father's shrewd proposal
finally registers.

These drabbles are well-written and truly a treat to read. Nicely done!

Title: The Houseless · Author: Jael · Genres: Horror · ID: 178
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-29 06:15:54
Returning from a hunting trip during the annual festival of the dead,
remarkably like our Halloween, Legolas finds and befriends a young Elf
woman who appears lost. Brightening at the fact she does not recognize
him as the king's son, Legolas engages her in conversation, finding
her easy to talk to and enjoying her company. But when he escorts her
home, he finds her reluctant to face her parents. She's afraid they
will be angry with her for being out so late. So, gallant lad that he
is, Legolas intervenes on her behalf. The ending may or may not be a
surprise but suffice it to say it is chilling nonetheless.

No one writes the Mirkwood Elves quite like Jael. She manages to
infuse her stories with details of the culture that are as riveting as
they are entertaining. A most unusual tale is this ghost story set in
the Lord of the Rings universe and it is a treat for both fans of the
Mirkwood Elves and fans of the eerie and atmospheric.


Title: Burdens · Author: Meril · Genres: Drama: General Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 219
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 06:19:20
Spoilers!
Meril's drabble series, "Burdens", is about the encumbrances -- both
tangible and emotional -- that the self-exiled Noldor took with them
over the ice of the Helcaraxe on their journey from Aman to
Middle-earth, as told by the thoughts of individual original characters.

What I especially like is the hard-nosed but heart-wrenching view of
the guilt, shame, sorrow, and sense of betrayal of each of the
individuals after the first Kinslaying and the burning of the ships at
Losgar. Though they started out with high hopes and dreams and faith,
no one is left unmarked emotionally by the later events, and this
series makes that clear.

A very powerful and touching series of vignettes. Well done!

Msg# 9591

MEFA Reviews for Saturday, November 29, 2008 (Part Four) Posted by annmarwalk November 29, 2008 - 20:37:28 Topic ID# 9591
Title: GOBLINS: The Herald's Summons · Author: Fiondil · Times: First
Age and Prior · ID: 53
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 06:26:20
Spoilers!
One of my favorite interpretations of SILMARILLION canon characters is
Fiondil's Eonwe. Here we have him in his role as Captain of the Host
of Valinor at the end of the first day of battle in the War of Wrath.
His conversational partner is none other than Arafinwe, the King of
the Noldor in Aman, who is in Middle-earth for the very first time of
his long life.

The crux of the conversation is Arafinwe's distress at having killed
for the first time in his life, first an orc and then an Atan (or
mortal man). Fiondil addresses the myth of orcish origins without
having Eonwe actually state whether or not they had once been
Elvenkind, leaving the reader, as he has Arafinwe, to make their own
decision on whether to believe it or not. But it is the death of the
Man that is the cause of Arafinwe's worry—the worry that by killing
another Child of Ilúvatar, he has committed Kinslaying.

The Herald of Manwë reassures him, but that is followed up with an
exchange between the two that is a classic bit of Fiondil's inimitable
humor, when Arafinwe forgets his son-in-law's Sindarin name.

But the humor slides into a much more serious tone when Eonwe summons
Celeborn and Galadriel to the command tent, and reveals that the
Noldor will be allowed to return to Valinor once the War of Wrath is
over, but that she will not be allowed to come, by order of the Valar.

Celeborn shows his strength and compassion as Arafinwe must deal with
the incipient loss of his final living child when the war is over and
he must return to Aman.

Any story with Eonwe, in Fiondil's Valar-verse, it seems, must include
at least a mention of an oath, and here we get to see him in his role
as Oathkeeper once more. I find myself looking for the moments that
Eonwe's blue bound book appears whenever I read any of Fiondil's tales.

I thoroughly enjoyed the characterization and the way that this little
tale opens up a part of the SIL that I haven't seen dealt with much
before.

Title: The Pillar Perished Is · Author: Imhiriel · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 356
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 06:39:50
Spoilers!
Imhiriel's vignette, "The Pillar Perished Is", is about Feanor on a
stolen Teleri ship during the storm-tossed crossing to Middle-earth,
after the first Kinslaying.

To say that this ficlet is emotionally wrenching is an understatement.
The crossing is violent, with huge waves and tremendous wind and rain;
but Feanor's thoughts and emotions are no less storm-tossed.

His grief at the loss of his father, Finwe, is overwhelming. Imhiriel
uses the words of a poem as an organizing theme for Feanor's thoughts
and feelings, and the technique works very well in this context.

All in all, this is a emotionally powerful vignette. Very well done!

Title: King Stag · Author: Jael · Races: Elves: Mirkwood Elves · ID: 86
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-29 07:00:27
Once upon a time, King Thranduil was a young man smitten by the wiles
of a strange and unusual Avari. What he was willing to go through to
win her is the heart of this story that gives us a glimpse into the
customs of a different group of Mirkwood Elves. Falling for the woman
is one thing, enduring a seemingly endless ritual of mushroom
hallucinogens and carved tattoos is the mark of a true gentleman, and
a true future king.

Thranduil is a fascinating, complex character in Jael's stories and in
this one we learn why he never sailed for Valinor and why he was so
determined to save his beloved Greenwood. This story has a depth and
humor rarely seen in fanfiction and the telling as a flashback of a
brooding and depressed Thranduil is a masterstroke. The contrast
between the rash, stubborn young Elf and the older king with the
weight of the world on his shoulders but the heart of that young man
still beating vibrantly beneath his troubled surface is beautifully
done. It is also a great prequel to another of this year's Jael
nominated stories: [Wayward Sons]

Jael writing about Thranduil. To that I say, "Is anything better? Tell
me it then."


Title: Parting Gifts · Author: Fiondil · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Post-Ring War · ID: 452
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 07:00:42
Spoilers!
This is one of those stories that will make you smile even as you
weep. Fiondil's account of the final parting of Legolas and Gimli on
Tol Eressea is one of the loveliest I've read, and even after multiple
readings, I still have tears on my cheeks and a smile on my lips.

Gimli is concerned about leaving Legolas alone and friendless once he
is gone, and so has conspired with Olorin to make sure that his dear
friend will not fade away from grief.

His last hours are filled with gentle teasing, loving reunions with
old friends and new ones present. Galadriel, who can still make him
mumble and blush; Arafinwe; Ingwe, the High King, and Finrod are
there, as are Elrond and Celebrian. In the end, though, it is Legolas
who sings him to his rest, and Gimli falls into his final sleep at
peace with his long life.

The final scene—an epilogue, if you will—is very much a favorite of
mine of all of Fiondil's Mortals in Mandos tales.

May we all face our departure from Arda with the grace and dignity
that Gimli did.

Title: Call of the Wild · Author: annmarwalk · Genres: Romance:
Drabbles · ID: 94
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 07:11:18
Spoilers!
Ann Marwalk's drabble, "Call of the Wild", is an aptly-named vignette
of a Gondorian maiden who sees a certain magnificently masculine
Rohirric lord in Minas Tirith, and decides on the spot that he will be
hers.

I love the wonderfully evocative language in this drabble: phrases
like [tawny hair and leonine grace] makes my heart go pitty-pat. ;-)

The point of view character, Morwen of Lossarnach, is decisive: she
will have this man as husband. The unspoken message is, "And no one
had better even try to get in my way!" One can't help but admire her
single-mindedness in pursuit of a (very!) worthy cause.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this drabble, not to mention its
companion piece, "Like Calls to Like". Beautifully done!


Title: FAULT: The Doctor Is In · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 545
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 07:11:32
Spoilers!
When Fiondil puts a beverage and food avoidance warning on a story, he
really means it!

This short fic manages to bring in a non Tolkien character that I
never would have thought of, and it works really well!

I've always thought that the Feanorean's were at least on the borders
of psychosis and needed help.

Well, here comes the help, in the person of Dr. Sigmund Freud, broken
English and all. The chaos of the session he holds with the brothers
Feanorian is spot on as are the personalities of each of the ellyn.

I laughed so hard my ribs ached. And I'm darn glad I'd obeyed the
beverage warning when, at the end of the session, the good doctor
turns his attention to Lord Namo! Otherwise I would have had to buy a
new laptop!

Very funny, and very well done!

Title: Wayward Sons · Author: Jael · Races: Elves · ID: 408
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-29 07:23:11
[Wayward Sons] is another of Jael's stories I eagerly anticipated and
one that did not disappoint. On the verge of fading, Thranduil
receives word of strangers entering the Greenwood. He rides out to
discover the party is group of Elves from his past, but even when we
discover their identities and purpose, the biggest surprise is yet to
come.

I will not give more away at this point, but anyone who has been
following Jael's Mirkwood stories needs to read this one. It's a
lovely continuation of the character study began in [King Stag] and
gives us a Thranduil as spiritually dark as we are ever likely to see
him. Jael writes Thranduil's despair palpably and his joy at the
reunion with the returning Elves equally so. Thanks to Jael's vivid
descriptions, the reader is able to share in Thranduil's joys and
sorrows as well. Another great addition to the Jaeliverse.


Title: An Autumn Fair in Halabor · Author: Soledad · Times: Mid Third
Age · ID: 165
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 07:50:40
Spoilers!
Soledad's fine story, "An Autumn Fair in Halabor", covers a period of
days in a Gondorian town of her imagining, filled with distinct and
fascinating original characters, during a time of festival when Gildor
Inglorion and his wandering company of Elves visit.

We get a glimpse of the daily lives and loves of many different
families, all involved in some sort of crafts or trade or otherwise
seeking to earn a living. Their stories are interwoven in realistic
and fascinating ways.

I really enjoy all the fine details, the complexity of the
interrelationships and interactions between the characters; each is
uniquely drawn, both the good and the bad. Halabor appears to be
loosely based upon medieval history, and I enjoyed seeing how things
are done "in the old ways".

This is a fascinating and complex story that I read with pleasure.
Nicely done!


Title: With Hope and Without Hope · Author: docmon · Genres:
Adventure: Incomplete · ID: 466
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:01:45
Spoilers!
Certainly there have been other authors who tried to tackle the
question of what would happen if the Three Hunters had been captured
alongside Merry and Pippin. And there have been a number of stories
built around this theme with varying degrees of success. But what sets
this story apart is that it finds a single turning point and then
shoots off into AU territory while always keeping in mind the canon
story that it parallels. This story is earned. Nothing is taken for
granted, and those events that would affect canon also affect the AU.

The action is also brilliantly related. There are some harrowing chase
sequences and some riveting dialog passages that are as much action as
any battle scene. Particularly after Saruman enters, the verbal
exchanges take on something resembling swordplay. And the drama that
ensues is gripping and dark. The narrative thrills readers both with
what it reveals and what it does not reveal. Sometimes the things that
are left unsaid are the things that really come back to haunt.

Finally, I have to give this story full props for some brilliant
descriptive prowess. The interior of Orthanc comes to mind as a good
example, and you can just see the shadows receding upwards in the
central room. Full and nuanced tale! Well worth the time to read!

Title: To See A World · Author: Nightwing · Genres: Adventure:
Incomplete · ID: 330
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:03:25
Spoilers!
This story was recommend to me when it had about five chapters. I was
hooked from chapter 1 and I have avidly followed it ever since. The
thing that constantly blows me away every time I read is the intensity
of the emotions and the drama. There are no shortcuts here. Nightwing
makes each word count, and the emotional roller coaster is authentic
and real. The readers feel what the characters feel.

But perhaps even more impressive than her grasp on the ability to tug
at readers' heartstrings is Nightwing's ability to describe a room or
a situation without relying on one of the character's primary senses.
And she does it so subtly that at first, it's difficult to pinpoint
what's going on. As Legolas slowly recovers, there's a sense that
something is wrong. Something is not as it should be. But it's hard to
get a feel for what that something is, because Nightwing more than
compensates with touch and sound and smell. By the time readers
realize that they've just experienced the narration of an entire scene
without the benefit of sight, they're just as shocked as Legolas to
realize that the sun is shining outside.

But of course the story doesn't end there, because Nightwing also
crafts a complex plot involving the local town. Fantastic OC
characterization abounds, as well as some very astute characterization
of a pair of struggling canon heroes. All in all, this is a dynamic,
fast-paced tale that pushes all the right boundaries and reminds us at
every turn what it means to ["see a world"].

Title: Tarnished Ivory · Author: Yavie Feels Pretty · Genres:
Adventure: Incomplete · ID: 464
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:04:03
A great start to what looks like a promising AU! I like how attention
is paid to each member of the Fellowship, giving the story a very
ensemble feel. It's as though an epic is in the making, though there's
currently only a couple of chapters available. The stage is set well,
and you can see the thin edge of the knife that the Fellowships walks
and how easy it is to take a step one way or the other. I'm anxious to
see more.

Title: The Wanderer · Author: Lackwit · Genres: Adventure: Incomplete
· ID: 627
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:05:55
Spoilers!
I really like the Odyssey and to see some of its storylines coming
into play as Faramir returns from Harad was a treat! The political
scene in both Harad and Gondor is as complex and difficult as what
might be found in any Greek epic, and Beregond as the loyal companion
is perfectly cast. I love the dark hints given as to what might be
happening, and the betrayal that Faramir reveals in explanation for
his long absence is dark and sinister. The story feels like it's a
mystery unfolding at a brilliant pace that pulls you insistently along
but never rushes you. It allows you time to absorb each new tidbit of
information, which gives you the impression that you might be able to
unravel the truth of what is happening. As well as what Faramir might
intend to do about it.

Characterization is also something of a marvel. Beregond is superb,
but Faramir is absolutely spectacular. You can see the wear of a long
journey, but you can also see the sharp-witted Steward beneath it. But
perhaps the real power of characterization lies in the grim hints and
speculation regarding the canon individuals that have not yet come
into play. Eowyn is portrayed as something of an enigma, which fits
her well enough anyway but her actions here are difficult to fathom.
Aragorn and Arwen, too, are mysteries, and in the meantime, rumors run
rampant. Very powerful beginning to an enthralling ride.

Title: Eagle of the Star · Author: Neoinean · Genres: Adventure:
Incomplete · ID: 327
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:07:54
Spoilers!
Beautifully drawn, this story is an amazingly thorough examination of
Aragorn's years in Rohan. And, I imagine, eventually his years in the
service of Gondor, though the story doesn't stretch quite that far
yet. This story boasts a brilliant mix of characters, action, drama,
angst, and some very astute healing scenes. The glimpses of Rivendell
and Arwen give the story a broad feel without detracting from its true
focus, which is Thorongil. I love how this is a learning experience
both for Aragorn and for all around him. Everyone seems to be growing
together, which is so hard to do as a writer. For a character to grow,
it means they can't come into the story at their peak. They need to
struggle through weaknesses, and balancing those weaknesses against
the seeds of greatness that they contain is a difficult thing to
accomplish. Neoinean seems to have pulled it off seamlessly, though,
and the complexity of the plot and action lend to a very real, very
visceral, and very plausible journey for both Thorongil and readers.
The elves are full and complete characters, the Rohirrim boast a rich
and vibrant culture, and in the midst of it all, Aragorn starts the
long road to destiny. Engrossing WIP!

Title: The Web of Darkness · Author: Soledad · Genres: Adventure:
Incomplete · ID: 101
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:08:57
Spoilers!
Oh, this is simply fantastic! First of all, what a great plot by the
Witch-king. I love the idea of bringing a drow to Middle-earth in
order to wreck havoc on Mirkwood. Superb appearances and insights from
Khamul abound, too, which makes me even happier. But then I just
laughed when I saw which drow got pulled over into Tolkien's canon. Of
all the drow they could pick, they just had to pick Drizzt!

The first meeting between Drizzt and Mirkwood Elf was brilliantly
depicted. You could feel the tension and the uncertainty, and I love
the mental acrobatics of the entire Mirkwood gang as they try to
figure out just where this strange elf came from. The emergence of
culture clash between Sindar and Silvan elves was also a great
addition, and one that Drizzt could certainly appreciate. But even
more than all that, I loved the dwarves and Drizzt's interaction with
them. His own memories from the Forgotten Realms series served as good
bridge for crafting friendships. Fun stuff, all around.

And then there's the action. Wow. Action sequences are always
difficult to pull off, but Soledad seems to have no trouble painting
rich and engrossing battles. A wonderful tale and an amazing blending
of two different worlds. Very well done!

Title: Moon of the Sea · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Second and
Early Third Age · ID: 213
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:10:02
Spoilers!
I really enjoyed this snapshot approach to Elendil's wife, who gets a
name in this story! I love how both she and Elendil are clearly tied
to the sea. It infuses everything they do and every place they walk.
Even childbirth is endured by remembering the long waves. It gives
these snapshots a tie that binds them together outside of the
characters, which makes the story feel fluid and smooth even as it
jumps through Isilme's life.

I was also impressed by how much growth the characters went through.
You see the child Isilme, and you see some of the qualities that will
be present when she is an adult, though they're not quite fully
developed yet. I was also touched by the images of Elendil as a father
and his devotion to family. I can just imagine that devotion turning
to country and kingdom during the Last Alliance.

Title: The Last Messenger: A Tale of Numenor · Author: Fiondil ·
Times: Second and Early Third Age · ID: 8
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:11:23
Spoilers!
Wonderful story! Lots of action, plenty of suspense, and some
fascinating culture exchanges on the part of Laurendil and the
Elendili. The strength of the characters is in turn one of the
greatest strengths of the story. These are full, complete characters
brought to life with brilliant dialog and surprising insights. The
historical background for the order lent even more detail to the
characters, and the political climate of Numenor was present in nearly
every action. These are desperate people living dangerous lives, and
that fact was never forgotten, even amidst the humor.

One of the other great things about this story is just how well it's
put together. The search for Fiondil was a theme from the very
beginning, though they didn't rescue him until over halfway through
the story. Finding Eanur was a great surprise, especially since
Laurendil's grief at his passing had been a very real and profound
thing several chapters earlier. It was interesting to see his
reaction, particularly given his relationship to the Valar. Boromir's
sacrifice was heart-breaking, and his foretelling of Numenor's fall
was another blow. Wonderful story filled with both hope and grief!

Title: Faithful · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Second and Early Third
Age · ID: 105
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:12:33
Spoilers!
What a twisted political tangle Amrazar finds for himself! And for all
of Belfalas. I've haven't seen many stories detailing the time around
the kin-strife, but this seems to boil down through all the politics
and hit the heart of the matter. The conflict is clearly narrated, and
Amrazar's dilemma is compelling. I love the imagery of the swan and
the metaphor Amrazar draws from it. I also loved the opening imagery
of a growing storm off the coast and the idea that Dol Amroth has
always been a place where people can find shelter from that storm.
These narrations of the environment create some powerful symbolism for
the turmoil currently affecting Gondor.

I also enjoyed the second section and Castamir's eagerness as he opens
Amrazar's response. His ambition is clear, and it seems as though he
never doubted the reply. Great characterization all around and
excellent look at a piece of Gondor's history that could probably due
with more scrutiny from the fandom.

Title: Nightfall · Author: Jael · Times: Second and Early Third Age ·
ID: 87
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:14:37
Spoilers!
Wow! Amazing story. Huge and epic and so very aware of its time and
place and the characters that infuse it. Thranduil is perfect. He is
every inch the woodland king, even though Galion keeps thinking of him
as Prince. The gamble he took was a dangerous one, and I love the idea
that Thranduil himself insists on taking part in the venture. Given
all that has happened and all that the elves have had to endure, I can
only imagine how distasteful it must be to dress in the garb of orcs.
And to add insult to injury, I love the verbal exchange between
Thranduil and Erestor, who makes a compelling cameo that beautifully
illustrates that tension that infused the Last Alliance. Thranduil's
response was a fantastic stroke of characterization, and I dearly
loved the follow-up when all was said and done. Even though Erestor is
forgiven, Thranduil's still going to get in the final strike.

Speaking of striking, the battle sequence in this story is brilliant.
The scope is huge, but even in its massive size, it is easy to
visualize. Jael does a superb job of narrating an enormous undertaking
and boiling it down so that the reader can follow the action of both
Thranduil's group and everyone else. I especially loved the
involvement of the dwarves, and I loved even more the side note that
Thranduil considers them ["doughty warriors"], even if he says it with
an odd look. I can only imagine the memories that such a remark had to
conjure.

Finally, there is the ending, in which Thranduil mourns a father while
Galion mourns a son. For all its epic scope, this story finds profound
meaning in a quiet, simple closing scene. All in all, wonderfully
drawn, powerfully narrated, and beautifully concluded. Thank you for
such a remarkable story, Jael!

Title: A Perfect Impression · Author: weepingnaiad · Times: Second and
Early Third Age · ID: 494
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:15:35
Spoilers!
What a touching family scene! The power of the writing is such that
the emotions are crystal clear and easily emulated by readers. The
complication that Thranduil and Saervain were a political match rather
than one made from love added an interesting sidenote, and the
resolution of that conflict made the scene even more nuanced. Very
enjoyable!

Title: U elyë, Ar-Pharazôn · Author: Elitihien · Times: Second and
Early Third Age · ID: 486
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:15:47
Spoilers!
Powerful little piece! The despair and condemnation ring out as
Tar-Miriel watches Numenor sink. There are quite a few pieces that
depict these last moments as Elendil escapes and the Queen sinks
beneath the waves, but this is one of the most compelling I've ever
seen. She faces her death and regards it as both a gift and a doom,
but she never seems to shrink from it. And there she passes her
husband (and most of the rest of Numennor) in accepting what she is
and what her fate will be. The narrative details depicting the sea are
excellent, and it isn't hard to get a mental picture of what is
happening. Beautiful story!

Title: Whatever Harm Encroached · Author: Nieriel Raina · Times:
Second and Early Third Age · ID: 708
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:16:39
Spoilers!
The imagery in this story is truly remarkable. Readers can feel the
cold winter seeping into their bones, and as this hunter hunts,
readers crouch along with him, watching the deer come to life as
though they were truly there. Even afterwards, as the identity of
these characters are revealed and the story becomes a little more
distant, the narrative still manages to paint a vivid and compelling
picture. The small detail of Legolas rubbing his hands together even
though he is safely within the elven stronghold gives readers a sense
of just how cold it is and how the elves have been pushed to the point
where everyone is now a hunter. Of course, the true star in this story
is Thranduil, who is wonderfully realized and definitely proves the
claim made by Bilbo that he was the greatest of Greenwood's kings.
Lovely story and excellent depiction of life in Mirkwood during the
Long Winter.

Title: The Strength of Men · Author: Savageseraph · Times: Second and
Early Third Age · ID: 584
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:17:12
Spoilers!
Dark and fascinating. The tension between Elrond and Isildur is
palpable, and I love that both are able to offer up arguments that
feel, for the most part, sound and logical. Isildur's are, of course,
tainted, but there's enough truth and feeling behind them that you can
see this is truly how he feels and how he thinks. That's the other
thing that is so compelling about this little story: You can see the
beginnings of the Ring's influence. It doesn't have complete hold. Not
yet. But it's definitely started to work on Isildur. Great little
snapshot into the end (literally) of the Last Alliance.

Title: Long Memories · Author: Bodkin · Times: Second and Early Third
Age · ID: 310
Reviewer: Thundera Tiger · 2008-11-29 08:18:20
Spoilers!
The tension between Willing and Unwilling has always been something of
a fascination for me, and when you add into that the tension that
always seems to rise up whenever Feanor's sons (or grandson) get
involved, it's like a political gold mine. And there are a lot of
stories that explore these tensions, but I think this particular story
might be among the best because it doesn't necessarily focus on the
big picture. It's certainly aware of the big picture, but the crux of
the story is carried by just a few individuals who have let their
emotions and prejudices run away with their common sense. It examines
the clash of culture on a microcosm, which allows the reader to see
exactly how this drama played out for the average elf. The mentions of
Gil-galad, Finarfin, Celeborn, and Galadriel gave the story a broad
feel as though it were encompassing all the elves, and the appearance
of Celebrimbor firmly anchored the presence of the Feanor gang. But
the story never moved from its true focus, which is what makes it so
powerful. But perhaps best of all, no one in this tale is completely
right or wrong. Bodkin doesn't play favorites. All sides of the coin
are told, and each side is given equal voice. Fascinating story!

Title: Wizards' Pupils · Author: Altariel · Races: Men: Minas Tirith ·
ID: 108
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:25:39
Delightful - I love your Faramir. And, come to that, his family. A
most pleasurable read.

Title: Star-songs of the Eorlingas · Author: Tanaqui · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 291
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 08:27:10
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's extraordinary drabble series, "Star-songs of the Eorlingas",
was written for my birthday, and I confess that every time I try to
describe my delight in these vignettes, I become tongue-tied. I am
afraid I don't have the words to praise it as highly as it deserves.

The Rohirrim seem to be a bardic culture; songs and stories were
recounted around the fire and passed along through countless
generations. And they [love best the plains], rather than large
cities, where a horizon-to-horizon sweep of the nightly procession of
sparkling sky-travellers can be appreciated in their full glory.

The fine companion series to this one, "Heaven's Embroidered Cloths",
covers Gondorian legends of the origins of the constellations, as
related by Faramir; this series depicts Eowyn's equivalent Rohirric
myths... which are truly distinctive, and have a decidedly Rohirric
flavor to them.

The language is truly exquisite, and captures the rhythm,
alliteration, and vivid imagery of the Rohirrim brilliantly. For
example, the first drabble is actually a poem called "The Hunter",
about Bema (Orome), and this is an excerpt: [From far-flung lands he
brought the fathers of the foals grazing our grass.] The enticingly
Rohirric flavor sparkles.

The legends that Eowyn relates are about the same constellations as in
the Gondorian series, but are uniquely suited to the Rohirrim
perspective; for example, one of the constellations is called the
Mearh, and another is the Horsefly.

I especially loved the glimpses of canon sprinkled throughout. For
example, the Hunter will not hunt the Boar until the foes of Rohan
have been felled, which is an echo of the story of the "real-life"
King Folca from the Appendices. But the bits that Tanaqui imagined
herself are also fascinating. For example, Bema wields the Eagles as
one would in falconry, to attack creatures of darkness.

This is truly a brilliant series, with vivid imagery and lilting
language. I am humbled to have been thought worthy of such an
exquisite gift.

Msg# 9592

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Morning Set, Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 5:49:40 Topic ID# 9592
Title: Hide the Knives · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Humor: Gondor
· ID: 485
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:28:13
Poor Aragorn - he's a brave man returning to Arwen's side at that
moment! Still, it's true that it doesn't take long to forget just how
much you want to torture your husband during labour - and the presence
of a new-born Eldarion is almost a guarantee of his father's safety. A
lovely moment.

Title: The Lost Restored · Author: Larner · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor · ID: 59
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:33:51
It's good to see Frodo recognise that Gollum saved him from something
that he would most certainly have felt was worse than death. Things
are always so much more complex than simple black hat / white hat. And
the scent of violets - you are so right that fragrance is powerful in
summoning the past.

Title: The Myth of the One Ring's Power · Author: Dreamflower ·
Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 532
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-29 08:39:13
Dreamflower offers an insightful and carefully referenced analysis of
the strengths and limitations of the One Ring's power, and the various
motivations of those who experience its seduction.

It is thought-provoking in the way a good essay should be, causing me
at various times to agree, disagree, and wander off on tangents. I
absolutely agree with the basic premise of the Ring's--and
Sauron's--blind spot regarding the appeal of power. However, I'm not
so sure that Boromir's fall was temporary, but rather his repentance
that might have been short-lived had the Ring once again come within
his range. And the tangent: Grishnákh is a fascinating case, as
Dreamflower so observantly notes. We are indeed left to speculate [and
I look forward to discussing him when we get to that point in the
reading group!]...


Title: Symbols of Love · Author: Larner · Genres: Adventure · ID: 130
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:39:39
I like Aragorn's sentimental side! He clings to evidence of love from
those who matter to him - and he is teaching the two young men some
important lessons. Not to mention that riding out with their fathers
and loyal guards much be enjoyable. Elboron and Eldarion grew up in
such a different world.

Title: Creation Myths · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama: General
Drabbles · ID: 300
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-29 08:42:34
In wonderfully poetic language reminiscent at times of another
"creation myth," William Blake's "The Tyger," Tanaqui paints two
portraits of the creative process: one gloriously messy, the other
obsessive and driven. Both produce magnificent results, but the peril
of the latter approach is clear. A lovely and profound pair of drabbles!

Title: Now the Green Blade Riseth · Author: annmarwalk · Genres:
Drama: Ring War Drabbles · ID: 37
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:42:45
The Gaffer might not realise it yet, but the Wrath of Sam has become
something of which to be wary!

Title: Least Expected · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Alternate Universe:
Drabbles · ID: 512
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:44:58
Ouch! That's a nasty twist of fate!

Title: Bibliophile · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Romance: Drabbles ·
ID: 370
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:47:25
Eowyn is being polite there, I think! I'm glad they can find better
uses of their time than reading laments.

Title: A Large Bold Hand · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 10
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:49:29
I like to see Elrohir working on Elf/Dwarf relations. Good
bridge-building, Ori.

Title: Reflections in the Smoke · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times:
Late Third Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 294
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:53:30
Job done! It must have felt really - odd. Gandalf had spent so long on
this task - and had the faith to put the outcome in the hand of
others. Home seems a good idea - although I don't know how much he'll
enjoy is. He's had too long under a wand'ring star.

Title: They Also Serve · Author: Marta · Times: Late Third Age · ID: 365
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 08:58:06
There are the stresses of life - and then there's baking. Arwen chose
a good way - and a good place - to deal with her worries. I wonder if,
one day, she'll seek the same solace in the kitchens of the Citadel?
Edhwen is just what she needs, too - someone who understands and will
offer that universal panacea; a good cup of tea.

Title: The Conscience of the King · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor · ID: 649
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 09:00:59
A good thing that Eomer's more reasonable side won out - but he will
be lonely without his sister. And an even better thing he won't have
to wait too long for Lothiriel!

Title: No Regrets · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 490
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 09:03:25
Just as well Faramir inherited when he did - for he would never grudge
Aragorn the throne. Unlike his father!

Title: Unwilling · Author: Elena Tiriel · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 64
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 09:09:57
Holding on beyond reason - but everyone has a breaking point. His time
is come.

Title: For the Want of ... · Author: Larner · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor · ID: 681
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 09:12:15
The flap of a butterfly's wings ...

Title: The Last Words · Author: Rhapsody · Genres: Drama: Featuring
the Noldor · ID: 409
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 09:22:02
To lose her love to another woman would have been bad enough - but to
have those dratted jewels take him! I, too, wonder why the Valar
released Morgoth - and why they were so naive as to fail to pick up on
what he was doing. Nerdanel is probably better off out of Feanor's
web, but I don't know that she'll ever really feel that way.
Especially after he takes all her sons and does his best to shatter
the peace of Aman.

Title: Faeries · Author: Pearl Took · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond ·
ID: 304
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 09:30:18
Kids are horrible little beasts. But Pippin is a very good - and
surprisingly observant - father. And Faramir will find that knowledge
is power!

Title: A Dream Come True · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Romance:
Gondor · ID: 162
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 09:40:24
Naughty Eomer! Although I am glad to see that he isn't interested in
the ministrations of cheap wh... ladies of the night. And I suppose he
is too intoxicated to tell the difference.

And almost as naughty (if not more) Lothiriel!! A good thing that her
brothers have taught her to employ unladylike tactics that target
men's weaker points.

They deserve each other - and I hope they will both be very happy. I
love the thought of the pair of them managing their family and
advisers into pushing them together. Middle-earth should watch out -
these two are unstoppable.


Title: Seeing Stars · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond · ID: 360
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 09:49:34
New fathers are - as Faramir half-remembered - highly entertaining to
those round them. I daresay Eowyn doesn't care, just at that moment,
but it's a shame she couldn't see the dancing in celebration of her
son's arrival. Typically Faramir to see his son as heir to the past -
I love his joy in the Tree, and his conversation with his brother.

It's good to see Aragorn looking after his Steward - and being
fatherly. I wonder if he is comtemplating the possible arrival of his
own son? It would be rather interesting to see a companion piece where
Faramir looks after his King.

Title: Arwen in the Afternoon · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres:
Romance: Elven Lands · ID: 244
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 10:01:09
Spoilers!
Ah the cost and labour of love. I love this piece written mostly from
Halbarad's perspective a lot. Even though he often refers to Aragorn's
absence as unwanted, his reasons for doing so are twofold: the
yearning to be with the one he loves and the responsibility Aragorn
has towards his people. If I am not mistaken GA had this piece or
perhaps a different piece under the same title, it matter naught it is
reworked, you really cannot recognise much of what was and what a
piece this is! I loved to read how Halbarad struggled with both
worlds, Rivendell as an enchanted vale just jumps of the page and his
own society in the Angle. I cannot help to think that Halbarad fights
it so much, that just as Gilraen he would not ever let go of the
freedom of Rivendell once he gives into it: this conflict might not be
clearly outspoken, yet it can be perceived. The end especially has a
fabulously different point of view which was just as vivid all the
same with the events written with elegantly implicitly. Besides that,
I find the way the author balances the level of angst and drama with
humour quite outstanding!

Title: Tying Notes · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Late Third Age: Gondor
Drabbles · ID: 378
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 10:02:19
Spoilers!
Imhiriel's drabble, "Tying Notes", depicts Faramir serenaded with
music in Harad, and his fascination with Haradric musicianship.

Imhiriel does an excellent job of scene-setting with her evocative
language, immersing us in the exotic smells, sounds, and rhythms of
the scene.

But we are left with a real admiration for Faramir, in his grasp of
the Haradric language and his interest in the concepts behind the
music and in the unfamiliar instruments. If he were alive today, he
would be an engineer -- the very best kind of engineer, who profoundly
appreciates art for itself, while at the same time seeking to
understand aspects of it intellectually.

And the Haradrim gift him in a way that they hope will lead to closer
relationships between their peoples; the double meaning of the clever
title then becomes clear.

Very well done!


Title: A Woman in Few Words: The Character of Nerdanel and Her
Treatment in Canon and Fandom · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 107
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 10:14:16
This essay serves two interesting purposes: what is known about
Nerdanel in canon and in a way the debunking of fanon around her ánd
then there is the statistical number crunching Dawn has done to
measure Nerdanel's popularity. It clearly shows to me how difficult it
actually is to create such a benchmark, but you did immensely well
with such a Herculean task given the different structures of the
archives available! Dawn's logical reasoning and her own musings on
how Nerdanel is so popular (hah, take that Lúthien!) is more than
enough to have more plot bunnies spawned and the appendix/citations
are muchly appreciated once this writer cannot resist those ideas to
write. This is an essay to keep bookmarked given the contents, easy to
navigate structure and yes, the bibliography. Thanks so much for this
Dawn!

Title: Circle of Silver · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of
Finwe · ID: 717
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 10:29:50
Spoilers!
This is a beautiful gap filler kind of story which conveys so much.
There is the current situation of the coast of Beleriand suffering
from Morgoth's attacks, the realms that tumble down and yet a young
Gil-galad treats himself to a well deserved rest in the sun. What a
gorgeous image Keiliss! What I so love is how she sketches the young
soon to be High King here, a born leader (even though later on he does
reason that he was raised for this purpose), with compassion to give.
The transferral power just goes as I kind of always expected: quietly
and with respect to those who ruled and fell before. Even though I
feel sad that such losses were necessary, it was meant to be.
Gil-galad slides smoothly in his role, but not forgetting the promised
made to little Erestor moments before (I love the idea he came from
Gondolin a lot! You give him an intriguing background with a few pen
strokes), he takes his first steps as High King with grace and the
mantle of compassion which just suits him (although I hope for him he
still can steal away afternoons to relax in the sun in that hollow at
the sea). The story is told at a gentle pace with elegant narrative
not overdone, just enough for the reader to play with and form an
image in her/his own mind.

Title: Messengers from the West · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 98
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 10:31:35
Hah! A cunning plan! One that worked out rather effectively, too. How
delightful to have that pair turn up to celebrate your birthday. I
daresay Estel ... Aragorn ... no - Thorongil was happy as Larry to see
them both.

Title: Eucatastrophe: The Return · Author: Dreamflower · Genres:
Alternate Universe · ID: 617
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 10:47:13
I do love the thought of the barriers coming down and the way west
becoming two way traffic.

Sam might well have found it harder to become the important hobbit he
did in the book, if Frodo had come back and resumed his Mastery of Bag
End. He might well have slotted back into being a servant - valued,
doubtless, but Frodo's right-hand hobbit rather than a hobbit of
substance. It's a joy to see a happy and healthy Frodo, though - the
heart of his extended family, loved from Aman to the borders of
Mordor, just as he deserved.

Msg# 9593

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Morning Set, Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 5:51:05 Topic ID# 9593
Title: Comfort · Author: Bodkin · Races: Elves: House of Elrond · ID: 161
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 10:49:41
Spoilers!
Bodkin's story, "Comfort", shows Elladan at Rivendell trying to cheer
up his brother; Elrohir is depressed over the death of yet another
Dunedain Ranger with whom they had fought.

The opening image is vivid and realistic, as is the humor that Elladan
uses to chivvy his brother into cheering up and taking better care of
himself.

I have myself written of the horrors of the sons of Elrond fighting
for centuries alongside the Dunedain, watching them die, taking sad
word home to the new-minted widows and children. Bodkin does so with
an rare sensitivity to the feelings of these immortal beings who ally
themselves so closely with mortals.

It is a good thing that these brothers can count on each other, not
only in battle but also for emotional support when the demands of
protecting their corner of Middle-earth becomes too great.

Well done!


Title: Shall We Dance? · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men:
Steward's Family · ID: 93
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 10:56:17
This is an absolutely delightful story - Boromir was almost
statesmanlike, Faramir was wise, and I loved Lothiriel, who proved
that her destiny was most definitely to rule highly resistant and
difficult men.

Title: Tide of Destiny - Part One: Choices · Author: Lady Bluejay ·
Genres: Drama: Incomplete · ID: 159
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:04:01
I have really enjoyed the amount I have managed to read of this story
- and I look forward to grabbing some time from somewhere in order to
be able to read more. (I hope that scuzzy prince is suffering - and
that Lothiriel is managing to keep a couple of steps ahead of him.) I
love the way you present Eomer and Lothiriel.

Title: Leaving Home · Author: annmarwalk · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 39
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:15:13
What a delightful little Elboron story - I daresay he'll be most
relieved to find that court clothes are not that important in Rohan!
And he'll have a tremendous time and make some marvellous memories,
even if he will miss his Modor and Ada. Unsurprisingly, I loved the
references to Nanny, who must be one of my favourite OCs of all time.

Title: Like Roses over a Fence · Author: Ellie · Times: First Age and
Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 110
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:23:36
I can't help but feel for those left behind - Indis, Anaire, Nerdanel
and all the many unnamed mothers, sisters and lovers, whose stories
were never important enough to tell. Blooming Morgoth - how the Valar
can have been dim enough to let him loose among them all! Hadn't they
learned anything?

Some very symbolic dead-heading going on here - and three strong
survivors making some decisions.

Title: Spiced Wine On A Snowy Day · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races:
Elves: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 558
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:26:04
A delicious way to sit out a snowy day - and contemplate Hope.

Title: The Librarian · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Races: Elves: Family
· ID: 700
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:27:20
Maybe a bit of Lanatus would be a good penalty ...

On the other hand, Tionel is much more likely to make Legolas an
enthusiastic student - and the stories he imparts are excellent. Every
child needs someone who will grass on the adventures of their
perfectly-behaved, mature parents.


Title: Reparation · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men · ID: 296
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:30:44
Andrahar is a man of enormous courage - and determined to do what it
right. And Brandmir has been good for him - offered him a bit of
honest admiration and respect that is unclouded by adult expectations.

Title: Circle of Silver · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of
Finwe · ID: 717
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:42:56
Poor Gil-galad - it's not much of a prospect, being reared to become a
rallying point. And he is so young to have to take on such a
responsibility. Three and a half thousand years isn't much when you're
an elf - but I'm glad he started his rule as he went on, with kindness
and consideration for those who looked to him. He was a delight with
young Erestor - a lesson on how to earn unending loyalty, I would think.

Title: The Misty Month · Author: Le Rouret · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Post-Ring War · ID: 454
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:47:37
What a lovely story this is - I have thoroughly enjoyed discovering
how Legolas gained his reputation as the midwife of choice to the
aristocracy of Gondor.

And, as I recall, it's a pretty accurate description of childbirth
too! I feel for Eowyn.

Title: In Passing · Author: Altariel · Races: Men · ID: 104
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 11:54:58
Very touching - Faramir as an old man, passing knowledge on to the
restless young. And the pictures - of the Black Captains and the White
Lady. Perhaps, one day, Beren will remember a wet morning and treasure
the time spent with his great-grandfather.

Title: Dol Amroth Yule · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres:
Adventure · ID: 295
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 12:00:22
Not one of Andrahar's most shining moments. But one of Hethlin's, I
think. And he had the courtesy to recognise her achievements.

I love an Elrohir addicted to oranges.

Title: One Summer Day · Author: annmarwalk · Genres: Humor: Gondor ·
ID: 535
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 12:07:58
Such a happy day! Serendipitous - crabs and Mag and two brothers
taking pleasure in spending time together. If only they could have had
more time like this - but, perhaps, they appreciated it all the more
because it came so infrequently.

Title: Thoughtful Company · Author: EdorasLass · Genres: Humor: Gondor
· ID: 16
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 12:26:03
Faramir is a treasure far greater than any dragon's hoard, and I'm
sure Mithrandir would have loved to be able to spend much more of his
time in the boy's company. And bless Nanny - I think she would like to
adopt the wizard as a surrogate grandfather for her little rabbit.

Good thinking on Faramir's part, too! A problem of logistics that
wouldn't cross many minds!

Lovely story.

Title: Summer Nights · Author: Marta · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 344
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 12:47:50
Spoilers!
Marta's drabble, "Summer Nights", is about Boromir in the last moments
before Mordor launches the initial assault on Osgiliath, opening the
War of the Ring.

The atmosphere that she sets up is tense, expectant, and unpleasantly
hot. Boromir seems anxious to protect Gondor, but the days of waiting
are wearing on him, and presumably the rest of the army, as well.

But when the moment finally comes, it is a shock, because of Marta's
incisive words.

Well done!


Title: The Prisoner of Dol Guldur · Author: Soledad · Genres: Drama:
Final Partings · ID: 102
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 12:58:39
I am glad Enadar recovered as much as he did. The special, outdoor,
Ent-supervised hospital ward was just what he needed. As was the Great
Ash, imbued with rather more than the spirit of Lalisin. I love the
thought that she will be able to follow Thranduil and her sons to
Valinor when the ties of the forest no longer hold them - the family
deserves to be reunited in a place and time where they can relax.


Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Bodkin · 2008-11-29 13:17:09
Poor Maglor. Even his kindness must be tainted - I don't know why his
fate had to be so much more cruel than that of his brothers. He
offered Arwen the best solution he could - this lost and bereaved
woman who was his foster son's child. Would that he could find his own
salvation.

Title: The Secret of the Wooden Wall · Author: Lily · Genres: Mystery
· ID: 630
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-29 13:34:27
A nicely done mystery, all the richer for good characters, dialog and
interaction. A good read!

Title: The Return · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Drama · ID: 167
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-29 13:48:06
I have come to expect a high quality of work from Lady Bluejay and
this piece, if anything, raises the bar. She is so good at seeing and
communcating the most difficult, human emotions and actions, and
making them rise from her characters naturally and genuinely. Here we
feel Duinhir's grief and apprehension with every step, but it never
overwhelms us as he, too, continues. The ending, of course, is a kick
in the head, but appropriately. I can't help but wonder what the
future might hold for this broken family.

Title: Wife of the Thain · Author: LA Knight · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 513
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 14:25:09
Spoilers!
"Wife of the Thain" is a drabble series about the myth that one of the
early Tooks had a fairy wife.

Thain Isumbras catches a glimpse of a nymph one day, and is now pining
away, wanting to see her again.

I liked the language and descriptions in these vignettes; they paint a
clear picture of the scene. And I felt sorry for the hobbit.

Well done!

Title: The Onion Riddle · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Post-Ring War · ID: 13
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 14:33:19
Spoilers!
Ah, clever Branwyn! It is always so gratifying when one finds a story
that can holds it POV this well, so that even though the reader has
every reason to think she knows what's going on, the end still comes
with that sense of reversal of expectations.

I love Beregond, here in his three roles that Tolkien gave him: armed
protector, commander, and father. Branwyn captures him perfectly: he
makes it his business to be concerned for the well-being of every
member of his troop, trusting to fatherly instinct and experience and
wedding it seamlessly with a commander's duties, even risking some
wrath from his charges when he thinks it is necessary.

This time, happily, the revelation is no cause for horror, just for a
bit of embarrassment, though the Dwarves don't seem to have minded at
all. Thank you for the lovely read, Lady Branwyn!

Title: Terra Incognita · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Humor: Drabbles · ID: 723
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 14:35:23
Nice double meaning in that last line!

The scene is quickly and efficiently set - I can imagine this is life
in the trenches. The woolen socks were very effective.



Title: Steward's Trumpets · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Times:
Late Third Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 400
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 14:39:03
Spoilers!
Writers who know how to use specific flowers and trees for symbolic
effect leave me jealous. The devastation of the tomb was beautifully
described: [As jagged as an eggshell, the broken dome rose before
him]. It's the only phrase devoted to the ruins, but it works like a
charm.

The juxtaposition of renewal and this destroyed place, coming together
in the flowers was just beautiful. Well done!

Title: In the Van · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres: Humor ·
ID: 72
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 14:43:30
Spoilers!
Oh dear! I can see it all too well. Whoever the nameless source of
inspiration is, she or he has my thanks for spurring this entertaining
little ficlet. The exchange between Gandalf and Boromir over
courtesies and privileges due the dead was probably my favorite part.

Bonus points for bringing Boromir into it without requiring an AU to
the AU.

Title: Wave-Singer · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 33
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 14:45:29
While the spirit involved remains nameless, or at least, we don't know
what he was called before the Dominion of Men, I have my guesses.
Beautiful last line - gives the whole piece its punch, just as a last
line should for a drabble.

Msg# 9594

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Morning Set, Part Three) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 5:53:02 Topic ID# 9594
Title: The King's Colors · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 482
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-29 14:49:24
This work uses its Alternate Universe to great benefit, changing only
one thing in order to see everything else familiar in a brand new
light. And what we are shown is a wonderfully incisive, character
revealing moment, well imagined and ringing true. I particularly
appreciated how Boromir's character is shown tired, distrusting, and
grieving yet faithful and true, while Aragorn's character is replete
with a little careful power maneuvering, and compassion. To create one
such complicated character is an achievement, two is a feat.

Title: No Man's Land · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 726
Reviewer: Dwimordene · 2008-11-29 14:51:21
Spoilers!
A sobering possibility - writers like Wilfred Owen remind us by their
work, fortunately saved, that there must have been so many young
artists devoured by war before they could ever give birth to their
creations. We can't even miss them, since we don't know who they were
or what they had in mind.

A thoughtful drabble that makes you think about the fact that you are
here, electronically among others, writing reviews for work that came
of one man's story.

Title: A Dream Come True · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Romance:
Gondor · ID: 162
Reviewer: Nancy Brooke · 2008-11-29 15:06:28
Lovely as always. LBJ's Eomer/Lothiriel romances are always charming,
fun and sweet, but never treacly or cliche.

Title: A Harmony In Autumn · Author: Oshun · Genres: Romance: Elven
Lands · ID: 49
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 15:27:13
Spoilers!
[A Harmony in Autumn], the title alluding to a passage in Percy Bysshe
Shelley's poem, [Hymn to Intellectual Beauty], contains all the
hallmarks of what I have come to expect -- and enjoy immensely -- in
Oshun's distinctive approach to Middle-earth and Aman: detailed
settings, rich dialogue, well-rounded characters, heated eroticism,
politics and family dynamics.

Although written for a Slashy Santa exchange, and thereby containing
the requisite erotica, [A Harmony in Autumn] is far more than the
consummation of Glorfindel and
Ecthelion's relationship. This occurs in the backdrop of Turgon's
decision to take his people who are willing to follow him and remove
to the confines of the Encircling Mountains. This situation -- that
Ecthelin, as well as Idril, Glorfindel's kinswoman here, will follow
Turgon -- places Glorfindel at a decision point. And it is a complex
one. Fingon's fireside conversation triggers Glorfindel's memories of
a concert in Tirion, lending Oshun a neat device to take the reader
back to a halcyon time for the Noldor.

Highlights for me were the description of the autumn woods, the
approach to Vinyamar by the ocean, the prickly familial and political
interactions between Turgon and Fingon, the sketch of Ecthelion's back
story and the characters of Ecthelion and Glorfindel and *especially*
the latter's skepticism. Oshun is well aware of my rather embarrassing
fangirlishness (fancrone-ishness) when it comes to Glorfindel, and I
love her portrayal of the character here.

I have to say that Fingon darn near steals the show, but that's hardly
surprising given his personality here and elsewhere in Oshun's work.
[A Harmony in Autumn] is neatly consistent with her other stories.

Title: Spaces in the Heart · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of
Elrond · ID: 251
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 15:28:14
Continuing this morning with my shameless Glorfindelism, I thoroughly
enjoyed Keiliss' [Spaces in the Heart] which dovetails beautifully
with her excellent novel [Even Quicker Than Doubt]. In [Spaces in the
Heart], the author takes the reader to Glorfindel's first meeting with
Elrond, a meeting that will reverberate through two Ages of Middle-earth.

Kei has a particular talent for interweaving the real (as real as
anything can be in Middle-earth, but I think it feels "real" for many
of us or we wouldn't be writing fan fic) with the uncanny realms of
the otherworldly. she does that here in describing Glorfindel's early
days in Lindon with Círdan, addressing his state after reincarnation
by the Valar and his return (neatly described) to the shores of
Middle-earth. The first two paragraphs of this short story are
stunning in this regard, and her description of the vessel that
Glorfindel is found in is understated but gives an allusion to the
strange nature of the perilous realm of the Valar.

Glorfindel's recollections of Gondolin -- an architectural beauty with
structured gardens -- are very satisfying to this reader, and Kei uses
these to contrast the new environment.

All in all, a good story combined with a fascinating thought exercise
from the viewpoint of one who has died but returned.


Title: An Elf-lord Revealed · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 406
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 15:29:38
Tanaqui crafts her vignettes of Glorfindel as carefully as an
elven-smith might a string of beads on a necklace. Although all are
written well, little stories in and of themselves that offer glimpses
into this canon icon's life, [Fulfillment] -- the piece that describes
Eowyn's interaction with Glorfindel (a meeting that surely must have
happened) and [Comparing Notes] -- Gandalf and Glorfindel's droll
comparison of a fearsome foe -- are my favorites. The implication of a
string of lives within an indefinite lifespan is a neat theme that
comes out here.

Title: I Ain't Got Nobody · Author: Ignoble Bard · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 568
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 15:30:20
[I Ain't Got Nobody] is trademark Ignoble Bard humor. IgB riffs off of
Tolkien's writings in the [Peoples of Middle-earth] of Glorfindel's
reincaration. Here Glorfindel's feä returns..and returns and
returns...to the Laboratory, err, make that *Halls* of Mandos, which
exasperates Námo (hilariously so) to no end. I don't want to spoil the
fun so I'll just say the quips made me laugh out loud, and that
there's a truly hootworthy scene which is a send-up of slashiness and
involves a tapestry. Only Ignoble Bard could come up with that one.

Title: The Importance of Being Bilbo · Author: Dreamflower · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 686
Reviewer: Virtuella · 2008-11-29 15:41:51
What a very interesting essay! You'll know by now that I'm always
looking for what you call the "story-external" and what I call the
"structural" issues, and I was surprised at what you unearthed here in
the way of similarities between The Hobbit and LOTR. Coming to think
of it, there are also similarities in themes, most notably the idea
that the different races of Middle-earth need to overcome their
estrangement in order to overcome evil.
As far as the story-internal side is concerned, I have always thought
it one of the weaknesses of the LOTR plot that the timescales covered
are so little convincing. What I mean is mostly that a whole seventeen
years pass after Bilbo's party, during which Gandals seems to amble
about finding tidbits of information, and then all of a sudden Frodo
leaves basically the minute a Black Rider comes to his doorstep. That
kind of coinicdence seems a bit contrived to me, as does the whole
fact that the hobbits escape at all, particulalry after the events in
Bree. But I'm getting side-tracked. The role of Bilbo as a tutor for
Frodo is certainly a crucial one, and I would like to add that Bilbo
also functions as a link between Elves, Dwarves and Men, which again
nicely connects to the theme I mentioned above.


Title: Like Roses over a Fence · Author: Ellie · Times: First Age and
Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 110
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 15:56:25
Spoilers!
The wives of the House of Finwe often bear a lot of the blame by fans
for what transpired in their families. Ellie's "Like Roses over a
Fence" takes on the issue directly and has Nerdanel, Indis, and Anaire
ask: to what extent do they bear blame for the fall of the Noldor? The
conversation between them is sadly revealing, but what is most
important is what comes of it. They decide that, in their husbands'
absences, they will work to better and reunite the Eldar in Aman. What
a lovely tribute to three women who often, unfairly, bear the blame
for the impetuosity and irresponsibility of the men in their lives.

Title: Wars of the Valar · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Longer Works · ID: 3
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 15:59:00
Spoilers!
Fiondil goes waaaaaaaay back in the history of Arda--even before Arda
exists for this story. It's a history of the physical creation of Ea
by the Valar, but it's no dry retelling of the Ainulindale or the
Valaquenta. The main character is Namo, the Doomsman of the Valar and
the Lord of Mandos, but this is a young Namo, uncertain and unsure of
himself as he faces the immense task of Creation with his brethren
Valar, We see all of them as the forerunners of the personalities that
we find in Elf Interrupted and Fiondil's other Valar stories, and it
is utterly engrossing to see the development and growth of Namo
through the spiritual and physical trials he undergoes as Melkor, who
wishes to take control of Arda and make it his, interferes with the
building of the reality of the Vision of the Themes of Iluvatar.

Fiondil has managed to take the mythic events from the Ainulindale in
the Silmarillion and blend them with physics, astronomy, mathematics,
and wonderful interpretations of the personalities of the Valar to
create a tale that is literally cosmic in scope, and heartfelt in the
intimate way we come to know each of Atar's Children of his Thought.

In particular, the story focuses on Namo, who is eventually destined
to become the Lord of Mandos, keeper of the fëa of the dead, and the
Judge of the Firstborn. But here, he isn't the intimidating Doomsman,
but a young Ayanuz, gradually learning about himself and the callings
he is destined to fulfill as Ea comes into existence.

The opening scene just caught me up, and was a perfect way of showing
the impulsive, youthful Namo, who, were he a mortal teenager would
likely be described as an adrenaline junkie! Riding the shock wave of
a supernova thrills him even as he grieves at the star's destruction.
Unfortunately it also turns out to be a trap, as Melkor--who from the
very beginning of Ea's existence, has sought power and dominion over
not just the slowly growing cosmos, but also over his younger siblings
in the Thought of Ilúvatar--tries to corner him and entice him to
abandon Manwe and Atar to follow him. Much of the first third of this
in progress tale is wrapped up in Melkor's efforts to corrupt the
younger, frequently insecure Namo, and Namo's efforts to hold true to
his love of and loyalty to Atar and the great Vision that the Valar
are building. Some of it is literally heartbreaking, but as gold is
refined in the fire, so Namo is likewise refined through his
suffering, until we can clearly see where he gets his great compassion
for the suffering of others, as well as his ability to rightly judge
those who come to his Halls.

All of the Valar are inexperienced as they enter Ea, although some,
such as Manwe and Varda are older in the Thought of Ilúvatar than the
rest. They are fired by the vision that Eru showed them, but taking a
vision and turning it into reality is a lot more complicated than they
thought it would be, and some truly memorable mistakes are made along
the way—such as Varda's black holes and brown dwarfs. This makes for
many moments of humor amid the seriousness that is the ongoing
conflict of light and dark, good and evil, order and chaos. Fiondil's
placement of these bright moments is always appropriate, breaking just
enough tension to keep the griefs from becoming unbearable, but not
turning it into inappropriate slap stick.

His linguistic expertise is very present in this story, introducing us
to the language of the Valar. Valarin has fewer attested words than
Tolkien left us for Quenya and Sindarin, but Fiondil has used his
knowledge well, even though the Valarin names for Arda and the other
planets of the solar system as well as for the Maiar are amazingly
tongue-twisting. I thank him for his author's notes to remind us of
what Valarin words mean, and for the growing character list at the end
of the ongoing tale.

But universe building aside, my favorite part of Wars of the Valar is
watching the slowly developing romance between Namo and Vaire. When he
finally proposes to her, I wanted to get up and dance and crow along
with him [Atar! She said yes!]

A wonderful story, and as much as I want to see it finished, part of
me wishes that it would go on and on, one delicious chapter after
another. Well done, Fiondil!

Title: Wedding Nerves · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor · ID: 48
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 16:02:01
Spoilers!
This is a thoroughly enjoyable little story. I love the idea of a
stressed Aragorn on his wedding day who, after seventy long years,
just wants to get married and yet all of the new courtiers in his life
won't even let him get dressed on his own! It seems a symbol of so
many changes in his life. Leave it to his two brothers to come and
'rescue' him. As in many of Jay's stories, I love the humor and yet
the underlying love that shines through the twins' relationships with
Aragorn. Nicely done!

Title: PROPHECY: Changing the Future · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor
· ID: 11
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 16:07:20
Spoilers!
This story offers a clever possibility for how the many complicated
tales and histories and songs in the HoMe became a neat and tidy (and
sometimes wrong!) Silmarillion, told with Fiondil's usual light touch
where the Valar are concerned. The Second Prophecy of Mandos is one of
my favorite snippets that Tolkien wrote that didn't make it into The
Silmarillion, and I, too, am always intrigued by its meaning. This was
an inventive way to work it into a story! Definitely a fun read.

Title: Nightfall · Author: Jael · Times: Second and Early Third Age ·
ID: 87
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 16:12:45
Spoilers!
Jael's story "Nightfall" describes the events surrounding a skirmish
in the Last Alliance, when Thranduil leads two groups of Silvan
archers, disguised as Orcs, on an extremely dangerous mission to the
Morannon to pick off the Orc captains and make the storming of the
gate possible.

The two main characters are Thranduil, made King of Mirkwood after his
father's recent death, and Galion, the butler mentioned in The Hobbit,
who is Thranduil's friend and personal esquire.

I enjoy the pictures that Jael paints with her words. Both the
physical and the emotional landscape seem very bleakly realistic for
such a horrific, long-term siege environment.

Both Thranduil and Galion are three-dimensional characters, who are
struggling to figure out how to act now that one is king. Their
emotions range from grimly humorous to tired but elated to desolate as
the terrible events of this story unfold... but they can still find
comfort in their lifetime friendship.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this story. Well done!

Title: GOBLINS: The Herald's Summons · Author: Fiondil · Times: First
Age and Prior · ID: 53
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 16:28:47
Spoilers!
I really enjoyed this glimpse of what it might have been like for
those fighting at the War of Wrath. How horrible it must have been for
the ones from Aman especially... they had not known war (I\\\'m not
counting the Kin-Slaying!) and they came to Middle-Earth at the behest
of the Valar and it must have been truly horrible for them. Of course,
war is horrible for anyone.

Then there is the whole conversation between Eonwe and the three elves
about the exiles going home after the war and my heart just broke at
Arafinwe\\\'s pain as he learned about Gladriel being banned from
returning to Aman. A horrible thing for a father to hear when his sons
have already died. Not that it was easy for Gladriel, either! I loved
how you portrayed Celeborn here and his oath to Eonwe was nice.

Another very nice story from a wonderful author.

Title: Diamonds For Forever I, II & III · Author: Elen Kortirion ·
Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 515
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 16:33:51
Spoilers!
Elen Kortirion's drabble trio, "Diamonds for Forever", is about some
jewels of the state of Gondor, and how they changed as they passed
through different hands.

The descriptions here are evocative. Phrases like [he loved the
silence... the only sound the crunch of his boots breaking the
sparkling snow, sunlit and glinting] set the scene vividly. Each
Steward in the first two drabbles creates jewels that are suited to
his personality and that of his bride, like Ecthelion I's winter-bare
tree branches for a northern bride. Denethor II wanted something
different, but his bride from Dol Amroth like the original, which
reminded her of her home. But Arwen added leaves and flowers, which
remind me of the renewal of the kingdom under Elessar.

There are many layers to these drabbles, and they are creative in
their conception. I enjoyed reading them.

Well done!

Title: The Last Messenger: A Tale of Numenor · Author: Fiondil ·
Times: Second and Early Third Age · ID: 8
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 16:36:49
Spoilers!
Set 24 years before the Fall, this story stars Finrod's friend,
Laurendil, from Elf Interrupted, and covers a part of the SILMARILLION
that I have never seen in fanfic before. The canon characters we meet
are fascinating but are actually somewhat peripheral to the real
action--being there mainly as the catalyst for the events that happen
to the main characters. The original characters are well drawn and
most definitely not Mary Sues. I've loved Fiondil's elves, but now
I've come to love Fiondil's interpretations of Men. The island of
Numenor itself is described so well that I can picture every scene
with vividness and wish that I could see it for real. The plotline is
very plausible, and even if a reader has not read the SIL, they will
be able to follow the events easily. Fiondil's language expertise with
Quenya and Sindarin have served him well here.

This tale although set firmly in the SILMARILLION and the last years
before the destruction of Numenor, is very much an original work of
art. Unlike Fiondil's other stories, the main characters are all
original characters of Fiondil's devising, but they seems as if they
are canon as they interact with the family of Isildur to try to rescue
a young man who had followed Isildur in the Faithful's attempt
(fortunately successful) to steal a fruit of Nimloth before the tree
was destroyed by Sauron.

Laurendil, who is life-oath-sworn to Finrod Felagund in the Elf
Interrupted stories, is called by the Valar to take a final message to
Numenor before the Valar cut off all contact with the doomed island
forever. He is reluctant to go, for it was on a trip to Numenor, one
of his dearest friends was lost and is now presumed to be in Mandos,
but obeys. His attitude towards the second born is tainted by his
grief for his friend, but he quickly learns that the young people with
whom he travels truly are Faithful to the Valar, despite their lives
being endangered by their loyalty. It is necessary to rescue the
author's namesake lest the young man betray the stricken Isilidur and
bring down the wrath of Sauron and Ar-Pharazon on the rest of the
Faithful in Romena.

The ongoing tension in the story mounts, although there are deftly
inserted bits of humor to keep the tension at a bearable level. In
particular, the name of a certain black cat comes to mind!

Of course, readers of the SILMARILLION will know that Isildur
recovered and that the Faithful survived those last years to sail on
the nine ships to Middle-earth. But as I read this story, there were
times that I truly wondered how on Arda that could happen, should
Laurendil and his companions be captured.

Like the heroes in all of Fiondil's tales, Laurendil is changed by his
experiences and grows—albeit sometimes painfully—from them. I hated to
see this story end, and I hope that one day Fiondil might go back and
write more about these original characters in their new lives in Aman
and in Middle-earth after Numenor vanishes beneath the waves.

Title: Lothíriel - The Tenth Walker, Book 2 · Author: juno_magic ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Incomplete · ID: 567
Reviewer: Aranel Took · 2008-11-29 16:47:07
This is a work that proves that "Tenth Walker" stories do not deserve
the general scorn that is often heaped upon them, because in the hands
of a skilled writer a wonderful story can result that is just as good
as (if not better than) any canonical story.

Lothiriel is from our world and was named for the the character from
the book. She takes the place of the fictional Lothiriel in this
Middle-Earth come to life. We follow Lothiriel as she tries to fit
into this strange world. And she will have quite a bit to fit into, as
she has fallen in love with Éomer, the future king of Rohan. Culture
clashes abound, especially in the matter of Lothiriel's romance with
Eomer, which is a focus of this section of the story.

Lothiriel is an easy character to like, capable but not perfect. The
supporting original characters are given as much care and development
as any of the canon characters. The canon characters are also well
written here. Characters that are just mentioned in the Appendices are
given a backstory and a life. And all of the characters come across as
real people.

Where Juno excels is world-building, and she beautifully brings to
life the cultures of Middle-Earth, building on the (sometimes scant)
details Tolkien has already given us. I especially love her
development of Rohirric culture, which has influenced my own writing
about Rohan. There are so many details of everyday life that have
obviously been carefully researched, which helps to bring this world
to life and, more importantly, make it interesting to read.

Title: BRIDGE: Pá Valaraucar ar Námier · Author: Fiondil · Races:
Other Beings · ID: 415
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 16:56:44
Spoilers!
I've never seen anyone else deal with what actually happened to
Gandalf in the time between his death and his resurrection in
Middle-earth as Gandalf the White.

Fiondil, by putting this in Olórin's POV, takes the established
routines carried out by Lord Namo in the Halls of Mandos, and shows
us, even as he shows Olorin in his judgment, just where the mistake
that led to Gandalf's death lay. Pride and arrogance are deadly sins
because they lead us to commit other sins and make other mistakes.
While in the guise of Gandalf, Olorin's pride is not the haughtiness
and arrogance displayed by Saruman, but even so, it caused him to
fall, literally and spiritually.

But, as Fiondil has taken pains to point out in all of his works, Eru
brings great good even out of evil, and through Olorin's error in how
he turned his back on the Balrog, from death, Gandalf the White was
born, to the benefit of all in Middle-earth.

And the ongoing joke in Fiondil's fics about being punished by being
promoted gets an airing too!

Title: Dragons In The Trollshaws · Author: Bodkin · Genres: Adventure
· ID: 170
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 16:58:26
Spoilers!
Bodkin's story is about the sons of Elrond on a mission to find a nest
of dragons living near Rivendell and posing a danger to the populace.

The brothers are capable warriors, but their grief at Celebrian's
departure makes them reckless. Glorfindel finds out about their quest
and commands a troop of warriors to find them and deal with the
problem properly.

The action is interesting, and seems well-thought-out. I enjoy the
bantering between the brothers, who are serious underneath all the
light-hearted jesting.

The interactions between characters is loving... except for the dragons!

Well done!

Title: The Wedding Gift · Author: annmarwalk · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 40
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 17:06:22
Spoilers!
Ann Marwalk's "A Wedding Gift" is a delightful glimpse into the love
of a dwarf -- Gloin, father of Gimli -- and his beautiful wife, the
original character Nandi.

I love the essential dwarvishness of this vignette. The crafting of
each bead and the necklace are described in exquisite detail, with the
emphasis on the tools and materials and craft, things that a dwarf
would find important.

And the presentation is so loving, so tender, that we see just how
similar these individuals are to those of other races... while at the
same time, how different.

This is a heart-warming vignette. Very well done!

Title: Spaces in the Heart · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of
Elrond · ID: 251
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 17:10:39
Spoilers!
"Spaces in the Heart" is, in many ways, a preface to the Third Age,
when Glorfindel will do a great deed in Elrond's service that will
allow the world to be rid of Sauron. Keiliss considers not only the
return of Glorfindel but the beginning of his special friendship with
Elrond that will allow for much good in the Third Age. I had not given
much thought to this relationship beyond one of duty, but this story
gives it a new and thoughtful dimension for me.

As usual, Keiliss's writing is simply breaktaking: ["Between the fire
and thunder and soul-dark terror that had been the Balrog, and the few
moments of confused waking when he had been lifted from the small,
other-worldly craft in which he had been sent back, there was simply a
pause, as though he had slept."] The imagery is vivid enough to bring
the story and its characters to life and the style one of easy grace,
almost peaceful, befitting a story about Elves in a way that few
authors can equal.

Title: Loss · Author: SurgicalSteel · Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 196
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 17:14:02
Spoilers!
Tolkien allowed his readers to see the day-to-day realities of life in
Middle-earth most often through the denizens of the Shire and Bree,
but largely, as would be expected in a story of a quest, the view is
broader with fewer details of daily life. Yet there must have been
realities, both mundane and grim, in his "world with a green sun."
From his writings, we know few details of the lot of the women of
Middle-earth, whether they were of mortal Men, hobbits, the Firstborn,
or Dwarves (especially the Dwarves!) Save for this passage from
[Aldarion and Erendis] in [Unfinished Tales]:

[And though childbirth had less of ills and peril, Númenor was not an
"earthly paradise," and the weariness of labour or of all making was
not taken away.]

...we know very little of the women of Middle-earth's experience in
childbed.

In [Loss], Surgical Steel illustrates the gritty reality of giving
birth when Serindë goes into labor early. Halbarard, her husband (an
appealing portrayal of this Dúnadan icon here as well as in her other
writings), must cope with a harrowing situation that escalates.

The pacing of the story is excellent. I tore through it, the build-up
of suspense and tension akin to any good drama revolving around
physicians and healthcare workers in our contemporary world. I
particularly appreciated the stark contrast between Serindë's more
sophisticated knowledge (which she is not in a position to apply
herself during this crisis) versus the local midwife (the unwashed
hands made me cringe). The characters are memorable,too, and I was
especially taken with Halbarad and Serindë's daughter and son.

Not a happy ending, but deeply emotional and satisfying one --
satisfying because Surgical Steel shines an uncompromising light on a
stark reality under the green sun of Tolkien's world.

Title: The Stolen Child · Author: SurgicalSteel · Races: Men · ID: 197
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 17:14:45
[Loss], Surgical Steel's follow-on to [The Stolen Child], portrays the
consequences of Serindë's loss of her child and subsequent near-death.
But more accurately, the story examines the feelings and fears of a
husband who has nearly lost his beloved and yearns for her to return
to him whole. This is a poignant coda to [The Stolen Child] and one
that shows the power of love in healing.

Title: Wind and Fire · Author: elfscribe · Times: First Age and Prior
· ID: 539
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 17:15:08
Spoilers!
An elemental clash of titans is [Wind and Fire] and oh, what a clash
it is! Elfscribe's story of the encounter between Fëanor and Manwë is
nothing short of cataclysmic. Just short of 5000 words, this is a far
bigger story than its length would indicate.

Elfscribe's depiction of Manwë enthralled me as she deftly wove the
semi-divine (or whatever the essence of these strange beings is) with
the incarnate. Tolkien wrote at length in his works about the Valar
assuming forms like that of the Children of Iluvatar. He said they put
these on as raiment, like we would don a sweater or a dress or a suit.
However, to my life scientist's mind, assuming an actual *human body*
with its attendant physiology, which invariably links into mind and
behavior, has consequences. Elfscribe addresses this in a most
satisfying manner here as Manwë takes on a human aspect.

I also like Fëanor's portrayal here. As Moreth noted, there's an
appropriate mix of the vulnerable and the arrogant. His digs at Manwë
concerning the Lord of the Wind's egregious oversight with regard to
Morgoth are sharp and to my mind, quite appropriate. The culpability
here did not rest on Fëanor's shoulders alone, and a careful reading
of [The Silmarillion] will reveal that. Elfscribe brings that into
high relief here in [Wind and Fire].

The eroticism is written on a grand scale, fitting nicely with the
larger-than-life tone of the entire piece. Elfscribe's bailiwick is
slash, and she shows her skills here, remaining in the erotic and not
succumbing to the boringly (well, to me at any rate -- I need
something left to the imagination) explicit.

Like the previous reviewers, I more often than not flinch at "ye olde
archaic" speech, but Elfscribe is one of the few who can wield this
effectively and still hold my attention. It flows well, and I was
never jolted by stumbling around awkward usage of this form.

Taken together, Elfscribe's gorgeous prose and the conceptualizations
of these icons provide a short story as rich as a Delacroix painting,
and in fact, that is what I visualized when I read this fic.



Title: The Work of Small Hands · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres:
Longer Works · ID: 352
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 17:16:02
Spoilers!
In the midst of e-mail discussions in which Dawn and I expressed our
mutual desire to read of fully realized female characters within
Tolkien's legendarium, she mentioned that she was working on a novella
in which Eärwen, the wife of Finarfin, was the protagonist and how
this woman became queen of the Noldor who remained in Aman, a radical
feat in a culture of people who apparently practiced agnatic
primogeniture. So I was thrilled when Dawn published [The Work of
Small Hands] on the SWG.

Just as with the history of our primary world, my suspicion is that
the male writers of Aman and Middle-earth's histories overlooked many
women and their power behind the scenes. Dawn's novel rectifies this
unpalatable situation.

Dawn is a skilled writer in every aspect of her work: setting,
gorgeous phraseology, technicality, plot, and characters. In [WSH],
Dawn gives each woman clearly identifiable personalities with just a
few strokes of the digital pen: Indis with quiet restraint, brash
Anairë, Nerdanel – her famous logic now horribly adrift -- and Eärwen,
the reluctant leader designate who must reconcile her beloved
Arafinwë's kind and sunny demeanor with the blood on his hands, and
then care for him and bring him back from a pit of despair after he
returns.

On a more analytical level, the thought-exercise behind the darkening
of Valinor is well executed. Dawn places herself in a very grim
"what-if" scenario: the consequences of sword wounds in Alqualondë,
the psychological effects of unremitting darkness, and the increasing
desperation of the Noldor as their food supplies diminish and they
resort to baser behaviors as they approach starvation.

Driven by dire straits, Eärwen goes to Máhanaxar to ask the Valar's
help. This is an extraordinary chapter, and to my mind, one of the
best descriptions of the Valar written. Dawn makes the reader feel
Eärwen's trepidations before these uncanny beings who, although not
gods, are significantly strange and powerful.

I was introduced to Tolkienian fan fiction through Dawn's [Another
Man's Cage] and thus was swept up into this milieu. I loved immersing
myself in Aman with the family of Fëanor in that work and those
characters are engraved in my mind, but it's about time that the women
stepped to the fore and in [The Work of Small Hands], they do.

Msg# 9595

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Morning Set, Part Four) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 5:54:06 Topic ID# 9595
Title: Moon Over Water · Author: Avon · Genres: Drama: Final Partings
· ID: 518
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 17:21:33
Spoilers!
Avon's short story, "Moon over Water", is about a tradition that
Boromir shared with Faramir when they were young, and that Faramir is
continuing... but he thinks it will be the last time.

It involves going to the Anduin and watching the dead float by on
ghostly boats on a particular full moon during the year. Boromir had
lost his taste for watching the procession after his first blooding as
a soldier, but Faramir continued to make the pilgrimage.

What I like about this story is the lyrical language that so vividly
describes the scene. Also, there is a melancholy sense that the
procession is becoming smaller each year, either through Gondor's
fading, or perhaps because the magic is dissipating from the
increasingly grim lives of those surviving under the shadow of Mordor.

But the story ends on a pleasingly hopeful note.

I really enjoyed reading this. Very well done!

Title: Expert Treasure Hunter · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 447
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 17:29:55
Spoilers!
Oh, I so enjoy reading Tanaqui's "Expert Treasure Hunter"! In it, she
suggests that Smaug the Golden sought out all the gems and treasure in
the Lonely Mountain by tasting it, as sensitively as any epicurean.
Then Smaug uses the most practical of means to extract the treasure
that is out of reach -- he fires up the walls, then smashes them with
this tail -- so he can add the treasure to his pile and savor it forever.

The language is evocative, and I can't help but get a chuckle out of
the premise. And I can so relate to finely-tuned tastes, though I
prefer to use mine to discern high-quality chocolate or cinnamon,
rather than rocks... no matter how sparkly!

Very nicely done!


Title: Somewhere I Have Never Traveled · Author: Fiondil · Times:
Fourth Age and Beyond · ID: 578
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 17:32:49
Spoilers!
This tale was a beautiful as it could possibly be. The thought of
Eowyn being there to await Arwen was so sweet and
compassionate--bringing out the side of the White Lady of Rohan that a
lot of fanfic writers often elide when they write about the
shieldmaiden. I like it that Arwen was angry--and proud--she is often
written as so perfect that I can't stand it. This was a lovely difference.

[She never liked my roses either.] LOL! What a great line! The tying
of the past to the present in Arwen's similiarities to her ancestress
was another thing that caught my attention. Namo and Eowyn... I like
to think about the conversations they must have had from time to time
as Eowyn waited for Arwen.

And it was so good to see Frodo and Sam again. I do hope that your
muse will tell you the story of Gimli's farewell eventually. Frodo had
a good point when he said that Lord Namo joining the picnic on the
shore would help the grieving elves come to terms with their loss and
be able to move on.

It's a masterpiece that makes me smile and think at the same time.
Thank you!

Title: The Ring That Sauron Forged · Author: Larner · Genres: Poetry:
Hobbits · ID: 645
Reviewer: pandemonium_213 · 2008-11-29 17:34:42
A catchy set of verses here. Larner's [The Ring That Sauron Forged]
nearly reflects the tradition brought forth by Tolkien himself when
Frodo sings the familiar Man in the Moon song at the Prancing Pony. I
agree with Imhiriel that it is most effective to read this aloud, and
I'd like to imagine this in sing-song among children learning their
lore in Minas Tirith or the Shire.

Title: Refuge · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Elves: Noldor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 423
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-29 17:36:04
Spoilers!
The unlikely story of Maglor fostering Elrond and Elros has always
seemed to me a link between the First and the Third Ages and this
ficlet reflects on this connection: how the aftermath of the sack of
the Havens of Sirion and the foundation of Rivendell were based on the
same basic principle of offering protection and refuge to those in
need . Elrond learnt from early on the need for a haven of peace and
comfort in difficult times and he reproduces the kindness and mercy
that he and his brother had been shown despite all the circumstances.
A reflection on childhood memories - the language and point of view of
a small child are very suitable to the story - and their long term
consequences.

Title: Five Fires · Author: Elleth · Races: Elves: House of Finwe ·
ID: 736
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-29 17:36:58
The competition for the saddest character in [The Silmarillion] is a
tough one. The author here follows the [Shibboleth of Feanor]'s turn
of events and advances the nomination of the Ambarussa for that honor.
In this collection of very short pieces, they are far from being a
pointy eared version of the Weasley twins and achieve a truly tragic
stature. Fire and water seem to be ever present in their lives and the
apparently random events that the author chooses paint a full picture
of the youngest Feanorians

Title: Wave-Singer · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 33
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-29 17:37:34
Despite the passing of time (millenia) and the change of continent
Maglor has retained his skill to move his listeners even if they
cannot begin to imagine who they have met. Who among Silmarillion
readers, Feanorian lovers hasn't at some time hoped to run into Maglor
singing by the sea? We may still hope.

Title: PROPHECY: Changing the Future · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor
· ID: 11
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 17:44:02
Spoilers!
This is a great addition to the humorous events that occur when
Fiondil's Valar and the Children of Iluvatar interact.

On the eve of the day that Elros takes the Edain to the Isle of
Numenor, a couple of mortals have an issue with the prophesy about
what happens to elves and men when Arda will be renewed, and take it
upon themselves to change the record.

Lord Namo is properly miffed over it, but gets his own back by coming
up with a third version he won't share with anyone, but Eru has the
final word, it seems.

Fiondil's deft hand with humor is a great way to try to reconcile the
different versions of the end of days prophesy that Tolkien came up with.

Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 17:54:58
Spoilers!
The fate of the Elves--particularly those of Elrond's house who were
given a choice between mortality and life unending--is understandably
one of the most evocative aspects of Tolkien's stories. But few
authors can truly capture the difficulty of this choice and the slow
despair that comes with it.

Keiliss does a marvellous job of showing how the world has changed
without the Elves and for those who remain. Maglor comes out of
legend, not exactly as those legends have told but with a patient
acceptance of his fate and an understanding of compassion that belies
his bad reputation. Arwen is amazingly written: her grief tastefully
and honestly portrayed; I had tears in my eyes more often than not as
I read this story. But, for me, what was saddest (and loveliest) about
this story was the way the *world* has changed without the Elves: the
way that the trees miss them, the deterioration of havens like Lorien
without their presence. This is beautifully depicted with a touch of
the memory of the beauty that was lingering still, as Arwen describes
the Lorien of her childhood to Maglor.

Perhaps my favorite scene, though, was as Maglor sat and played music
to the wood. Not only did this scene feel "Elven" to me, showing their
innate sensitivity to perceptions beyond our reach as mortals, but it
was brilliantly written, the work of a skilled writer.

A simply amazing story; highly recommended.

Title: The Apprentice · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains · ID: 52
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-29 17:59:06
As fanfic writer and reader both, I have assiduously avoided the
character of Sauron. It seemed impossible to the point of foolishness
to try to meddle with the mystery of the unknown that Tolkien wove
around the Dark Lord in the story that bears his name. To personify
it—describe it—render it more, what, human?—seemed to risk destroying
its very effectiveness.

Until I read pandemonium's "The Apprentice." Now I cannot imagine the
Dark Lord any other way. Pandemonium by some stretch of brilliant
imagination, fertilized by a wicked knowledge of the ways of
scientists, keeps the eeee-VILLE, indeed enhances it, while
constructing a personage that, trembling, we can imagine having a
conversation with. Egad, how does she do it? Very few, even among the
greatest writers I have read, can draw a villain simultaneously
terrifying and sympathetic. George Lucas really ought to have hired
pandemonium as a screenwriter before he attempted his ludicrous
explanation of how Annikin Skywalker turned into Darth Vader.

What else do you need to know to get off your butt and read this
story? It's about Celebrimbor. It's about the forging of the Rings.
It's about Elvish arts and women leaders. So read it, already!

Forever will I hear the words: "you're hopeless, Samaril, hopeless...."


Title: Answering the Call · Author: docmon · Genres: Drama · ID: 340
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-29 18:04:53
Spoilers!
Such realistic scenarios for every Fellowship member in how they might
become seduced by the Ring. Very well done, I enjoyed it very much.

I especially liked Legolas, Gimli and Pippin, in that all hope is not
lost, but redemption and/or success is still possible. That seems very
true to their characters, as opposed to the others.



Title: The Road Trip · Author: Garnet Took · Times: Modern Times · ID: 410
Reviewer: PipMer · 2008-11-29 18:05:45
Spoilers!
This is hysterical! Leave it to Pippin to turn what should have been a
pleasant trip into a nightmare.

Well done!

Title: The Water's Song · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races: Elves: Family
· ID: 707
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 18:09:44
Spoilers!
What a bittersweet story, a reminder of how often the choices of the
Elves come with difficulty and great loss no matter what the decision.
Thranduil's acceptance of his son's fate is all the sadder knowing
Legolas's choice in the Fourth Age. I like how NiRi ties this into the
events of the Third Age as well, and that it ended on a lighter note
was the perfect touch!

Title: Legolas in Mandos · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Drama: Featuring
Aragorn · ID: 317
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 18:20:46
Spoilers!
The whole idea of Aragorn having the audacity to charge into Mandos
and demand his elf back grabbed me from the get go. The first part of
the story is a wonderful interaction between the Lord of Mandos and
the Elessar, the latter having challenged Namo to bring his friend
Legolas back to life after a very sudden—and quite embarrassing—manner
of dying. It's in Aragorn's POV so we don't actually see inside of
Námo's head, but it works well. Namo agrees to Aragorn's demand, after
getting permission from the higher ups (Manwe and Eru, too, one
assumes), chooses a chess game as the manner of battle. Aragorn gets
white, Namo gets black, and the fëa of Legolas actually moves the
pieces on the board. It's pretty clear that Namo is going to release
Legolas, even if he makes Aragorn play hard for the outcome—including
telling Aragorn that he can't talk to Legolas or he forfeits not only
his friend's life, but his own, but the tension is strong throughout
until the denoument.

Of course the game is rigged—and Aragorn does win. However it's not an
instant recovery for our favorite Mirkwood elf and it requires the
intervention of an "in the nick of time" arrival of
Glorfindel—appropriately garbed in red with a holly wreath on his
brow—to bring him back to life, to the joy of Aragorn.

Seeing the second half of the story from inside Legolas' head was a
nice counterpoint to the first half. He has lost much of his memory,
but unlike the Reborn in Mandos who gradually regain most of their
memories prior to remembering their Judgments, Legolas must remember
his judgment in order to recall everything else. In particular, one
bit really stuck with me and I'm still trying to figure out if the
episode of his life as seen in Judgment is something that Fiondil has
already written about: [He thought he started weeping at one point and
even struggled out of Námo's hold when a particularly vicious memory
concerning betrayal and loss reared it's ugly head and he found
himself cowering against the throne, clutching at Namo's feet as if to
an anchor. Námo said nothing, merely reaching down and placing a hand
gently on the elf's head, lending him his strength to get through this
worst memory, a memory Legolas had studiously forgotten for several
centuries.]

That certainly has me very curious... but I won't demand a story
pertaining to that incident--at least not now. *grin*

I really love how Fiondil has so many different things in his tales
that hint at other things in the lives lived by the characters, such
as this memory, and Legolas remembering that he had once been in love
with Arwen, but she chose Aragorn. (And that's another story waiting
to be told!)

This is a terrific and wonderful addition to your tales of the members
of the Fellowship and Lord Namo.

Title: FAULT: The Doctor Is In · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 545
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 18:21:24
["It amazes me that such a dysfunctional family ever survived long
enough to get themselves killed the way they did."] This is my
favorite line of this story--how true! (Though I'd be inclined to
apply it broader to the entire House of Finwe rather than just the
Feanorians!) A delightful and humorous story!

Title: MAGIC: The Password · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor: Elven
Lands · ID: 451
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 18:24:50
Spoilers!
The perils of modern technology! As someone who has forgotten
passwords more times than I care to admit to, this really stuck a
chord with me even as I laughed my head off. Poor Thranduil! I hope
that Radagast gave him the means to change the darn password to
something a bit less difficult!

The beverage warning is absolutely necessary to preserve your keyboard
or laptop. It really is!

The punch line was just perfect!

Title: WAR: A Promise Before Dying · Author: Fiondil · Times:
Multi-Age · ID: 55
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 18:28:16
Spoilers!
This story just made me smile. Fiondil tied together the second and
fourth ages wonderfully with this story.

For all that we know from canon about Gil-galad is contained in just a
few lines with nothing of his actual character, Fiondil brings him to
life as a fully formed person who I'm glad to "meet" and identify with.

I get the impression that he is somewhat ashamed of the way he feels
when he finds out that Elrond had been unable to get Isildur to cast
the Ring into the fires of Mt. Doom--after all the work and terror and
death, to find that it seemed in vain and the evil one had been
battling was still alive and growing in power must have been awful for
him. To feel disappointment is a normal emotion, but it is hard to
deal with feeling disappointment in a person one loves--and it's very
easy to feel guilty about it.

I did laugh about the arm-wrestling comment in regards to "I get to
kill him first" with Celebrian and Finrod. But the very best part was
"Well, it certainly took you long enough" when Elrond, who also
probably agonized over not being able to keep the promise realized
that he was forgiven.

And saying hello to Olorin once more--even if he didn't look the same
as when the Maia had bid Ereinion farewell--that's a hug I'd like to
experience myself! :)

Well done!

Title: WAR: A Promise Before Dying · Author: Fiondil · Times:
Multi-Age · ID: 55
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 18:33:41
Spoilers!
A favorite story of mine because it features Gil-galad - one of my
very favorite elves. I like seeing him at different stages here - just
as he dies (although that is a little tough!), as he is newly reborn
and somewhat confused about things, and then as a fully restored elf -
if that is the way to say it! It would be so disappointing to think
that your death had been in vain and that one who you counted on had,
apparently, let you down. Gil-galad was fortunate to be surrounded by
many others who could give him wise counsel on the matter. I enjoyed
the interaction between Gil-galad, Celebrian and Finrod and then his
surprise when he met the hobbits. Very nicely done and a story I think
others will truly enjoy as well.

Title: Early Winter at Himring Hill · Author: Oshun · Genres: Romance:
Elven Lands · ID: 79
Reviewer: Jael · 2008-11-29 18:35:34
You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind is blowing in
this charming addition to this author's cycle of Fingon and Maedhros.
The descriptions are beautifully done, evoking the feel of winter in
Beleriand.

Let it snow! Thank you, Oshun!

Title: NIGHT and FOREST: A Glimpse of Beauty · Author: Fiondil ·
Times: First Age and Prior · ID: 554
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 18:35:45
Spoilers!
I admit that I've not really paid a lot of attention to the Beren and
Luthien based fics out there, until Fiondil took up the challenge. I
think I like this so very much because is deals in exquisite detail
with a part of Beren's life that few writers dare to address--the dark
times before he found his Tinuviel.

The descriptions of Beren's journey and suffering are painfully sharp,
but because of that, we, too, are enchanted when he catches his first
glimpse of Luthien.

For the first time, this epic love story felt real instead of just a
mythic lay. Well done!

Title: A Fair Trial · Author: Maeve Riannon · Genres: Humor: Valar &
Maiar · ID: 403
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 18:39:33
Spoilers!
This is a funny medley of humor from a variety of sources, from the
Silm to the LotR movies to Montey Python. I really liked Sauron's rant
in legalese about his ownership of Minas Tirith and Finrod's crimes
against him, and Melian's excuse for creating Doriath as a tax haven.
Very funny!

Title: A Meeting in the Tower Hills · Author: Imhiriel · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 374
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 18:45:52
Spoilers!
First meetings between different peoples are fascinating. Imhiriel's
drabble is a look at the first meeting of Numenoreans and Men of
Middle-earth. The first impression that the Numenoreans ["seemed
living people"] is great, as is the drabble's conclusion. Nicely done!

Title: Silver Blossoms Blown · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races:
Cross-Cultural · ID: 646
Reviewer: Jael · 2008-11-29 18:48:11
Spoilers!
Ignoble Bard is a writer of great scope -- stories ranging from dark
erotica to wickedly witty humor that never fails to leave me laughing
helplessly to the gently poetic. This story is of the last, its
carefully crafted descriptions evoking the love and wonder of a Valie
as she first beholds three of the Firstborn.

The contrast with the final paragraph, as she watches the departing
Noldorin Exiles is both moving and heartbreaking. Yes, children must
grow, but it is still a bitter thing to a parent.

Nicely done, Bard!

Title: DISGUISE: Emissaries · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor: Valar &
Maiar · ID: 56
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 18:56:57
Spoilers!
Reading Olorin the way Fiondil writes him is a treat. I've always
liked the character, but now I truly love him as I see him in a new
light. Perhaps it's just seeing him as he might have been before the
burdens of Middle-earth wore him down that make him so special.

In this particular story, I really like the distinctions that are so
clearly drawn between Olorin and Curumo. Distinctions that were there
even before they arrived in Middle-earth. I also enjoyed the humor in
this story as Olorin shows the different forms they 'could' take as
they prepare to go to serve the peoples of Middle-earth in their fight
against Sauron. It rings very true to form as Tolkien clearly showed
Gandalf's sense of humor in The Hobbit and early on in The Lord of the
Rings.

A most enjoyable tale and one that I highly recommend to others.

Title: GOBLINS: The Herald's Summons · Author: Fiondil · Times: First
Age and Prior · ID: 53
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 19:04:35
Spoilers!
I particularly related to Finarfin in this story: his constant
questioning of himself, how he berates himself and belittles his
contributions to his people, and his protest at Galadriel's continued
barring from Aman, just like the son of Finwe that he is. His fears
and his questions really bring home what the War of Wrath would have
been like for Elves who, otherwise, had no idea what Middle-earth was
like, had no experience in battle, and would have arrived shocked at
the changes in their loved ones, even changes as small as a different
name. Nicely done, Fiondil!

Msg# 9596

Re: URGENT!!!!! Help! I pasted my review of Wars of the Valar into t Posted by Berni Crumb November 30, 2008 - 7:56:12 Topic ID# 9585
Tanaqui, That was the right story and I got in and fixed the review. Thank
you, thank you, thank you for doing it so fast. I'm sorry my thanks weren't
as swift, but we had a family crisis that had to be dealt with before I
could come back to my email.
I do really appreciate all you and the other Admins have done for the MEFAs!

Rhyselle

On Sat, Nov 29, 2008 at 10:58 AM, Tanaqui <tanaqui@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:

> Hi Rhyselle
>
> I've set the status on your review for BRIDGE: Pá Valaraucar ar Námier
> back to hidden so you can edit it again. (If I picked the wrong story to
> re-set, let me know and I'll change the status on the other story.)
>
> Tanaqui
> MEFA Tech Support
>
> Berni Crumb wrote:
> >
> >
> > Anyone on the Admin Team, Help!
> > I was finishing up my reviews of Fiondil's Wars of the Valar and of
> BRIDGE:
> > Pá Valaraucar ar Námier in Word, and had opened the MEFA site to paste
> them
> > in, and I got distracted by my kids when clicking on the link. I ended up
> > posting the review for Wars of the Valar under BRIDGE: Pá Valaraucar ar
> > Námier instead! *headdesk*
> > Can you please, please, please delete the review so I can paste the
> correct
> > text for the review of BRIDGE in before the deadline tonight? While I
> want
> > Fiondil to have as many points as possible for the fic, I don't want him
> to
> > get them because the wrong text got put in place.
> >
> > I'd appreciate an email back to let me know I can paste in BRIDGE'S
> review.
> > Thank you very VERY much!
> >
> > Vorondavë ar linalmië,
> > Rhyselle
> >
> > Fantasy remains a human right: we make in our measure and in our
> derivative
> > mode, because we are made: and not only made, but made in the image and
> > likeness of a Maker. -- J.R.R. Tolkien, On Fairy-Stories, 1939
> >
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
> >
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Visit our website: http://www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>


--
Vorondavë ar linalmië,
Rhyselle

Fantasy remains a human right: we make in our measure and in our derivative
mode, because we are made: and not only made, but made in the image and
likeness of a Maker. -- J.R.R. Tolkien, On Fairy-Stories, 1939


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 9597

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Noon Set, Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 12:32:07 Topic ID# 9597
Title: Trinity · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Modern Times · ID: 51
Reviewer: Jael · 2008-11-29 19:09:07
Spoilers!
Forgive me for lacking the words to do this story justice. It is such
a brilliant mixing of Tolkien's and our world, with a heavy dose of
science and philosophy thrown in.

Sauron, Feanor . . . and Oppenheimer. I think anyone who has these
three as heroes is a person after my own heart.

However, my favorite line, [ Hell, look at his goddamned eyes. Didn't
you feel it when you shook his hand? He surely has the alleles, just
like Jim and the others."] echoes one I wrote myself. It is so
wonderful to find another writer who shares the same world view.

Thank you for this one, Pandemonium!


Title: The Lost Restored · Author: Larner · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor · ID: 59
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 19:09:33
Spoilers!
This is an incredibly moving tale of loss, hurt, redemption,
forgiveness and reconcilation with those who have hurt us the most -
and sometimes that is ourselves as much as it is others. I mean that
sometimes we have a hard time forgiving ourselves or getting over
hurts and moving on from them even if we can forgive others.

But this tale of Frodo and also of Smeagol coming to terms with the
events of the Ring War and the things that happened on Mount Doom
moved me in ways that I can't explain. The arrival of the third eagle
at Mount Doom was always something that I had imagined was for Gollum
and to read a story that recognizes that was very enjoyable. To read
of the recovery of Frodo was expected and not unusual, but to read of
Smeagol's redemption in the afterlife was a treat. And, to read of
their ultimate reconcilation brought tears to my eyes.

I highly recommend this story to others.

Title: Kin-Strife · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres: Drama:
Incomplete · ID: 92
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 19:10:12
Spoilers!
Isabeau of Greenlea's story, "Kin-strife", is about her version of a
nineteen-year-old Imrahil, heir to the Prince of Dol Amroth, and her
(very) original male character, Andrahar, a Haradric former slave and
street-rat that Imrahil rescued from Umbar and brought home to Dol
Amroth a few years before.

It was written for the HASA Brothel Challenge, so it is an adult story
which contains some relatively explicit sexual content.

I really like all the characters that Isabeau writes about, whether
original or drawn from canon -- or a mix (for example, Imrahil is a
canon character that we know little about, so Isabeau's Imrahil has
become the standard by which I judge all others). But my favorite of
her original characters is Andrahar. She writes him as a strait-laced
Haradric male with a rigidly-ingrained sense of honor. In gratitude
for Imrahil having saved him from a certain, painful death in Umbar,
he has pledged to serve Imrahil as his self-appointed bodyguard. They
begin this stories as esquires, in training to become Swan Knights,
Gondor's elite corps of cavalry. The bulk of this story happens
because he has not completely assimilated into the culture of Dol
Amroth, and is resented by many of those in the palace and in the Swan
Knights.

Imrahil is sometimes strong-willed and reckless, and he leads them
into a dangerous situation in a brothel. Andrahar saves him from
death, but his actions are misunderstood and he is attacked. The rest
of the story deals with the widening consequences of those events.

I enjoy the well-drawn relationships between the characters. Their
actions and emotions seem to suit their ages and relative levels of
maturity very well.

All in all, this is a great story that I truly enjoy reading often.

Very well done!

Title: WOUNDS: Invisible Scars · Author: Fiondil · Races: Elves: House
of Finwe · ID: 57
Reviewer: rhyselle · 2008-11-29 19:10:16
Spoilers!
I think that this is the best of these bits of Fiondil's collection of
short fics so far. This glimpse into Finrod's second life brings out
some very intriguing issues that I hadn't thought about before.

One would think that having scars, which are normally defined as a
defacement of a person's body, removed wouldn't be an emotionally
traumatic thing, but when one's memory is not trustworthy, the lack of
a physical sign of the events that occurred to oneself can be very
uncomfortable.

But what I liked best in here was seeing Arafinwe and his son
connecting in a way that we didn't see in Elf Interrupted. Learning to
live again is a lesson that both of them had to do--even though
Arafinwe never passed through Namo's halls, he essentially had to
readjust to his life after he returned from the War of Wrath, just as
Finrod did after his re-embodiment.

And Fiondil managed to get yet another naked elf into his collection
of tales. Snicker! I'm sure some psychologist would have fun trying to
interpret something significant from that...

I really liked this piece!

Title: The Last Messenger: A Tale of Numenor · Author: Fiondil ·
Times: Second and Early Third Age · ID: 8
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 19:14:33
Spoilers!
Fiondil writes very detailed stories featuring the Elves and Ainur of
Aman. In "The Last Messenger: A Tale of Numenor" he writes of one of
his Elven original characters, who is sent by the Valar on a mission
to Numenor.

The characters are interesting and detailed, and the story line is
intricate. I enjoyed reading this story.

Well done!


Title: Cuts Gone Wrong · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Mid Third Age:
Eriador · ID: 156
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 19:15:41
Spoilers!
A fun tale of the very early days of Aragorn as a Ranger learning
their ways and the way things work in the world at large -
specifically in the area around Bree. It had to be hard for a Man
raised in an elven stronghold to be out in the rough world of men and
then to be dispised by most of those men - especially as he was trying
to safeguard those men. I really enjoyed this as it was a gapfiller to
a comment that appears in Lord of the Ring when Aragorn tells the
hobbits that his shortcuts don't don't go wrong. I really like the
older Ranger here - his quiet wisdom as he trains this lord... HIS
lord. It must have been very difficult for him.

A wonderful tale - as all of Dwimordene's stories are - and I highly
recommend it.

Title: Waterloo · Author: Lady Bluejay · Genres: Romance: Gondor · ID: 158
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 19:24:14
Spoilers!
Lady Bluejay writes wonderful Lothiriel / Eomer romance stories and
this is one of her finest short stories in the genre. There are
several things in this story that made it unique from other stories
for me, most notably the idea of having horses 'stabled' everywhere in
the streets to keep them safe. I think that that makes sense - even
more sense then having them on the Pelennor which would have been torn
up from the battle and Minas Tirith certainly didn't have stables for
all of them. I enjoyed the tension between the two of them as they
spoke at the dinner table... saying things almost in code so that
others didn't understand them. It was a marvelous scene.

An altogether wonderful story that I truly enjoyed.

Title: A Moment Away · Author: Elen Kortirion · Races: Men: General
Drabbles · ID: 474
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-29 19:25:24
Thoughtful and evocative.

Title: Out of the Blue · Author: Jael · Races: Elves · ID: 205
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 19:34:48
Spoilers!
Jael's story, "Out of the Blue", is about an original character, a
caseworker from the Department of Child Protective Services, who is
sent to evaluate the young son of some wealthy but crazy cultists. He
turns out to be the son of Legolas, and the crazy cultists are Elves
of Mirkwood, living in modern-day Chicago under Thranduil's leadership.

The details of the protagonist and her concerns are realistic, and her
puzzlement at meeting these odd people is well-drawn. She never quite
understands why they are so odd, but very slowly learns to accept
them, perhaps under the radical influence of lembas.

I enjoyed reading this story very much... it is far more detailed,
three-dimensional, and convincing than any other "Elves in modern
times" story I have ever read.

Very well done!


Title: The Keys of the Realm · Author: Larner · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Aragorn · ID: 477
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 19:37:38
Spoilers!
This is an amazing story about a character this is very, very seldom
written about - Hurin of the Keys. I loved seeing the whole return of
the king from such a unique perspective... not quite a commoners
perspective but certainly not one you see often. I've always enjoyed
the stories that take such familiar things and are able to give us a
different and wonderful take on it and this story definitely does
that! There are many behind the scenes things going on as Hurin has to
do the little things that lead up to the coronation... finding the
crown and helping Faramir with things. I also enjoy the conversations
that take place with the lords about whether or not they will accept
Aragorn's claim as King. It really rings true to me as I'm sure that
such conversations must have taken place and that there were some
lords opposed to him.

All in all, this is a delightful story and one I have re-read. [Thanks
for writing and dedicating this to me, Larner!]

Title: WOUNDS: Invisible Scars · Author: Fiondil · Races: Elves: House
of Finwe · ID: 57
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 19:45:06
Spoilers!
This is moving on many levels and hard to review because of that. It
is wonderfully written and the conversation between Finrod and his
father is well done as Fiondil captures Finrod's confusion and
Arafinwe's concern beautifully. As Arafinwe notes at the end, it is
the invisible scars in life that take longest to heal.

Very nicely done.

Title: Second Best · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 384
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 19:45:25
Spoilers!
Tanaqui is the mistress of misdirection, and this drabble, "Second
Best", is a fine exemplar of that.

The drabble vividly describes a Steward's son who is always treated as
second best; no matter what he does or how admirably he does it, he is
always unfavorably compared to another.

We think we know who he is, but it's not until the last few words of
the final sentence that we realize that we are reading about someone
else. It's fascinating, because there is likely a direct link between
the son's treatment at the hands of his father, and the similar
treatment of the person whom we thought the drabble was about.

The language clearly conveys the main character's dilemma, and the
unfairness of the situation. Very well done!

Title: Broken Star · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 54
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 19:50:57
Spoilers!
Pandemonium-213's double drabble, "Broken Star", is a wrenching
depiction of the last hours of Celebrimbor's life, as Sauron tries to
torture him into revealing the location of the three Elven Rings of Power.

What is especially disturbing about this is the familiarity and
intimacy between the two, and the resulting sense of betrayal on the
part of Celebrimbor.

And what is not said is as devastating as what is said.

This is chilling and powerful work. Well done!

Title: Tide of Destiny - Part One: Choices · Author: Lady Bluejay ·
Genres: Drama: Incomplete · ID: 159
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 19:52:58
Spoilers!
This is a story that I look eagerly for the updates for from week to
week. I have enjoyed the way Lady Bluejay has switched from Lothiriel
to Eomer's point of view over the course of the story. This is also
the first Eomer/Lothiriel story that I've read that has shown them at
a young age and has shown the characters growing up. I've been
touched, horrified, saddened, and then also laughed at times
throughout the course of this story. Lady Bluejay has truly shown the
growth of the characters as people. I've also enjoyed the secondary
characters in the story, both in Rohan and in Dol Amroth. Although, I
truly despised the men from Harad - although I was supposed to do
that. [smile]

A very enjoyable story and I highly recommend it.

Title: Wind and Fire · Author: elfscribe · Times: First Age and Prior
· ID: 539
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-29 19:54:55
Spoilers!
No matter how many times I read this, I am still struck by how simply
and clearly Feanor's obsession with the Silmarils is explained – not a
materialistic desire for possessions, but something far deeper and
more potent, going beyond symbolism to explain how in their making a
part of himself became one with them, and why. I remember mentioning
when this was first posted that I was reminded of Sauron leaving part
of himself within the One…

Loved the descriptions, something at which Elfscribe excels, and the
pervading sense of too little, too late. The atmosphere in the camp
when Manwë arrives feels as it should, and Feanor is – beautiful. That
was the first thing I noticed when I first read this, that he is
beautiful. Most writers don't bother to mention that fact, but how
else would he be, considering who and what he is? I loved the way the
passions of the flesh took Manwë almost by surprise and carried him
away in a manner that kept him coming back, hungering for more. Sadly
he is in many ways very similar to Zeus, and like Zeus he has no
courage when faced with his wife's anger and tears, and the stage was
set for the long tragedy of the Noldor to play itself out.

Cooler heads, higher courage, and it could all have ended quite
differently.


Title: Tangled Webs · Author: Ribby · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 100
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 19:57:28
Spoilers!
Ribby's drabble, "Tangled Webs", uses tatting lace with a broken
thread as a metaphor for how those people we have lost remain with us,
even if only in our memory. It is beautifully done, and worth a read.

Well done!

Title: An Elf-lord Revealed · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 406
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-29 19:58:09
Spoilers!
I really enjoyed these drabbles showing different aspects of
Glorfindel's life from his awakening in Mandos onward. I liked the
sense of confusion followed by bitter memory in the first one, and how
he takes note of his unscarred skin. My favourites though were
probably [A Shining Light] and [Fulfilment]. The first shows his
power, an elf lord of immense potency, able to stand against the Nine
at need, and the second is a lovely reminder of time passed and his
very `elvenness'. Too often Glorfindel is portrayed as a warrior
without regard to his other role as the vessel of the Valar. It must
have been a personal satisfaction for him to see his words come to pass.

Title: My Oaths I Will Keep · Author: Encaitariel · Races: Elves:
House of Finwe · ID: 298
Reviewer: Dawn Felagund · 2008-11-29 20:00:19
Spoilers!
What a wonderful story! There is so much to praise about "My Oaths I
Will Keep." Encaitariel's story sparkles with original characters who
bring life and humor to the pages; likewise, the canon characters,
while true to the shapes Tolkien gave them, are very well depicted and
given added depth. Finrod's nobility, Orodreth's quiet desperation,
and the fey magnetism of the Feanorians are all perceptible in this story.

But what I liked best is that it is, literally, a page-turner; once I
started reading it, I found that I could not stop. There is always
something going on, and the pacing is perfect to move the story
forward. Yet it is not all action: Encaitariel handles the emotions of
her characters exceptionally well. Although this event has always
comes across as rather stiff to me in The Silmarillion, Encaitariel
breathes new life into it and shows convincingly how it probably was:
a king deserted by his people, twelve companions bound to each other
by loyalty on a quest that will result in almost certain death.
Finrod's silent exchange with his foster-son showed the compassion,
desperation, and humanity of the king; the wives and children as they
bid their husbands and fathers farewell was heartbreaking, all the
more so with knowledge of the end that all of them will meet.

I am very glad to have found this story and would like to pass along
my recommendations.

Title: Orc Dreams · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Villains: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 448
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 20:07:57
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble, "Orc Dreams", is a fascinating descent through the
fevered nightmare of an Orc, physically exhausted from a long march,
perhaps to a battle somewhere. As befits corrupted Elves, his dreams
center around the heavens. Tanaqui names the constellations very
creatively, yet it is obvious that the dream is deeply disturbing to
the Orc.

Beautifully done... well, maybe "beautiful" isn't quite the right
word.... Powerfully done... yeah, that's it!

Bravo!

Title: Young Fëanáro Makes A Stone · Author: Oshun · Genres: Humor:
Valar & Maiar · ID: 77
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-29 20:12:30
Spoilers!
Oh yes, the trials of the Tolkien fan fiction writer – get an idea,
haul out the books to glance quickly over the canon before you start
writing it, and three days later you have read so many versions in so
many different places saying so many contradictory things that you
barely remember what you were planning to write in the first place.

Oshun paints a convincing picture that suggests this is the only
possible way it could have happened. She also has no difficulty
convincing the reader that this is precisely how Aulë would have
appeared to his young apprentices. I enjoyed the touches of humour and
found the description of how one went about `making a stone' extremely
interesting.


Title: Tree of Knowledge · Author: Nancy Brooke · Times: Late Third
Age: Gondor Drabbles · ID: 172
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-29 20:13:24
Spoilers!
Nancy Brooke's drabble, "Tree of Knowledge", is a fascinating glimpse
at the mind of Denethor. His knowledge about what awaits Faramir at
Rivendell is perceptive, but we don't learn what he speaks of until
the very last sentence.

The language is rich with metaphor, and clearly shows the depth of
Denethor's understanding, and the depth of his reluctance for his sons
to understand, as well.

Very well done!

Title: Refuge · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Elves: Noldor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 423
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-29 20:34:10
Spoilers!
Such a good – and chilling – picture of this first meeting. The scene
was very well set with Elrond prepared to defend his brother and
himself, even though the reader knows it's a hopeless instinct, and I
liked the fact that there was no sugar coating – a major slaughter
occurred at Sirion, and it can be assumed that almost everyone the
twins knew had either been killed or had fled. Seeing it through a
child's eyes makes it even more horrifying.

[The world is broken. His mother must be dead too.] is exactly how a
child in the midst of trauma might think, and it would be natural for
the boys to cling onto someone whose first action made it clear he was
prepared to defend them. Hearing only the Feanorian version of events,
I can imagine how they would have later grown to love him without
guilt despite the blood that had been spilt. I also liked the link
from Elrond's childhood experience through to the founding of
Imladris. I don't think I've seen it done before, but the psychology
makes sense. Nice touch.


Title: Aulë the Smith · Author: Oshun · Genres: Non-Fiction: Character
Studies · ID: 530
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-29 20:37:57
One of Oshun's great services to the Tolkien fanfiction community is
her carefully researched biographies of characters in the legendarium,
featured at the SWG Web site. Oshun scours the volumes hunting down
references, but she doesn't just regurgitate the professor's words:
she interprets the tales and comments on the events.

My own personal favorite among the loathsome Valar (I'm rather
anti-god in general) is Ulmo, who seems to be the only one who
actually does out of his way to help out the hapless Children in
Middle-earth. However, Oshun makes a good case for Aule. While he
doesn't leave his safe haven in Valinor, he shows an active interest
in the Noldor and encourages their scientific curiosity.

Aule, however, is married to the insufferable Yavanna. Poor thing.

My one complaint about this useful essay is its neglect of the
Dwarves. While Oshun mentions Aule's creation of the Dwarves, we don't
learn much about how the Dwarves themselves see him.

Title: Wave-Singer · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Drabbles · ID: 33
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-29 20:45:18
Spoilers!
This sent ice cold chills down my spine and raised gooseflesh on my
arms. It is an an excellent piece of writing and I'm sure it would
stand on its own really well even completely divorced from Tolkien's
universe, but of course the fact that it gives us a tiny glimpse into
a well-documented life after many-thousands of years of wandering
alone is what makes it complete. The word choices throughout are
immaculate, the speakers are so well defined I could probably describe
them, and the picture of him singing his sorrow on the shore - utterly
alone for all time - will stay with me for a very long time.

This was quite wonderful.


Title: Name Calling: Group Identity and the Other among First Age
Elves · Author: Angelica · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 322
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-29 20:51:42
A very helpful resource for fanfiction-writers, researchers and
Tolkien-linguists alike, Angelica summarizes the 'HoMe' writings on
[Quendi and Eldar] and brings some order and structure into the
sometimes confusing source material. The resulting essay, not merely a
reappraisal of the material, lists differences in the Eldarin groups
with regard to linguistics, historical and cultural developments and
draws sharp conclusions that serve to further understanding of
'elvendom' as a whole, between and within the different groups that
set out (and those that did not) from Cuivienen. In short: A treat
that I will definitely come back to, and well worth a read.

Msg# 9598

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Noon Set, Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 12:33:35 Topic ID# 9598
Title: The Consuming Darkness · Author: Isil Elensar · Genres: Drama ·
ID: 467
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-29 20:54:11
Spoilers!
I had to sit quietly and let the story soak into me after I had
finished reading it. I don't think I have ever really stopped to
wonder why Míriel had apparently left her bid for safety to the last
minute, and this story provides an explanation that is both plausible
and heart-wrenching. The final council meeting before the end, with
the description of the slights, small but deeply insulting, that she
has had to live with, give the reader a fair idea of what life as
consort to the usurper must have been like. Duty done, the urgency of
her quest on the other side of town builds wonderfully, drawing the
reader along. One of the best sentences for what it tells the reader
about Míriel is a simple one – [She persevered, though her side hurt
terribly.] - which tells me that she is probably fit and healthy but
being gently bred, raised in luxury, she would certainly not be in the
habit of strenuous exercise.

The parting on the pier is agonizing, and I loved the quick glimpse
we're given of young Anárion who I have also not thought about all
that much but who somehow came across exactly as I expected. And
finally, only too human despite deciding that her fate is to die and
there is no salvation for her, Míriel makes her final desperate dash
for survival through a city overwhelmed by terror as it soon will be
by water. And of course, we know how it ends.

Loved her cursing her husband, not knowing he had already met his
fate. I'm sure it gave her a tiny bit of satisfaction to be able to
say all that out loud before the end.

Second Age is my period, but being an elf person I have read far too
little about Numenor and its fate. This has given me quite a taste for
it. Stunning story! Thank you.


Title: Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast? · Author: viv · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 180
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-29 21:05:58
Spoilers!
Problem is the word count is everything, and I'm sitting here giggling
and a bit at a loss for - yes, words. LOL! All right, loved the style,
loved the concept, loved the picture of Eowyn – to be fair to Angmar,
she certainly was little and blonde and sassy, right? He comes across
as the right kind of guy to be up for a threesome, too – been around a
bit, seen it all, done some of it…

His pick up lines were no worse than some I remember from my teenage
years. Somehow, divorced from the larger story, killing him seems a
bit of an extreme response.

Talking about lines, the last line here is perfect.


Title: On Canon and Fanfic · Author: Marta · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 123
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-29 21:11:22
Marta navigates the fanfic minefield of canon vs. AU with great skill
in this essay, presenting a well thought-out series of definitions
without ever seeming judgmental. Even what seems a given to me
(perhaps unjustly)--that detailed knowledge of canon is a prerequisite
to writing good noncanonical fanfic--is handled with careful neutrality:

[For some people canon is important, and if you choose not to focus on
this aspect, you will lose some readers. But this is true for any
aspect of the writing process. So while some people may criticize you
for being uncanonical, you could probably just as easily criticize
them for not doing as well as you'd like in some other important
aspect of their writing.]

I like the distinction made between extracanonical and uncanonical,
imagining a sliding scale from gapfiller to AU. To it I might add what
I like to think of as "speculative canon" for the stories that
*really* stretch canon, and I wonder where Marta would classify such
uncanonical but often highly "canonesque" genres like parodies,
crossovers, and modern times fics. But that's a topic for another essay!



Title: An Ordinary Woman · Author: Dawn Felagund · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 32
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 21:12:28
Spoilers!
Oh no Dawn, don't tell me he just did that!!!!

I found this story an immensely amusing read, from the start where
Finrod surely remembers why he left Aman and his reasoning that
perhaps attending a birthday of one of the Sindar might bring him some
fun and maybe an heir. I just love how you explain the births of
Finduilas and Gil-galad here, making me go like: hey that makes sense,
especially on how they pop up on those family trees! Curufin's
reaction to such frivolity had me laughing so hard, who knows what is
in that study of his. And after that, oh my. I had to giggle so much
at how Finrod described Melian's girdle (mazes huh), the meeting with
Beleg and a dinner with Thingol. Yet it leaves him to ponder where
Lúthien is and their meeting - especially the first looks at her - is
so splendidly written. I just could see Finrod standing there, taking
her in like that. However not all wishes are fulfilled and the
ending... I wondered what kind of mistake he would have made, but that
most certainly was the icing on the cake. Let's blame Beleg, shall we?

I really loved to read this story written from Finrod's perspective
solely and completely in the wonderful style that is Dawn's trademark.
This exploration how a rather normal person can grow to be a larger
than life persona is immensely well done with the numerous moments of
laughter.


Title: Two Prisoners · Author: Lord Branwyn · Genres: Alternate
Universe · ID: 724
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-29 21:16:09
Spoilers!
This is one of those stories you read through to the end, think about
it, and then go back and read it a second time. Quietly practical,
with a very authentic feeling about it. I've read enough war stories
to know this is how things would have been done, yes. There is nothing
overtly strange or creepy, nothing to sound alarms or suggest the
proximity of legend or the paranormal. Yet there they were, a pair of
very, very old soldiers. [There's a signals office who's an expert in
languages, an Oxford man.] Yes, quite. And I hope they found him as
interesting as he clearly found them.

I am going to come back to this in my mind many times in the future I
think, trying to decide who they were and why they were where they
were, and if they wanted to help or if they just got all caught up in
the fighting, and what they thought of the state of the world they had
handed over governance of so many thousands of years before… Lot of
food for thought here.


Title: A New Day · Author: Oshun · Genres: Longer Works · ID: 35
Reviewer: Angelica · 2008-11-29 21:21:02
Spoilers!
Love, sex, politics, family dynamics, great characterizations, amazing
dialogs: this story has everything and then some. Oshun manages to
tell the story in such a way that makes the reader feel that, maybe
why not?, things will work out after all and these two
friends/lovers/co-conspirators will live happily ever after.
Findekano's nightmare of the Nirnaeth is a chilling reminder of what
horrors the future holds for them.
It's almost impossible to choose one character. Of course, there is no
Findekano like Oshun's and what can be added about Maitimo
(intelligent, vulnerable, scholarly, political, beautiful) or
Findarato (hiding his shrewdness behind his good looks) or loyal
Makalaure, dignified Nolofinwe, difficult Carnistir or ambitious
Curufinwe? But leaving aside all the irresistible males, I will choose
Artanis because I've never been a Galadriel fan and when I read her
characterization, I realized why.

Title: The Search · Author: rhyselle · Genres: Poetry: Late Third Age
· ID: 501
Reviewer: Alassante · 2008-11-29 21:21:22
This was a wonderful poem by Rhyselle. She really captured Gollum's
characterization quite well. I actually felt sorry for him. Plus the
poem is written in such a way that it is enjoyable even for someone
who does not particularly like poetry. It flows beautifully.

Title: Early Winter at Himring Hill · Author: Oshun · Genres: Romance:
Elven Lands · ID: 79
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 21:25:15
I loved this piece from the day I read it and sometimes when the
darkness of the Silm is just a bit too much, I just have to pull up
this story to be remembered what great moments the watchful peace
brought to those brave elves. It just feels right to see Fingon
shedding that mantle of responsibility and leadership to be himself,
free from all burdens to be with his friend. And the feeling is
returned all the same. Winter may be in the air, but I am almost
certain that indoors the warmth of summer will be present. Besides the
responses this little ficlet evokes, I just love Oshun's usage of
language here. Ficlets are hard to write because you want to get the
essence of the story down as best as you can, but she surely succeeded
here.

Title: The Dance · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres: Romance: Elven
Lands · ID: 128
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-29 21:29:01
This elegant tale imagines a first dance between Feanor and Nerdanel;
as a whole it hovers between Tolkien fanfiction and Regency comedy of
manners. I like the melange, although, I think, Tolkien would not
have. (He seems to have thought that the cruder the culture, the more
"noble" it would be, and thus disavowed any concept of courtly love.)

Being very clumsy and socially inept, I was able to fully identify
with Nerdanel's agonies at the ball. The story ends with a sweet,
romantic twist.

Title: All these hands · Author: Elitihien · Races: Elves: Noldor
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 534
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 21:33:23
Spoilers!
This is a gorgeously constructed drabble series regarding Idril and
those who are important to her. Each drabble simply gives you pause,
not only because of the lyrical words, but also about what just
transpired. Love, death, birth and partings go hand in hand, changing
her life immensely. The last one is perfect: I can see her on her
deathbed where Eru's hand touches her before she dies. She forgives
Maeglin, realising that she might have been too harsh towards him.
What I find so exceptionally about these series is not only the superb
usage of language, but also that the character grows with every
drabble; her voice matures with every piece. What a marvellous piece!

Title: A Darkness Lies behind Us · Author: Bodkin · Races: Elves:
Incomplete · ID: 190
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-29 21:41:57
A lovely story about Finrod's return to life in Aman, featuring
well-known and well-loved canon characters and some interesting OCs in
the Blessed Realm. The story goes to show that not all tales from
Valinor after Feanor left need to be eventless, and it is beautifully
written, too. I enjoyed reading this very much.

Title: Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast? · Author: viv · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 180
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 21:45:24
Spoilers!
Leave it up to the Witchking to even see a dating opportunity on the
battlefield and I do think that over the time his lines and views of
women have grown outdated. Marvellously done Viv, he remains bawdy and
arrogant to the end, mocking them all as he falls - in a way!

Title: Tolkien's Parish: The Canonical Middle-earth · Author: Steuard
Jensen · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 91
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-29 21:50:51
How do we define canon in source material as complex and varied as
Tolkien's? Jensen's response to this thorny question is thoughtful and
even-handed, but in his careful deference to personal preference he
seems at times too much like the Elves, who say both yes and no. No
ground-breaking insights here, but a well-written, cogent exploration
of the issue.

Title: Least Expected · Author: Imhiriel · Genres: Alternate Universe:
Drabbles · ID: 512
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 21:54:32
Spoilers!
A scary alternative universe drabble of one of my favorite Rangers. Of
course, the Ring War is already lost with the implication in the story
that Aragorn has already been killed, but this loss is also difficult
to take. It took me a few minutes to understand that the leader of the
Rohirrim must be Grima, which makes it even more chilling in my
opinion as it suggests that Eomer and Eowyn are also lost.

Very nicely done!

Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 22:06:24
Spoilers!
A very nice ficlet about the arrival of Eowyn and how her birth
heralded a change in things - particularly for the Witch-king. I
really liked the glimpses of both Glorfindel and the Witch-king as
they 'felt' that shift in the air at her birth - Glorfindel's joy and
the Nazgul's concern. Raksha really captured the pride and joy of the
new parents.

Well done and an enjoyable read.

Title: They Also Serve · Author: Marta · Times: Late Third Age · ID: 365
Reviewer: Radbooks · 2008-11-29 22:20:41
Spoilers!
A enjoyable story of those left behind while their loved ones are off
at War - or in some sort of dangerous situation. It is such a very
difficult situation for those people - often women - not knowing what
is going on with their loved ones and Marta captures that very well
here. Arwen has had to deal with Aragorn traveling and being in danger
for decades and in this story is trying to soothe that worry by
working in the kitchen. I really like the kitchen cook who is a
forthright, no-nonsense woman who helps Arwen keep things in perspective.

Very well done and I really recommend it.

Title: Light of the Westering Sun · Author: Dawn Felagund · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 126
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 22:38:20
Spoilers!
This is a very ingenious and creatively crafted story that looks back
on Haleth's life. This series works on so many levels since it
portrays all stages of womanhood, life, her love, her decisions
towards the love of her life, her own people.

The format Dawn chose her works here so well, most commonly you see
drabble series that begin in the youth or start of events, but this is
written in reverse, an experiment as the author called it.

This experimental writing resulted in a melancholically tribute to (a
fanonically favourite) love. A series that to me it feels like just
brief touches upon her life and yet they tell so much in this short
format. [Love bought me my wisdom.] and this phrase seems to be the
central theme in this drabble series, but it also connects the first
to the last. But foremost it reads as a celebration of love which
might have been between Caranthir and Haleth, the wisdom and wishes
that brought them together, a lie she did had to tell for the safety
of her people and sundered her from Caranthir in the end. Even though
we don't see Caranthir saying it aloud, but to me his love for her
ruled his mind and heart and all we are left with is her sadness of
what might have been and the love mirrored in the eyes which were
alike the [Light of the Westering Sun].

Title: Nerdanel's Sons · Author: Istarnie · Races: Elves: Incomplete ·
ID: 659
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-29 22:47:00
Istarnie writes an ongoing story about Nerdanel and her family that I
have admired for a long time, and that has for a part shaped my
understanding of Nerdanel as a character. The style especially always
struck me as notable, it is very helpful in establishing Nerdanel as a
strong but believable figure with strengths and weaknesses, but always
consistent and strikingly wise, fitting for the epithet Feanor's wife
was given. The story expresses a familiarity with the source material
and builds upon it in an entirely believable way so as to offer a
glimpse into the domestic world of the Eldar that makes the suspension
of disbelief easy. A lovely piece of writing that I wish I could say
more about, but find myself at a loss of words - but that is my fault,
not the author's.

Title: Maglor's Song · Author: Robinka · Genres: Poetry: Drama · ID: 398
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 22:47:13
This poem is perhaps one of my favourites written by Robinka. It is
written in an elegant style, the tone is yet sober, and utmost
reflecting. It does not take too much to see the elf standing there
during his vigil, remembering his past, feeling the bitterness of his
fate as the sea tides come and go. The sonnets are simply gorgeous,
especially since it feels to me that it is written in a bardic style,
to be remembered and passed on orally by generations to come. Would he
have written this vigil himself? Who knows, Robinka's writing is
thusly that this lament feels ancient, perhaps something we just have
heard as we walked by an unknown to us poet who in fact is the elf
himself... This is a very evocative poem and a great take on Maglor's
final fate.

Title: Return · Author: Elleth · Genres: Alternate Universe: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 399
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 23:05:53
Spoilers!
Depending of course if you want to believe Nerdanel's words to Fëanor
did not come true, I can see that instead of Amras landing on the
beach with his brothers, or being burned in a ship at Losgar, this
would be an immensely believable take on what should have happened (I
am being rebellious here). To me these two double drabbles are
brilliant, well paced and filled with post-Alqualondë action. The
emotions of both feel so natural: the doubt (is it really him?), the
fear of being cheated still at last by fate and the stigma's shouted
by those who suffered. It surely must have hurt to hear such a thing.
How would the Telerin have reacted to a kinslayer returning to Aman so
shortly after it happened and what would Nerdanel have done to protect
him?

Yet indeed, what if? These drabbles leaves you to ponder about the
outcome of what Elleth just portrayed here. Would you as a reader
would not have granted Nerdanel to have one of her children returning
to her, at least her youngest? Elleth, these two ficlets really makes
you wish Tolkien had written Amras' fate otherwise. This is just
wonderfully written with so much emotion and vivid detail, this
especially in combination with the artwork Elleth submitted for Seven
in '07, see here [http://tinyurl.com/6n7duo%5d.

Title: Loss · Author: SurgicalSteel · Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 196
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 23:09:26
Spoilers!
This is a story that hit close home to me and I knew that this
happened in the character's lives when reading [The King's Surgeon],
so in a way I was prepared in what was to come. This still makes this
a fabulous one shot that is carefully written and it mirrors the rush
one goes through during such a horrible event. To Halbarad it seems
like such a normal day, but soon the rush of events starts to kick in
and there is no way of stopping it. His pain and grief of loosing a
child, fearing for the life of his love and concern for his children
are well brought in this piece. To me this is written with a lot of
courage, to write so marvellously about a life changing event not many
do want to talk about in our life, this piece is just excellently
written with great characters that you just want to hold so close.

Title: Flame of Life · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 114
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 23:20:14
Spoilers!
[If the Imperishable Flame could speak...] then I could see why so
many tried to conquer or master it when I read Imhiriel's take on this
rather eum elusive being. To me one has to realise its presence in
able to understand it in full and only he and Eru seems to understand
it fully. I can also imagine the appeal or perhaps the attraction of
this imaginative power it has, and how many would seek out to conquer
it for its own reasons (like Melkor). Greatly drabbled!

Title: Gently Held · Author: viv · Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 6
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 23:29:25
Spoilers!
What a gorgeous tribute to love and it's a sound answer to those who
would even dare to question her reasons for loving him? This touching
ficlet (it had me wondering for a moment if it was really 300 words
because it feels as if it encompasses so much more) leaves me to
wonder - in a way - what hurts of Arwen Aragorn has healed. The grief
regarding her father's departure, the hurt regarding the loss of her
mother? What is for certain is that she entrusts her entire being to
him and what greater price can one give? This is beautifully written
Viv, with a gentle pacing just as Aragorn's hands.

Title: The Dwarves Treasure · Author: eiranae · Races: Dwarves · ID: 312
Reviewer: Nieriel Raina · 2008-11-29 23:31:02
Spoilers!
A very interesting plot. The dwarves are portrayed very nicely! And
little Mir is adorable. Eirae has done a wonderful job of showing just
what could happen if a dwarf were to raise an elf child. Engaging and
enjoyable to read.

Title: Forsaken · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 369
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 23:34:39
Spoilers!
This drabble conveys the fully lived life of Finrod and the build up
makes you feel for him so much, but that last line. That blow, that
from the very start he lost the support of his brother. One can only
imagine how agonising that was, especially since his brother went with
him along the way to Middle-earth. It leaves me to ponder that even
though Orodreth only treated him with silence, the devotion was there
nonetheless. Only at such a price. What a drabble Imhiriel, I honestly
think this is one of your finest!

Msg# 9599

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Noon Set, Part Three) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 12:34:28 Topic ID# 9599
Title: Here's To The King! · Author: Jael · Genres: Humor: Elven
Lands · ID: 204
Reviewer: Nieriel Raina · 2008-11-29 23:35:04
One of my absolute favorite stories! Jael is a mastermind when it
comes to writing the elves of the Greenwood and Thranduil and Legolas
in particular. In this instance Legolas finds the Elvenking in a
rather unprecedented situation, and all for the good of the kingdom!
Full of ribald humor, this fic continues to make me smile. And I
continue to find myself at odd times humming 'Gler' i aran'.

Title: At the Last Minute · Author: rhyselle · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Elves and Men · ID: 544
Reviewer: Nieriel Raina · 2008-11-29 23:38:17
Spoilers!
A charming holiday fic. Rhyselle manages to get a couple elf warriors
doing what we rarely see them doing: baking cookies and other domestic
chores, all to cheer a young friend. A good reminder that sometimes we
need to celebrate not just for ourselves, but for others. Wonderful!

Title: Not Yet · Author: erobey · Genres: Romance: Elven Lands · ID: 712
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-29 23:43:06
Good story about the troubles of expecting to find some past love in a
person who resembles one of the former beloved - but can never be it,
I love the end of this. Very fitting. :)

Title: Boromir at the Bat · Author: White Gull · Genres: Poetry: Late
Third Age · ID: 632
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-29 23:44:25
I really had no idea what to expect from this poem and perhaps some
things are lost on me, but I like this approach of Boromir's demise,
caught in such verse. The pacing is nice and apt, the wording quite
colourful. Nicely done!

Title: The Captain's New Clothes · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 421
Reviewer: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · 2008-11-29 23:44:56
Spoilers!
The prompt for this fic is an illustration of Faramir from one of the
Hildrebrandt calendars published in the 1970s. Well will fans of d'un
certain age remember the illustration of Robin Hood!Faramir clad in
green and unrangerly orange. This fic gives a clever explanation of
why Faramir would ever don orange leggings. He shows himself to be a
wise commander, willing to sacrifice a little pride in return for the
happiness of his men. His final comment about the clothes scaring the
enemy made me laugh. Maybe that is why the hobbits look so astonished
in the calendar illustration.

Title: Dispelling the Fog · Author: fantasyfan · Races: Other Beings ·
ID: 642
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-29 23:57:05
Spoilers!
Vrerty good story which poises a question that has driven many a
fandom discussion and has never been resolved: Who is Tom Bombadil?
Frodo is very bright, in this, indeed to poise the question, and I
like the way you go about having Tom give (or avoid...) an answer.
Very lovely little tale, and very good executed. applause!

Title: Coming Home to Crickhollow · Author: calanthe11 · Genres:
Romance · ID: 445
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-30 00:43:53
Spoilers!
Dear heaven, this was stunning. What an absolutely amazing fic. I
write and normally read elves, so this was on a shot list of stories
with interesting summaries that I kept to look at if I had time.
Tonight I was sorting out which ones to bookmark and which to scrap
and glanced at the first paragraph… and was lost.

To say this is about friendship, love, and how to pick up a life when
you are no longer the people you were a handful of years ago barely
scrapes the surface. At regular intervals while I was reading, I would
stop and wonder how on earth they were ever going to fit back into the
world they had left and be content and whole again. They have
travelled so far, seen so much, grown and changed in ways that have
nothing to do with age. The memories of other places and times
contrast with the present, underlining the difference, the otherness
that has become part of them.

The writing itself is almost sensually inviting, pleasing to read,
with some quite breathtakingly lovely phrasing. The way words are used
to paint pictures with clear light and subtle shading is pure joy. I
wanted to include a few passages I particularly enjoyed but that would
necessitate pasting half the story here, so I'll rather say how they
made me feel. Reading this, I could see the countryside, smell the
air, shiver from the cold breeze on my skin. I could picture an
ordinary kitchen scene, note the incongruity within it of a knife with
the crest of the white tree on the hilt. I sat with Merry on the
windowsill, seeing and smelling the night. And I could feel the subtle
(and not so subtle) dance of sensations and emotions taking place
between Merry and Pippin. Anyone who has ever fallen in love, anyone
who has ever desired someone and not been certain of the level of
desire in return, will recognize those moments when breathing is
difficult and the heart hurts and the world shrinks.

This is a woefully inadequate review. Just – of all the stories I have
read for this year's MEFAs (and I have written reviews for 44 so far)
this is the one that has had the greatest impact on me, and is one I
will certainly read again.


Title: Trinity · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Modern Times · ID: 51
Reviewer: Aranel Took · 2008-11-30 00:54:13
Spoilers!
I liked this one very much! I'm probably one of the rare readers here
who is actually more familiar with atomic bombs than elves (I figured
out Sauron, but didn't know who Fionn was though I did recognize the
jewels were Silmarils.), but it is still a very enjoyable story even
without detailed knowledge of the characters. It's a very interesting
comparison, the scientists and engineers compared to the elves who
created such great (and terrible) items as the Silmarils and the One
Ring. And it's even a trait passed in DNA (I did get who Jim and
Francis were right away! ;-) ). The part where Oppenheimer describes
their eyes with ["unusual refractive proteins"] -- and Fionn and
Saunder's reactions -- cracked me up! I also like your view of Sauron
being a victim of historical revisionism. I like my villains to be
morally complex! :-D

Title: Dead Steward's Gift · Author: stefaniab · Genres: Mystery · ID: 572
Reviewer: Cathleen · 2008-11-30 01:08:32
Spoilers!
Oh, lol! Where do I begin? A very cool blend of so many elements make
this story an exciting read. I've never seen a fic where the writer
has combined aspects of not only movie verse and book verse - but her
own "verse" as well! Stef's lotr universe is quite a place! She has
created not only a thrilling mystery here, but stuffed it full of
surprises. The kitty is endearing and seems like an appropriate
companion for Faramir. I can easily picture him as a cat person. I
love the ghostly feel to the story and I think using the palantir
added just the right touch. I admit, the palantiri have always
fascinated me and I love seeing one turn up in a story. It's nice,
also, to see Faramir portrayed as more of an emotionally settled
person that he sometimes is. This story started out as a Halloween
story for the G-Fic group and I was delighted to see that Stef
continued it firther and turned it into such a wonderful tale for all
of us to enjoy! Very well done, Stef!

Title: Trajectory · Author: Galadriel · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 153
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 01:20:40
Spoilers!
I really love the texture of the description here, of the water and of
the sense of drowning. It also love how it foreshadows Aragorn\\\'s
fall into the river in the films and works as a lovely metaphor for
despair. More foreshadowing in the powerful image at the end of the
story. Throughout, the alliteration gives the fic a musical quality. I
also enjoy the more perilous aspects of loving that are reflected in
the fic and seem appropriate for warriors.

Title: Generations · Author: Bodkin · Genres: Drama: Featuring Aragorn
· ID: 508
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-30 01:33:56
Spoilers!
I just loved this story which gives a somewhat different version of
Eldarion than we are accustomed to.
Aragorn feels his son is far too pampered and needs a spell with the
Northern Rangers to learn their ways.It is obvious that Aragorn still
feels most at home in the North and is puzzled by his son's emphasis
on cleanliness!
I liked the way that Eldarion thought Faramir understood him and that
he is better mannered than his friend.
A very well written and enjoyable story well worth reading.

Title: The Warmth of Morning · Author: Spindle Berry · Times: Late
Third Age: Gondor · ID: 148
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-30 01:36:02
Spoilers!
This is a stunningly beautiful story, and even those that dislike
slash can read it safely as the suggestions of slash are described
simply and there are no graphic descriptions as such. This story
certainly deserves to be read and reviewed as the writing is lovely
and so is the content and overall message.

I have always felt the slash pairing of Merry and Pippin to be a
believable one – really the only believable one in Lord of the Rings
to me – because of their closeness in bookverse; they are soulmates
and a physical/romantic relationship seems to me to be just a step
further on from their canon relationship. And, unlike some readers, I
have no trouble in separating slash universes from canon/gen ones so I
have no problem in enjoying stories in both – they are just different
possibilities, if you see what I mean.

The Merry and Pippin in this particular slash story have kept the
characterisations of bookverse Merry and Pippin to a far greater
extent than the majority of slash stories that I have read. The author
obviously has a very good understanding of the bookverse characters
and so has been able to bring a believability to their relationship in
this story that not too many slash authors have been able to.

The emotions in this story are palpable. The dream-thoughts of Pippin,
being kept alive by Merry's presence though he doesn't understand it
at the time, are chillingly real – that they are described in such a
perfect and simple way makes the knowledge that he could go either way
worrying for the reader even though we know that he ultimately survives.

His distress and confusion upon awakening is also very well described
and so is his interaction with Merry. The dialogue is believable and
so are the thoughts and emotions described. The descriptions are
excellent and don't overshadow the emotion of the story in any way.

This is a story not to be missed; it's beautifully written. Do give it
a try!


Title: Whatever Harm Encroached · Author: Nieriel Raina · Times:
Second and Early Third Age · ID: 708
Reviewer: Linda Hoyland · 2008-11-30 01:36:35
Spoilers!
It was maybe not a good idea to read this story on a freezing day as
it made me feel all the colder,but that is a tribute to NiRi's skills
as a storyteller.I enjoyed seeing Thanduril as a king concerned with
the needs of his people.

Title: Child of Hope · Author: Galadriel · Races: Men: Steward's
Family · ID: 97
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 01:52:30
Spoilers!
This was a quiet, lovely fic, and there are many things that I enjoyed
about it. First, it really captures how children think and act. When I
read through young Boromir's thoughts (and Faramir's actions), they
seem appropriate for his age. Faramir's toy horsey...loved that! I
want one too. I also really, really, really enjoy how Boromir's
reflections both point to the moment at hand and provide lovely
foreshadowing of the events to come. That gives the ending of the fic
an extra punch.

There's a certain sense of wistfulness that comes not from the fic
itself, but from seeing the family as they are in the fic and knowing
the shadow that will fall over all of them.

Title: Oathbreakers · Author: Thundera Tiger · Times: Late Third Age ·
ID: 470
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 01:57:16
Spoilers!
This is an interesting conversation. I never thought about Eowyn in
connection with the place where she finally decides to follow the men.
Elladan and Elrohir are astute observers. The comparison of the
oathbreakers with the fates of the elves is something else I never
thought about. It gave me a chill.

Title: Only Water in Your Veins · Author: Michelle · Races: Men · ID: 154
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 01:57:55
Spoilers!
What a thoroughly harrowing experience for Thorongil. The way you
describe the slow death from lack of water made me feel thirsty. It
sounded very realistic, complete with fata morgana, and
hallucinations. The Haradric rescuer made a nice touch. This guy did
more for Harad's future than he will probably ever know.

Title: Reparation · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men · ID: 296
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 01:58:36
Spoilers!
I love reading about Andrahar and this story fuels my craving for
more. The dynamic between Andrahar and Brand is delightful and I liked
that Andrahar found the same expression on Hethlin's face that he
didn't like on Brand's face. It was a difficult decision to apologize,
but Hethlin's reaction confirmed that it was right.

I love the way you show the thought process of how Andrahar unravels
his unease with the help of Brand.

Title: Blue · Author: red lasbelin · Races: Elves · ID: 563
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 01:59:08
Spoilers!
Blue is an apt title for this bittersweet vignette. Glorfindel feels
the burden of his new position before he even starts. Although I don't
know much about the Silm, I got a good feeling of who Glorfindel and
the most important people around him are.

Title: MAGIC: The Password · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor: Elven
Lands · ID: 451
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:01:12
Spoilers!
This is hilariously funny. I can so understand Thranduil and his fight
with modern technology. His way of dealing with his memory reminded me
of a lot of my coworkers. The password had me laughing out loud. No
wonder he can't remember it. And the last sentence was the icing. I
love how serenely his wife handles him.

Title: The Legend of the Grey Riders · Author: Jay of Lasgalen ·
Races: Cross-Cultural: Elves and Men · ID: 176
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:01:48
Spoilers!
Oh, this was hilarious. I love the running commentary of the twins
during Eomer's recitation. The story is mostly told in dialogue to
very good effect. Eomer's and Eowyn's debate while the real heroes sit
right next to them is ironic in that I think they don't really want to
know the truth. Maybe Faramir will let the cat out of the bag at a
future time.

Title: Where Shadows Lay No More · Author: Cathleen · Times: Fourth
Age and Beyond · ID: 358
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:02:24
Spoilers!
In this gentle tale all of the Fellowship attend the coronation. I
like Boromir watching the proceedings and being able to see the fruit
of his labor and sacrifice. Pippin's grief for Boromir is very poignant.

Title: A Woman in Few Words: The Character of Nerdanel and Her
Treatment in Canon and Fandom · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres:
Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 107
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-30 02:02:30
Spoilers!
First considering sometimes hard-to-locate or otherwisely elusive
canon evidence, Dawn Felagund paints a comprehensive and (considering
the dearth of references) extensive picture of Nerdanel, that takes
into account her role as daughter, wife, mother and strong woman in
Tolkien's (hi)stories. The author then goes on to debunk certain
'fanon' myths such as the colour of Nerdanel's hair, considers
possible interpretations of the untranslated name and takes a look at
canon history that yields yet more clues about Tolkien's possible
conception of the character of Nerdanel. Dawn also emphasizes the
popularity of Nerdanel in fandom by comparing and contrasting her
appearances in fanfiction: She shows that despite the few mentions in
the published Silmarillion Nerdanel has nonetheless gained popularity
with fans; reasons enough are cited in the essay itself.

The essay, as may be assumed of nonfiction character studies, could
easily be a dry and boring read, but no such thing has happened here.
The skill of the author as a writer of (fan) fiction and nonfiction
alike easily shows and makes this a fascinating, captivating read. As
one of the SWG reference-reader team who helped review this essay
before its publication on the site, I can only repeat what I said
then. It was a pleasure to help work on it, and it is a pleasure to
read and re-read. This is a great resource for writers and readers who
want or need to know more about Nerdanel, and well worth a look.

Title: DISGUISE: Emissaries · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor: Valar &
Maiar · ID: 56
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:02:54
Spoilers!
This is a delightful gapfiller on how the Istari got chosen and appear
in Middle-earth in the form we get to meet them. It is a short piece,
but already the different characters of the Wizards can be seen. I
wonder why the Valar let Curumo go, although they were not blind to
his character flaws.

Title: Farewell · Author: agape4gondor · Genres: Drama: Final Partings
· ID: 127
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:03:52
Spoilers!
This is a heartfelt farewell between Boromir and Faramir. I loved the
image of the brothers sharing Faramir's bedroll for comfort and the
comparison to the time after their mother's death. I love Boromir's
acknowledgment of Faramir's vision in the subtle change of his words
and his nearly prophetic plea to Faramir not to fall with Denethor but
to save himself. Knowing how the story ends makes this even more poignant.

Title: Meddling · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Mid Third Age: Eriador ·
ID: 695
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:04:29
Spoilers!
A story with my second favorite ranger Halbarad. I love your
characterization of him and of Gandalf in this piece. Halbarad is very
brave (or foolish) to confront Gandalf. But I think he instinctively
knew that Gandalf would do him no harm.

I like the vivid picture of the Prancing Pony you painted with a few
words. It gave the right setting for this little piece.

Msg# 9600

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Noon Set, Part Four) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 12:35:38 Topic ID# 9600
Title: That Fate Them Bore · Author: Cara Loup · Races: Hobbits:
Incomplete · ID: 476
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-30 02:05:18
This is a story that I can't wait to see updated. The writing is
exceptional and so are the characterisations of Merry, Pippin, Frodo
and Sam. The author is skilled at gorgeous, rich descriptions and
spot-on dialogue.

When reading this I am totally caught up in the tale; the emotions and
settings are so realistically described that I have no trouble
envisioning the action, or in understanding exactly how each character
is feeling.

I check regularly for new chapters and I am sure that many other
readers do as well, so get to work Cara!


Title: The King's Colors · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 482
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:05:24
Spoilers!
In this AU apparently Boromir traded places with Faramir. With a few
well-placed words the reader knows enough to fill in the blanks. From
there the whole changed scenario of Aragorn's arrival in Minas Tirith
follows.

Here it is Boromir who meets Aragorn after the battle on the Pelennor
and there follows an excellent exchange between the two. They are both
wary and weary, but they need to see where they stand. It feels like
two combatants circling each other and sizing each other up, not
knowing quite which way this will go. A lot of their dialogue has a
second layer of meaning.

This is an AU, but these are the canon characters we love and know and
if this scenario would have happened, it would lead to just this scene.

Title: A Maid Waiting · Author: Larner · Genres: Romance: Gondor · ID: 691
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:06:10
This story is about lessons learned at King Elessar's court and what
it means to be a Lord of the Realm. Young Ivormil, who got introduced
in an earlier story learns here even more lessons. But at least he
learns them, which is more than can be said of his relatives.

I love the warmth with which the main characters in this tale, mostly
original characters, are drawn. They all have their distinctive voice.
The canon characters are also true to canon.

I like the look behind the scenes of the "official" face of the
government of Gondor: the work of the staff in the citadel.

Title: On Canon and Fanfic · Author: Marta · Genres: Non-Fiction · ID: 123
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:06:38
A very interesting and enlightening essay. It clarified some of the
thoughts I had about AUs myself. I love that you say only what Tolkien
wrote is 100% canonical. Some people need to remember that. I liked
the distinction between extra canonical and uncanonical. That is a
good way of describing AUs.

Title: The Prisoner of Time · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 313
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:07:10
Spoilers!
Ouch! This is so sad, to see Denethor come to this. It's ironic that
Gandalf saved him in this AU, only to have Denethor himself work on
wasting this deed, instead of taking this new chance. Denethor is his
own worst enemy. His characterization fits well with canon.

Title: Eagle of the Star · Author: alex_quine · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Aragorn · ID: 152
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:08:02
Spoilers!
This story has an unusual explanation for why Thorongil mysteriously
vanished after the triumph over the Corsairs. This is the first time
that I see a story where Thorongil and Denethor are not parting on bad
terms.

I like the portrait of Steward Ecthelion in this piece. He wants what
is best for his son, but realizes that he made a mistake. I love the
conversation in the garden between Thorongil and Ecthelion. Does
Ecthelion know who Thorongil is? Sometimes it seems he knows and then
I'm not so sure anymore. I like this ambiguity. It adds to Ecthelions
personality as the wise Steward who knows what he is doing except when
it comes to his son.

Title: The Keys of the Realm · Author: Larner · Genres: Drama:
Featuring Aragorn · ID: 477
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:08:43
Spoilers!
This is a lovely story from the point of view of Hurin the Warden of
the Keys. I would call it a gap filler, since it describes the
preparation for the coronation from the folks left behind in Minas
Tirith and it provides an answer (not strictly canonical, since there
is nothing written about it) to some of the questions I always had
when I read these passages in the book. Where do the circlets of honor
for Frodo and Sam come from? What had the council to say to Aragorn? I
love the characterization of Hurin and Faramir, and Leonid turned out
to be my favorite OC.

Title: Lingering Shadow · Author: Shireling · Genres: Drama: Featuring
Boromir or Faramir · ID: 412
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:09:06
The aftermath of war is never easy and it is haunting to witness what
the horrors of war can do to a decent man. I like it that Faramir has
not lost his connection to his rangers and that they meet every once
in a while.

Title: Destiny · Author: Cinzia · Races: Men · ID: 592
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 02:09:57
Spoilers!
Ah, I'm quite taken with the Rohan/Gondor love. Aragorn's feelings as
he is watching the younger men are so strong. The longing and conflict
and doubt so intense. So real.

And those last six paragraphs, yeah, they are just beautiful both in
presenting the Boromir/Theodred relationship and in crystallizing
Aragon's feelings.


Title: Consolation · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Races: Men:
Steward's Family · ID: 341
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:10:10
Spoilers!
Faramir lies wounded in a tent after the disastrous battle of
Osgiliath and frets over the losses to his rangers until some of his
best Rangers and friends show up, among them Hethlin. I always love to
read something new about Hethlin and this is no exception.

I like the interaction between Boromir and Faramir here. The way they
discuss Amrothos contribution to the taking down of the bridge. It is
only hinted at, but for everyone who knows the other stories in this
universe, he is the obvious expert.

Boromir's tries to cheer Faramir up and take his mind off his wound
and the losses of his men are typical Boromir, although they don't
quite work until he finds the right cure in sending for Mablung,
Hethlin and Lorend. They know exactly how to deal with Faramir. There
is something familial in the way the four interact even more than
between Faramir and Boromir.

I loved the [missing roast suckling pig] finding its way to Faramir's
tent.

Title: In The Midst Of Summer · Author: Cuthalion · Genres: Drama:
Final Partings · ID: 270
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:10:35
This is a bittersweet story with an uplifting end. I love the
description of Frodo lad with his son watched through the eyes of his
father.

Title: A Perfect World · Author: mistycracraft · Genres: Romance:
Elven Lands · ID: 248
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:10:59
Spoilers!
I love Aragorn/Arwen stories where the reader can feel the importance
of Arwen for Aragorn. This is one example. Arwen doesn't need to fight
with a sword. Her confidence in him and her unwavering trust is all he
needs. I love the tenderness expressed in this scene.

Title: With Many "Fond" Acknowledgments · Author: Thundera Tiger ·
Genres: Humor · ID: 472
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:11:23
Spoilers!
Oh, poor Sam. This is hilarious. I'm still giggling. I could see poor
Sam trying to be invisible and failing miserably. Escape was not
really an option. Smart Faramir. His entrance made them all aware of
their behavior and provided Sam with the much needed escape.

Title: Restoration · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Races: Men:
Minas Tirith · ID: 19
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:11:52
Spoilers!
This is a lovely little scene. The imagery of Aragorn comparing
sitting at Faramir's bedside with the elves restoring their spirit by
watching leaves, is very soothing and peaceful. I like the description
of Beregond. Here is the reminder of the horrors of the just ended battle.

Title: The Warmth of Morning · Author: Spindle Berry · Times: Late
Third Age: Gondor · ID: 148
Reviewer: grey_wonderer · 2008-11-30 02:12:31
Spoilers!
This is a lovely fiction and I enjoyed every word of it. The author
has a wonderful style of writing and brings every moment of the tale
to life with her words. She writes Merry Brandybuck very well and I
could feel his worry for his cousin throughout the story. I have
always enjoyed stories written about the time of healing after the
final battle and I think this one has to go on my list of favorites.
The author gives us a very realistic view of Pippin's suffering as he
tries to heal from his injuries which he sustained after his battle
with the troll. Merry's devotion to his cousin is moving and even
though this is a tale involving injuries and healing/comfort, it is
not drawn out in a manner that takes away from the characters or their
naturally hopeful nature. This was a joy to read from start to finish.
When Pippin tells Merry that he thought of him at what he believed to
be the end of everything for him, it was very emotional. I found the
confusion and worry shared in this moment by the cousins to be very
well written. It speaks to the trouble that they have accepting that
the dark times are finally over and their hope for the future. At that
moment they are both, in their own way, trying to recover from all
that they have seen and all that has happened to them. Pippin's fears
at being too injured for Merry to still care for him almost brought
tears to my eyes as I read but it was Merry's reassuring words of
caring for his younger cousin that seemed to bring out the very nature
of the hobbits. No matter what, they were there for one another.

Title: The King's Surgeon · Author: SurgicalSteel · Genres: Longer
Works · ID: 90
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:13:16
Spoilers!
This story centers around one of my favorite original characters in
Tolkien fanfiction: Serinde, an outspoken surgeon who wants nothing to
do with politics, but gets inevitably pulled into the political
machinations in Gondor after befriending the mysterious Captain Thorongil.

The story is long, but well worth the read. It made me laugh; it made
me cry. I could gleefully rub my hands when some bad guy got his
comeuppance. The characters, original and canon characters alike, come
to life. I got the feeling as if they invite you into their circle of
friends to sit on the sidelines and watch the story unfold.

The story enhanced my medical vocabulary considerably, and now I know
a lot more about medical procedures than I ever thought possible. The
medical emergencies are skillfully woven into the story and never felt
as if they were put in gratuitously. Serinde is a healer and that is
what she deals with in her profession.

I love the way Serinde's less than stellar way of language use is
handled. You rarely hear her swear outright. Her colorful expression's
are mostly commented on by people around her, which makes it for me as
a non-native speaker a kind of guessing game, what she might have said
this time.

Title: The Mariner's Son · Author: cairistiona · Genres: Adventure ·
ID: 329
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:15:24
Spoilers!
Aragorn travels to the coast of Anfalas when he falls victim to a
madman who steals his ring. When Aragorn wakes up he is trapped in a
room with no way out and a big storm approaching. The description of
Aragorn's fear and panic when he tries to escape the trap seems very
real. The story takes several surprising turns until he finally gets
his ring back. The tale of the life of the mariner and his son was
touching with unintended consequences of his decisions for his son. I
was touched by the discussion of what is in a name. Aragorn has too
many names, the mariner's son has not enough.

Title: Put Aside Your Doubt · Author: sophinisba solis · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Frodo and Faramir · ID: 187
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:15:46
Spoilers!
In his nightmares and dreams Frodo comes to a decision about Faramir.
I liked the description of the dreams or rather nightmares with all
the confusion that comes with dreams like that.

Title: Took Broth · Author: Pearl Took · Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 543
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-30 02:17:40
Spoilers!
This is a very hobbity and very Tookish tale! I can really imagine the
Took's having such a tradition and can imagine Sam and Rosie reacting
to it just the way that they did.

I enjoyed this story very much and thought that the characterisations
were very well done. I liked the suggestion that the Faeries might
just have something to do with the excellence of the broth!


Title: Generations · Author: Bodkin · Genres: Drama: Featuring Aragorn
· ID: 508
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:17:52
Spoilers!
This is a lovely, insightful story about parents dealing with
teenagers and teenagers dealing with parents. Aragorn's woes are spot
on and Eldarion and his friend also are typical for teenagers.

I loved Eldarion's disgusted comment that [his father seemed to expect
him to like dirt]. I had to giggle at that, especially since it
contrasted sharply with the description of Eldarion's outfit, which
seemed totally out of place in this town of the northern Dunedain.

The conversation between the two pairs, Aragorn and his companion
Baras and Eldarion and his friend Ceniril, are highlighting all the
reader ever wanted to know about the darker aspects of the teenage
years from both sides.

Very enjoyable!

Title: Too Many Rangers · Author: Larner · Races: Hobbits · ID: 116
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:18:36
Spoilers!
This story is named a crossover, but it is not a crossover in the
traditional sense. Here Tolkien's different versions of the story,
meet each other. I had to laugh at the discussion between Strider and
Trotter about who is supposed to be where and all the name confusion.
I loved the way Butterbur's dialect and speech pattern came through on
the page.

Title: Keep Him Secret, Keep Him Safe · Author: shirebound · Races:
Hobbits: Incomplete · ID: 643
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:19:10
Spoilers!
Aragorn succumbs to his exhaustion at Cormallen. To keep his men from
thinking the new king is weak, he is hidden in the tent of the hobbits.

All the characters are coming to life in this tale. Aragorn does not
lack in allies and supporters. I love Gimli's workmanship in building
a bunkbed for the hobbits, because the tent, as big as it is, can't
accommodate that many people.

Title: Daybreak · Author: Cinzia · Races: Men: Steward's Family · ID: 591
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 02:20:36
Spoilers!
I really adore the feelings between the brothers that you've captured
here: the warmth, the caring. The soft, sweet sensuality also fits
very nicely. The setting at the waterfalls by the Forbidden Pool
conjured a strong sense of the visual place of the fic, as did the sun
rising and the eagle in flight in the morning sky.

Title: Lothíriel - The Tenth Walker, Book 2 · Author: juno_magic ·
Genres: Alternate Universe: Incomplete · ID: 567
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:21:45
This is the second part of one of my favorite
modern-girl-ends-up-in-middle-earth stories. After having survived the
war, Lothiriel must now find her way in this still strange world and a
place where she can be happy. The story is written in first person
pov, which let the reader experience the story through the filter of
Lothiriel's modern thoughts. I love the humor, angst, adventure, the
normal day-to-day activities and, in this part, the romance, which
make a very enjoyable mix in this story.

Title: Gifts · Author: Gloria Mundi · Races: Villains: Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 594
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 02:26:48
Spoilers!
This captured Smeagol perfectly, and some of the descriptive elements
like the darkness in the first sentence was interesting. I liked the
odd tenderness behind Smeagol's wanting to take Frodo to someplace
cool and dark and bring him fish. I also found it interesting that the
Ring wasn't in Smeagol's thoughts as much as Frodo.

Msg# 9601

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by Nieriel Raina November 30, 2008 - 15:53:20 Topic ID# 9570
I could help out. I finally invested in Photoshop!

NiRi

Nieriel Raina   Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before.
~ EA Poe
SOA http://www.storiesofarda.com/author.asp?AuthID=1836%c2%a0%c2%a0%c2%a0%c2%a0%c2%a0%c2%a0 FFN  http://www.fanfiction.net/u/974648/%c2%a0%c2%a0%c2%a0%c2%a0%c2%a0 LJ http://nierielraina.livejournal.com/




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 9602

Re: Seeking banner customizers Posted by Marta November 30, 2008 - 16:57:36 Topic ID# 9570
Hi NiRi,

Thanks! I'll send you more info privately.

Marta

Nieriel Raina wrote:
>
>
> I could help out. I finally invested in Photoshop!
>
> NiRi
>

Msg# 9603

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Early Evening Set, Part Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 17:11:46 Topic ID# 9603
Title: Into the Woods · Author: Gloria Mundi · Times: Modern Times ·
ID: 593
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 02:40:12
The switching points of view as two men from two different worlds meet
for a brief moment in time really worked for me. This fic perfectly
captured each character's distinct voice and sensibility. I also
enjoyed seeing Aragorn's longing for Boromir opening out a little to
embrace someone who looked so much like him (at least in the movie-verse).

Title: Messengers from the West · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 98
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:43:52
This just makes me smile, so very much! I love the idea.

Title: As Was Dwarven Tradition · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races:
Dwarves · ID: 553
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:44:08
I love the ["Dwarven Tradition"] created for this ficlet--and the
conclusion is perfect.

Title: Loss · Author: SurgicalSteel · Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 196
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:44:21
This story is like a bruise to the heart--you feel so, for Halbarad
and for Serinde and their young children. Halbarad's desperation is
palpable, while the clear and clinical details of Serinde's
difficulties underline that desperation. This story will leave the
reader breathless with grief, but it is worth it.

Title: The Blessing · Author: Mews1945 · Genres: Drama: Featuring
Frodo or Sam · ID: 228
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:44:50
In this story, Mews creates an utterly believable OC as her POV
character. Loefal is just an ordinary soldier, injured in the fighting
at the Black Gate, but he is intelligent and observant as he takes
note of his first encounter with the Ringbearers.

His thoughts are amazing and touching. I love the conclusions he
reaches about hobbits and their natures, and this is another of Mews
stories that can bring tears to my eyes.

Title: Grandmum's Button Box · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 135
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:45:25
Pippinfan's Tooks are a remarkably close-knit family, generation to
generation--and to see Pippin's children interacting with their
grandmother Eglantine is a delight. The idea of Eglantine's stories
about the different buttons is very believable--such a collection came
to me from my mother-in-law, and she did know the provenance of many
of them. As I know the stories behind the ones I've added. A very
heart-warming vignette.

Title: For the Want of ... · Author: Larner · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor · ID: 681
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:45:37
Spoilers!
This is such a lovely conversation between Pippin and Faramir. What I
like about it most is not only does Larner convey Pippin's earnestness
and his devotion to his kin and friends, but also his intelligence and
keen sense of duty as well--yes, his main reason for going to fight is
to do his part for Frodo, but he also recognizes that he has a part in
the big picture as well.

Title: Elanor of Westmarch: Still There · Author: Baranduin · Genres:
Drama: Final Partings · ID: 183
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:45:50
This was just beautiful, showing just how much Elanor loved her
father--I think that she now will understand more than ever the years
he spent torn in two.

Title: At Cormallen · Author: Mews1945 · Genres: Drama: Hurt/Comfort ·
ID: 730
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:46:04
Cormallen fics are always wonderful, and this one is an especial
favorite of mine. Mews always has a way with evocative descriptions,
bringing forth the nuances of emotion through the use of sensory details.

I love Merry in this: frightened and apprehensive as he
arrives--worrying about his cousins and Sam, and what condition he
will find them in. His reactions are very realistic, as he takes in
their injuries.

I think my favorite part of this is where he carefully and lovingly
washes the sleeping Frodo's hair. It's such a sweet and touching scene.

Title: Faeries · Author: Pearl Took · Times: Fourth Age and Beyond ·
ID: 304
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:46:22
Spoilers!
Faramir Took has a problem; he's being bullied and teased with
innuendo about his Tookishness. His father has a talk with him, but
the outcome of the conversation is not what Faramir expects.

This little story brings many of Pearl's other stories full circle
into another generation, so to speak, in a very satisfying manner. I
would love to see this followed up on!

Title: Gently Held · Author: viv · Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 6
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 02:46:24
There is a breathtakingly beautiful elegance to the language in this
tribble that makes it seem supremely fitting for a child of the Eldar.
I don't have the eloquence to explain why it struck me so completely,
but there's just a plethora of lovely phrasing and a very high,
intelligent level of clear descriptions. A perfect tone is carried
throughout.

It's framed as Arwen answering a question someone asked of her (or she
sensed was foremost in others' minds), and this works very well as a
method for listing many of her love's fine qualities - certainly many
of the ones that Aragorn fangirls have dreamed up over the years of
rereading LotR!

But Arwen names as primary motivator something that is probably not
obvious to most, but which felt tremendously appropriate to me once
revealed. (Particularly because it's something I myself have found
sexy in RL and fantasy characters.) I found her reflections to be
completely believable: definitely a wellspring of love and sensuality,
commitment and passion.

The last paragraph is very poignant and ties back to the title
wonderfully.

Title: Tolo Dan Na Ngalad · Author: Elwen · Races: Hobbits · ID: 735
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:46:48
There have been many stories about Elrond's efforts at removing the
Morgul-shard from Frodo's shoulder, but this one takes a slightly
different take on how he accomplished that than most such fics. It's
very plausible in the way he might have used Vilya--and in the way
Elrond would extend himself to help Frodo!

Title: Pirates Ye Be Warned · Author: Imhiriel · Races: Men: Gondor
Drabbles · ID: 353
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 02:46:49
I know that this is not a true crossover, but I admit that the
possibility is delicious to contemplate... (So long as it is complete
with the pirate's nick-of-time escape, of course, dashing and
extravagant flair included.)

Taken as a non-crossover, even with a certain specific pirate's
swaggering bonhomie, I can see this exact reaction from the Prince of
Dol Amroth, responsible as he is for the well-being and safety of a
huge swath of coastline. As the first - and perhaps often the only -
line of defense against marauding thieves lurking in from the high
seas, only the harshest justice would serve as any deterrent to the
lawless.

Nevertheless, a fair and just ruler must ache for the chance to be
merciful, and this is how I've always thought of the great noblemen
such as Imrahil. Not lightly would he pass judgement of this sort, and
I think Imhiriel captures all of the above in Imrahil's severe
demeanor and decision to keep any spoils out of the hands of others.
The whole setup and both characterizations (pirate and Prince) are
wonderfully spun out, all in a quick and enjoyable hundred words.

Title: The Making of a Ringbearer I: Adrift · Author: obelia medusa ·
Races: Hobbits: Childhood · ID: 145
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:46:59
This is the prequel to Obelia Medusa's story ["Anchored"], and in it
she covers the time between Frodo's losing his parents and his
adoption by Bilbo. She creates a very believable situation for young
Frodo at Brandy Hall, and convey's Bilbo's worry and concern over the
child very well.

I love Frodo's first meeting with his infant cousin Merry--so
touchingly portrayed, and with Bilbo in attendance. There are also
some very interesting OCs. Nasty Cousin Bolo is a good precursor for
Frodo's later meetings with Lotho, and I am particularly fond of the
wonderful Miss Poppy, one of Brandy Hall's servants and a good friend
to Frodo.

There's a bit of adventure and a bit of angst, but the course of
things seems to run very naturally into the decision for Frodo to move
away.

One thing the reader needs to remember is that the author uses a
formula for hobbit-to-human ages that skews a bit younger than most
do--so Frodo is much more childlike in this story. It's a delightful
prologue to the sequel.

Title: Bears With Honey · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 243
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:47:10
There are very few fics out there dealing with Beorn, so that is one
of the good things this has going for it--and the other is that it has
Mrs. Beorn, who is truly delightful!

Title: Engineering · Author: SurgicalSteel · Races: Men: Minas Tirith
· ID: 696
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:47:21
Spoilers!
In this story, we finally get to see just what got SurgicalSteel's OFC
Serinde started on her career as a surgeon: the treatment of her
childhood injury at the Houses of Healing. In the process, we not only
see the seeds of her future self, but meet a couple of new OCs,
Talagon and Handir, who make an indelible impression on the reader!

Title: Answering the Call · Author: docmon · Genres: Drama · ID: 340
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 02:47:24
First, I think the author made an excellent selection of plausible AUs
with these vignettes. Each is unique to the individual portrayed, with
logical use of "weaknesses" that allowed the One Ring to speak to
every member of the Fellowship, and a very creative use of different
times in which each character could have snatched the Ring. The
introduction itself sets the stage very nicely, and the interspersed
quotes are relevant reminders without being intrusive.

Even better, every scenario left me wanting to know more about that
particular situation. (Like in Gandalf's chapter: What happened to
Bilbo? This one may have been my favorite, although it would be hard
to choose.) I admit, I liked that the Ring was not always successful
in its objectives; [The Hobbit] and Tolkien's background information
certainly shows this as a reasonable possibility. The thread of
referring to the Ring as being "precious" is used well, not only in
setting up the story of a character's fall, but also being notably
absent where It fails.

Combined with the lovely originality is the author's excellent
writing, flowing style and wonderful characterizations. I felt the
members of the Fellowship were still those I knew from the books, even
as events spiraled away from canon.

Title: Moonset over Gondor · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 652
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:47:32
A conversation I am sure Faramir and Eowyn had more than once. They
would not forget their small friends, to whom they owed so much!

Title: The Secret of the Wooden Wall · Author: Lily · Genres: Mystery
· ID: 630
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:47:45
I had the privilege of beta-ing this story, and it was a lot of fun to
see the mystery unfolding. Lily has a real knack with the "older
generation" on the family trees, and in this story, she shows that
knack is not just confined to Brandybucks but extends to Tooks as
well. She makes good use of the fanon of the Took "Sight" and I really
enjoy her Paladin in this.

Title: Dance of the Deer and Mûmak · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Post-Ring War · ID: 559
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:48:08
A marvelous cross-cultural vignette. The way the author describes
Gimli's dancing seems just right for the dances of the Dwarves!

Title: The Search For Middle-earth · Author: Jules14 · Genres:
Alternate Universe: Incomplete · ID: 346
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:48:19
This was an intriguing and rather chilling Modern Day AU. The idea
that the world come come to such a pass is a sad and discouraging one,
yet in spite of the darkness of its theme, this story keeps the reader
going.

Title: Moon Over Water · Author: Avon · Genres: Drama: Final Partings
· ID: 518
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:48:31
Such a lovely and melancholy vignette; I love Faramir's memories of
this, and his conclusion at the end.

Title: The Tower Hills · Author: DrummerWench · Genres: Drama: Final
Partings · ID: 608
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:48:48
Spoilers!
This is very evocative and atmospheric: the idea of this last visit to
the Tower, and that it would trigger bad memories for Sam is
altogether plausible. I loved the way that Frodo comforted him--Frodo
may be leaving, but he still will take care of those he loves.

Title: Shire · Author: Aranel Took · Genres: Poetry: Hobbits · ID: 469
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:49:10
Concise and descriptive, I love the hobbity metaphors!

Title: Wife of the Thain · Author: LA Knight · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 513
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:49:39
This is a fascinating drabble series that perfectly captures the
mythical, fairy-tale spirit of the subject matter!

Msg# 9604

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Early Evening,Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 17:13:18 Topic ID# 9604
Title: Before the Black Gate · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Late
Third Age · ID: 45
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:49:49
Spoilers!
Pippin at the Black Gate--there is something that draws one in, the
thought of that blythe spirit of unquenchable optimism finally facing
despair. Here we see him share a welcome moment of camaraderie with
Beregond, that puts their friendship in the spotlight. A very touching
vignette.

Title: Silver Rain · Author: Empy · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 589
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 02:49:58
Spoilers!
There is a very bittersweet, wistful longing in this piece, both in
the relationship between Elladan and Haldir and in the decline of the
Elves and the passing of their power and their people across the sea.
I adore that the ending blends joy with the knowledge of sorrow to
come. Lovely!

Title: Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast? · Author: viv · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 180
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:49:59
Oh, this is just too funny! Talk about pick-up lines!

Title: Seven Sisters · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Other Beings · ID: 388
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:50:10
Pearl has a knack for including mythical motifs from real world
history into her stories, and for using mystical elements in a
believable manner. This story is atmospheric and more than a little
spooky. And I love tweenaged Pippin's experience here, leaving him
wondering.

Title: The Stolen Child · Author: SurgicalSteel · Races: Men · ID: 197
Reviewer: Dreamflower · 2008-11-30 02:50:19
This story is in the aftermath of ["Loss"], and once more
SurgicalSteel proves herself a master at conveying deep emotion, and
the way tragic circumstances can both rip people apart and then draw
them back together again. And after all this time, her Halbarad seems
like the definitive Halbarad.

Title: The Captain's New Clothes · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 421
Reviewer: Marigold · 2008-11-30 02:51:47
Spoilers!
LOL! I remember wondering about the wisdom of this outfit back in the
days when I was very young and actually owned this calendar! This
little tale is a marvellous take on why poor Faramir is making a
target of himself in the woods of Ithilien. Faramir will do anything
for the comfort of his men! I'd like to read the other stories
inspired from this calendar.

Very original and entertaining!

Title: Comfort · Author: Bodkin · Races: Elves: House of Elrond · ID: 161
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 02:59:10
Spoilers!
Ah, survivor's guilt and the eternal questions what could you have
done to change the outcome. There is never a good answer. Elladan is
the sensible one, but all rationalizing and logic will not overcome
Elrohir's feeling of responsibility. He will just have to learn to
live with it. I love the sentence about the bad memories always come
back to haunt you more readily than the good ones. How true. The
seriousness is nicely balanced with some much needed humor in this
little tale.

Title: Trading Pledges · Author: Adaneth · Races: Dwarves · ID: 339
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 03:00:18
Adaneth has established herself in my mind as a world-builder
extraordinaire. She has focused on Dwarves and on the Dunadain of the
(far, far) North, and this short story takes the first culture and
adds a wonderful depth and warmth to the premises established in her
longer works. Both Dwarven society in general and - delightfully! -
the close-kept particulars of Dwarven women are explored. There are
enough similarities with human romance to strike a sympathetic spark
in a reader's heart, but it comes with a very, very rich Dwarvish flavor.

The setting is excellent, plausible and well laid-out, with simply
divine characterizations: some that faithful readers know and others
that are new. No matter: every individual (and they are all OCs) is a
whole and three-dimensional figure, and by the end they feel as
familiar as old friends.

The entire piece is wonderful, leading us along through the main
female character's exploration of her heart and how/why she makes her
final decision. I love the description of the women's hearts burning
as hotly as those of their men; and of how women have their own secret
skills and arts, and how they pass them on to the next generation.

And I especially love the ending: awesome! Another terrific addition
to the Dunhabaid Cycle, Adaneth.

Title: Dirt and Gold · Author: Empy · Times: Mid Third Age · ID: 590
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 03:03:46
Spoilers!
Wow! This is both disturbing and very hot. I love it! The language is
lovely, especially the contrasts between the gold of the siblings and
the ash/dirt of Wormtongue. I enjoy how Wormtongue's words manage to
make both Eowyn and Eomer shine: their love, their lust, their cruelty
done to him by being together. The detail and the reasoning capture
his character perfectly.

Title: Best Three Falls, No Gouging · Author: Brigantine · Genres:
Humor: Gondor · ID: 587
Reviewer: obsidianj · 2008-11-30 03:07:45
LOL! The running commentary of Merry and Pippin is hilarious. Even
removed from the actual action I can follow the fight through this
dialogue. And then enters Faramir to give Merry and Pippin a new
victim, eh target, for their comments. It seems at the end they too
are about to enter a fight.

Title: Blood and Iron · Author: Ribby · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 122
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 03:09:13
Spoilers!
Like all your short work, I love how much meaning and resonance your
manage to make your words carry. The last sentence, in particular, was
lovely and brough the drabble to a strong and satisfying end.

Title: Tangled Webs · Author: Ribby · Races: Men: Gondor Drabbles ·
ID: 100
Reviewer: Savageseraph · 2008-11-30 03:15:37
Spoilers!
This is a beautiful, bittersweet drabble. I confess that part of the
appeal is the lace making, since my grandmother did that and I could
see her making her webs in my mind's eye. Of course, I also like the
thought that Boromir is not gone because he is still entangled with
Aragorn.

Title: A Midsummer Day's Dream · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 422
Reviewer: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · 2008-11-30 03:19:48
Spoilers!
Raksha shows us the peaceful close of Faramir's life. Like the ancient
Numenorean kings, he seems to choose the moment of his death, leaving
when he is in a summer garden, surrounded by his surviving family. The
prose is lovely, and the final line is perfect--conveying (to this
reader, anyway) the transience that shimmers behind a summer day.The
absence of Denethor did strike a strange note with me since Boromir is
included.

I would like to think that this is how Faramir died--peacefully and
content that he has left behind a legacy of fine children and
well-tended lands. Well done!



Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · 2008-11-30 03:44:49
Spoilers!
The quote from the Song of Solomon--[Who is she that looketh forth as
the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an
army with banners?]--is a wonderful description of either Eowyn or
Galadriel. In this fic, it is a nice touch that Eowyn is named based
on the reaction of the King when he first sees her.

I loved the image of Glorfindel shaking out his mane after the
rainstorm. Those elves and their hair! I also liked that he could
perceive the sudden change in the balance of power as, with the birth
of Eowyn, the prophecy began to be worked out to its fulfillment. I
think it is plausible that he could sense that.

[The child quiets, then fearlessly gazes up at him and shakes a fist.
Her perfect little fingers uncurl, as if reaching to grip the hilt of
a sword.] This is a wonderful line--Eomund too has a moment of
prescience about his little daughter.

This is yet another a lovely piece of writing from Raksha.



Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-30 04:59:22
As a writer of Aragorn and Arwen, I am usually put off by "Arwen's
end" tales--mostly they descend into the maudlin or some pretentious
religious sentiment, or portray Arwen as a whining child.

Keiliss's outstanding and tenderly beautiful story reaches far above
the usual. Her language is exquisite, mirroring the delicacy of the
feelings she writes of. Arwen's sorrow is fully adult; her words of no
regret ring so very true. But like any choice, there is a price.
Aragorn and Arwen pay a high price for a truly great love. Such things
don't come cheap.

Maglor's gift of mercy is--just that. This is in its own right a very
satisfactory answer to the question of what happened to Maglor.

I've always thought that Elladan and Elrohir would choose to stay in
Middle-earth as well. I know it is an unpopular position, but I see
them exactly as Arwen describes them. In my own, as yet unwritten AU
tale of Arwen's death, their choice will come up too. In my own view,
Arwen does not die with Aragorn because she can't face it at that
time. Then she comes to regret her own lack of courage.

There's a debate among some in the fandom about Aragorn's decision to
"accept the gift" as a horrible thing to do to Arwen. But he could not
spare her the pain of his death. And to spare both himself and her his
debility and age, I think, is a great act. That's why their story is
such a powerful tale of the tragedy of death.

Thanks, Keiliss. I love this story.

Title: The Legend of the Grey Riders · Author: Jay of Lasgalen ·
Races: Cross-Cultural: Elves and Men · ID: 176
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 06:08:39
Spoilers!
I confess: Jay of Lasgalen wrote this ficlet for my birthday, and I
can't stop grinning in delight whenever I re-read it... which is often.

The descriptions of Meduseld are atmospheric and sensual, very
evocative. I almost get dizzy imagining the thick scent of smoke.

After the solemnity of burying Theoden, the crowd has turned festive,
in celebration of the announcement of Faramir and Eowyn's betrothal.
In honor of the occasion, Eomer decides to tell the historic tale of
how the Eorlings and Gondor first made an alliance: the charge of Eorl
in the Battle of the Field of Celebrant... a topic which is very near
and dear to my heart. ;-)

Eomer's retelling strikes me as being very theatrical, just the way
experienced bards would be to keep the attention of their audience...
very Rohirric!

The he tells of the legendary Grey Riders, who rode at the forefront
of the battle, and the twins' ears perk up, realizing that they are
those mythical riders.

The rest of the story makes for some delicious humor: the twins know
who the mysterious riders are, while Eomer and Eowyn argue over the
accuracy of the bards' insistence that the riders existed. Faramir is
on the sidelines, listening to the comments of both sets of siblings,
and finally realizes that there is more to the twins' comments than he
believed at first.

I love the commentary between the twins, as well as the squabbling
over the meaning of the legend between Eomer and Eowyn, and Faramir's
growing awareness.

This is a great story, and I'm so pleased Jay shared it. Very nicely done!


Title: The Onion Riddle · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Post-Ring War · ID: 13
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 06:19:04
Spoilers!
Lady Branwyn's "The Onion Riddle" is a sweet ficlet about Beregond
escorting a group of Dwarves to scout out mine sites in Ithilien.

What I enjoy most is Beregond's slowly dawning understanding of the
Dwarves, and his surprise and embarrassment when he becomes privy to a
dwarven secret. The characters are well-drawn and realistic, and the
relationships are handled deftly and with some humor.

And the onion riddle was a special treat!

A lovely work!

Title: The Roses of Imloth Melui · Author: Aervir · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 435
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 06:33:55
Spoilers!
Aervir's series of drabbles, "The Roses of Imloth Melui", gives us
glimpses of the long life of an extraordinary woman, Ioreth of the
Houses of Healing.

The imagery in these drabbles is vivid and rich, with roses recurring
as a theme throughout. The vignettes show us a strong woman who has
endured much, but always finds red roses to surround herself with...
until the Battle of the Pelennor, after which red became too closely
associated with blood and horrific losses.

Aervir does a wonderful job of evoking the senses: we seen and hear
and smell and feel the world as Ioreth does, and we are the richer for it.

This is an extraordinarily beautiful series. Very nicely done!


Title: Music hath Charms · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men: Minas
Tirith · ID: 361
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-30 06:45:29
This is such a charming story, Linda! If there is one thing that
Aragorn and Faramir do not want is to incur their wives' wrath. They
know very well what could happen, and they just walked right into this
situation. Forgetting their children because of some meeting is not a
good way to make the ladies happy. Eowyn did not even want to see or
talk to Faramir. She just left him a note. I thought that was funny,
though. I imagine that probably hut him and caught him very off guard.
Although, Aragorn and Faramir did both forget about their children
That is irresponsible and they should feel bad. Arwen and Eowyn are so
angry with the two men, that they do not even want to eat or sleep
with them. Poor guys! They really want their husbands to feel bad and
are very successful with that. Aragorn and Faramir felt so sorry for
themselves that they went out to a tavern to have a drink. I think it
was sweet that Aragorn and Faramir got the idea to serenade their
wives under their windows. It was kind of a Romeo and Juliet moment,
and Aragorn remembered when he sang of Luthien to Arwen when they met;
believing her to be Luthien. I love that scene in the Appendices. The
singing melted the heart of both Arwen and Eowyn and they quickly
forgave their husbands. But I think they would have forgiven their
husbands by then, anyway. I cannot see how anyone could stay angry at
those two for long. However, the serenading to them was a very sweet
gesture. I love the way Faramir sings to his son. It is so adorable
and sweet. I can almost hear him singing to his child; the baby just
fascinated with Eowyn looking on. I will bet that he had a wonderful
singing voice. He put Elboron right to sleep, whereas Eowyn could not.
I really do believe that music has a magic all it's own. It is
soothing and relaxing. It can also take your mind off of other things
for a while; and take you somewhere else. There is just something
about music. It is unlike anything else. It can bring back memories
from long ago. Music truly does have charms. It certainly worked for
Aragorn's and Faaramir's family. This is a wonderful story, Linda. I
really, really like it. Pam

Title: A Smile · Author: Aria · Races: Elves: House of Finwe · ID: 321
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 06:58:07
Spoilers!
Aria's ficlet, "A Smile", is a gap-filler, an explanation of why
Curufin smiled when his son, Celebrimbor, repudiated him as he left
Nargothrond.

It is an emotionally powerful vignette, in which Curufin comes to the
conclusion that he must let his precious child go, in order to save him.

Very nicely done!

Title: Sunset Gates · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races: Dwarves: Drabbles
· ID: 342
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-30 07:05:25
I am always up for an examination of Gimli and the lady. This one goes
about it from a rather unusual angle--hey, it includes the city I live
in! I don't know what to say about this one. I am really not
particularly fond of the bait and switch technique in a story, unless
it is a mystery story. A dirty trick has been played here and within a
drabble no less. It's got a certain humor I must admit and IgnobleBard
knows how to write. I know the author likes the particular genre
himself. And if anyone could pull it off, he could. You get away with
it this time, but don't make a habit of it. I have to state that I
prefer your real stories.

Title: Feelings of Superiority · Author: Gwynnyd · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 362
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 07:26:30
Spoilers!
Gwynnyd's excellent drabble series, "Feelings of Superiority", is a
collection of vignettes showing how Men and Elves will splinter
themselves into tribal groups, and then look down on any other group,
considering them lesser than themselves.

The vignettes are emotionally powerful, and each point of view is
strong and individual... and the absolute certainty of each character
that he is right, and is blessed by his version of a god, is chilling.

These are extremely well written, and also fascinating. Gwynnyd's
clever wielding of language and skill with the drabble form, are
evident here.

I think my favorite is the son of the horse lord of Rhovanion, who
honestly says to the buyer that he wanted to keep a stallion for
himself, conveniently leaving out the purpose for which he wanted to
keep it. The double-speak is deft and almost humorous, in a grimly
bittersweet sort of way. (I smiled at how well the boy misled his
customers, but grimaced at his unease at misleading them, if that
makes any sense.)

Very nicely done!

Title: Bears With Honey · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 243
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 07:31:26
There is something so appealing to how GA begins her ficlet. Perhaps
it's the image of a writer settling in to craft a story to share, or
the comfort and ease of a favored pet settling in with you. Or perhaps
it's the parallel drawn between fanfic and real life, a brief
commentary on how one is often a reflection of the other and how an
author's inspiration dawns. Whatever it is, I really enjoyed it!

The descriptions are wonderful and creative, bringing me right into
the story - for both settings. I particularly adore the
characterizations of the intelligent animals (smiling with whiskers
and eyes is a terrific way to put it), although Mrs. Beorn and the
author both deserve commendations for dealing so blithely with their
partners! An entertaining and charming drabblet.

Title: Giving Gifts · Author: Marta · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 426
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 07:31:57
Even if this particular situation isn't quite HoMe-compliant (and I
think that it *could* actually work), something like it surely
occurred. The characterizations are wonderful; this is easily a
relationship that I can see between the two premier noblemen of
Gondor, and I especially see Denethor as having a quick and biting
wit: usually hidden, yes, but let out with delight under certain
circumstances. The letter is the perfect vehicle to transmit it in the
story.

The revenge is fitting, although the promised escalation as each round
goes on would have me pacing the floor with worry, were I a member of
either of these households...

Title: The Wedding Gift · Author: annmarwalk · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 40
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 07:32:59
Oh, simply lovely! The description of Gloin's dedication and intense
concentration on his task gives full voice to how important the gift
is to him. And then a beautiful listing of all the wonders he puts
together to fulfill his creative vision; I love the tender touch of
him wishing for even more precious materials to utilize in his
fabrication efforts.

The characterization of Dwarves in general and of this particular
custom are wonderful, and that's one moving and sensual scene when he
gives his bride his present. The author tucks in a brilliant
specification of just who will get to see this gift; that alone
heightened even more the tremendous effort that Gloin put into it.
Well done!

Msg# 9605

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Early Evening,Part Three Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 17:14:28 Topic ID# 9605
Title: Don't Explain · Author: gwidhiel · Races: Elves: Incomplete ·
ID: 289
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 07:52:28
I've really enjoyed keeping up with gwidhiel's ["Don't Explain"] as
the chapters have come out. I know RL cramps many a writer's style,
but I want to put in a plug right up front pleading for rest of the
story to be told as soon as possible!

One of the things that I like so much about it is that the author puts
a bit of a different twist on some of her characterizations, at least
for me; it makes the well-known characters fresh again. Another
absolutely wonderful aspect of this story is how a specific series of
events now receives a convincing female perspective. And what women!
Strong and honest, but not perfect, Indis in particular is used to
deliver an creative new take on the Miriel/Finwe/Indis triangle. She
is not the only one trying to uncover the reasons behind why certain
things occurred in the past, however, and her companions are a welcome
and sometimes appropriately challenging pair.

There are many surprises: although not an action story, the
psychological explorations, keen insights and character developments
make it a fascinating read. The author manages a nice balance between
activity/conversation and moments of reflective thought, keeping the
pace moving well from chapter to chapter. Which leaves me where I
began this review, as I stare forlornly at all the so-far unanswered
questions: please update?

Title: Fine Art for Future Generations · Author: stefaniab · Genres:
Humor: Gondor · ID: 561
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-30 07:53:31
Well, the old adage goes: A picture is worth a thousand words. This
tale didn't need many words at all to just destroy the seriousness of
a certain picture.

Thanks go to the author for putting the picture in the tale - though
the written word worked very well, the picture - enhanced by the tale
- was just too much. The seriousness of those who perused it and poor
Arwen's part in the painting of it were delicious.

I'm still laughing and that is why I'm posting a review here. Laughter
is such a blessing and the category was humor and this definitely fits
to the nth degree.

Congrats!

Title: The Apprentice · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains · ID: 52
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-30 07:56:16
This is the most brilliantly constructed fanfiction I have ever read,
thoroughly enthralling and "all of a piece" as Pauline Kael used to
say. The way Pandemonium weaves this tale through the eyes of an
ambitious young Elf, who wishes to become an apprentice smith, is a
marvel to behold. There was not a single moment when I did not believe
in the characters, when I was not anxious to find out how the tale
would end, despite it being couched in canon events the outcome of
which is well known to certain readers.

Pandemonium writes Sauron like no other, as a scientist seeking to
restore order to a world he feels has gone awry through the
impassivity of his Valarian kin. The fact that his drive leads to acts
of unimaginable cruelty and betrayal are of minor concern to this end
justifies the means kind of guy. But the way he is written is so
arresting, and the complexity of the detail so remarkable, that one is
caught up as surely as the apprentice through whose eyes we see him.

This is such an amazing story this review is like a fly speck unto its
greatness. I was all prepared to write this epic review full of
sparkling prose praising this to the skies but now, faced with the
reality of putting into words how special this story is, words fail
me. All I can say is, if you haven't read this, read it! It will give
you a whole new perspective on the Valar in general and Sauron in
particular.


Title: Eight Weeks · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Humor: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 273
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 07:58:18
Yes, this is a delightful, laugh-out-loud-filled series of humorous
drabbles exploring an intriguing and entertaining concept. Yes, the
interactions are awesome and totally engaging. Yes, the
characterizations feel completely authentic and real. Yes, each scene
is well-thought out and a harmonious link in the whole, flowing
smoothly and naturally from one to another. Yes, every technical
aspect is flawless, the writing excellent with marvellous phrases, the
perfect tone carried throughout.

But really, the very, very best part of this series is how Denethor
and Faramir work as a concerted team in a single-minded and
cleverly-laid siege. So many times the focus is on the adversarial and
apparently dysfunction relationship that this powerful and
intellectual father has with his equally intellectual second-born.
Here we have a tantalizing viewpoint of them working together to
belabor the one they both love - all for the greater good, of course!

There are so many great moments to reread and chortle over anew...
Definitely the two chess games, particularly Denethor's final musing
at the end of Week Six; Faramir's devious comments - the "appearance"
shot and noting the meaning of (at least some) Dwarven beards; and of
course, of course, the final toast. Simply sublime...

Title: Weathertop · Author: Primsong · Genres: Poetry: Late Third Age
· ID: 597
Reviewer: agape4gondor · 2008-11-30 08:11:27
Spoilers!
I suppose I must mark spoilers, but any who have read the book or seen
the movie know what Weathertop portends. The very sound of it makes
one shiver - in fear for Frodo, in fear for the Hobbits, and in fear
for all of Middle-earth.

The shivering continues with these six short poems. The first speaks
of the place itself - in tones that carry a legacy of darkness from an
age just passed. The second speaks of the assault as Frodo scrabbles
away, hoping, but we know better. The third speaks of the battle of
wills and we know, for Eru's sake, we know the outcome, yet, because
of the author's words, we hope, we hope. The fourth is my favorite: it
speaks (there is a poetic term that I cannot remember! Blast!) but it
speaks words that are repeated elsewhere in Tolkien's books. But here
- oh here their meaning is twisted and turned and one almost laughs at
the final rape of words. *shivers again* The fifth speaks of another's
sorrow. The sixth speaks of despair.

Oh these are beautiful poems for that moment on Weathertop.

I am not a reader nor understander of poetry. I have felt the lack so
thoroughly throughout my life - especially at times like this when, I
think if I had a better knowledge of the form, I would enjoy these
even more. Blessed reading even for the untutored.

Title: Tide of Destiny - Part One: Choices · Author: Lady Bluejay ·
Genres: Drama: Incomplete · ID: 159
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 08:26:47
Spoilers!
Lady Bluejay's work-in-progress story, "Tide of Destiny - Part One:
Choices", is truly an epic one. It follows the lives of Lothiriel,
Princes of Dol Amroth, and Eomer, future King of Rohan, from
Lothiriel's childhood. Presumably, it will continue into the old age
of the two characters.

They each have several major traumas to deal with, and I found myself
becoming emotionally involved in their struggles, particularly those
of Lothiriel. The sweep of the saga includes the events of the War of
the Ring, and their reactions to those events have deep roots in
earlier ones.

I really enjoyed the characterizations; Lothiriel especially is a
compelling character who gains in maturity as the story progresses.
Eomer starts out an adult, but he also changes as he goes through
emotionally charged events.

This is a sweeping story, very well-written and engaging.

Nicely done!

Title: On Far Fields · Author: Dwimordene · Races: Cross-Cultural ·
ID: 106
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 08:42:38
Spoilers!
Dwimordene's story, "On Far Fields", is about Andrahar, Isabeau's
original character from Harad, on the Pelennor Fields after the great
battle fought there. There are some Haradrim prisoners of war, and he
is standing vigil with them.

It is a rather angsty, introspective piece where Andrahar is trying to
work out how to behave, being caught between warring cultures...
having lost his place in Umbar, he now has a home in Dol Amroth, but
the old sense of honor as understood by the Haradrim still survives.

Imrahil arrives and supports his friend as best as he can, given
Andrahar's internally warring system of values.

This is an interesting story which sheds light on both of the
characters, and helps us to understand the depth of Andrahar's
emotional turmoil after the loss of his lover and the devastation of
the war.

Very well done!

Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 08:51:16
Spoilers!
Raksha the Demon's ficlet, "Winds of Change", is about the birth of
Eowyn, shieldmaiden of Rohan, as symbolized by a storm that heralds
her birth in Aldburg, makes the Witch-king uneasy in Minas Morgul, and
gladdens the heart of Glorfindel on his way to Rivendell.

It is a lovely vignette, and I enjoyed reading it.

Very nicely done!

Title: Flame of Life · Author: Imhiriel · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 114
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-30 08:59:32
Spoilers!
The Imperishable Flame as divine mystery--remote and unattainable, yet
present in the World and in each one of us--is beautifully conceived
and expressed in this highly original meditation on the immortal spark
that fuels our own creative passion.

A splendid ficlet!


Title: To Sleep, Perchance to Dream · Author: Ariel/Auntie
Meesh/Budgielover/Cathleen/Dreamflower/Gryffinjack/kellyfrankenfield/Lindelea/Pearl
Took/Rosie Took/SlightlyTookish CoAuthors · Times: Late Third Age:
Gondor · ID: 496
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 09:29:27
That is a great story to read that all of you people wrote together. I
enjoyed it very much. Nice and angsty! *g*
A very interessting topic to write about and realistic too. After all
war is thraumatizising and may rob of sleep. That the sleeping powder
turned out to be a hard drug... poor Pippin! I am glad Aragorn and his
cousins where there for him.

Title: Yule Tails · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Cross-Cultural · ID: 303
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 09:35:40
A very nice story to read. I just love the way your show us moments of
the past from Faramir and Pippin. Especially when Pip got his big pony
that doesnt go anywhere that is so cute! Great writing!

Title: Pippin and the Incredible Shrinking Piglet · Author: Cathleen ·
Genres: Humor: Shire · ID: 241
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 09:40:26
I am glad Tulipd did not disappear! ;) I find it sooooooo sweet that
Pearl is making all the stuff for Tulip. His family may find Pips
antics funny, but they certainly love him to no end.

Title: The Shadow · Author: Linda Hoyland · Genres: Drama: Ring War
Drabbles · ID: 25
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-30 09:44:02
Spoilers!
This heart-wrenching drabble captures Frodo's pain and alienation
after the Quest, embodied in the spirit of Gollum. I heard echoes of
Tolkien's Letter 246: ["Frodo was sent or allowed to pass over Sea to
heal him – if that could be done"]. Peace and healing in Aman, then,
was no sure thing...and so we, as Frodo, are left contemplate his
final anguished question. Wonderfully done!

Title: Birthday Double Drabble · Author: PipMer · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 526
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 09:44:43
A very nice little piece! Makes feel both sad and smiling to think of
Pip having his birthday while to hurt, but still at least he has his
birthday and is not dead!

Title: Pippin (Paladin) Had a Little Lamb · Author: Cathleen · Genres:
Humor · ID: 629
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 09:46:50
*giggles* Now I know why Pips such a cute character. He has it from
his father. I really like your Paladin! Well actually I like your
whole Took family including their knitted members!

Title: When the King Came Back · Author: Cathleen · Times: Fourth Age
and Beyond · ID: 514
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 09:49:02
This story gives a good look into how it might have been for Pippin
when coming back. I love the scene with Pip sitting at his place in
the end and then Paladin finding him. A warm and nontheless somehow
heartbreaking scene.

Title: Meant to Be · Author: Pearl Took · Races: Other Beings · ID: 137
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 09:52:09
This is a great story to read, it has so much warms and magic inside
it. Tulip truly was meant to be. A nice read about "the birth" of our
favourite knitted Piglass, that will have sooo many adventures with
Pippin.

Title: Healing · Author: Bodkin · Races: Elves · ID: 419
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 09:53:32
Spoilers!
Bodkin's short story, "Healing", is about Celeborn after he finally
arrived in the Undying Lands. He is struggling to explain to Galadriel
why his sojourn in Middle-earth was so draining.

The writing is poignant and beautiful, but the story of the decline of
the land under the dominion of Men, and their utter disregard, is
heart-wrenching.

But the love between Celeborn and Galadriel is strong, and their
relationship is one of strength and respect, nuanced and
three-dimensional. One ends up with the quiet certainty that Celeborn
will be able to heal, with the help of his beloved wife.

A beautifully wrought, somewhat melancholy but also hopeful story!

Title: Drawing the Eye · Author: Linda Hoyland · Times: Late Third Age
· ID: 569
Reviewer: rosethorn59 · 2008-11-30 09:53:50
This was good, Linda! The room Aragorn chose to look at the Eye sounds
as bleak, dark and cold as the Eye itself. The low--burning flames in
the fireplace sound to me like they could represent the Eye itself as
it begins to come alive; to see. The fire burns low and can generate
into a very bright and living thing, but can still very cold and dark
in its purpose, it can burn you. Not necessarily a fire's purpose,
Ihough, I suppose. Later on in the story you mention that the room had
been cleansed, like a living thing. Not quite sure what I am trying to
say there. As Aragorn states, he does have the right to use the
Palantir and he seems more determined than ever to do so; it being a
trial he must go through if he is ever to become King. Aragorn is very
brave and determined to do this. He is a very strong and admirable
person to be able to keep contact with the Eye for so long, hours
even. And just to draw Sauron's attention; which everyone knows would
work, considerin who he is. No one ever would have been able to stand
against Sauron's evil power like Aragorn could. The things he is
willing to sacrifice for his people, humanity, Middle Earth and the
Quest is astounding. He is always willing to give anything, including
his life, for those he loves. I really have always liked Halbarad. It
must be very difficult for Aragorn to know what will become of him;
knowing it would not make any difference to Halbarad. He would still
follow his leader, regardless, even if meant his death. This is a very
good tale, Linda.

Title: Grandmum's Button Box · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits:
Family · ID: 135
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 09:55:49
A very cute story and I love the background to it. Yes also bottons
can hold memories of the heart. I enjoyed reading that nice story of
yours.

Title: Alqualondë · Author: Moreth · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 220
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 10:00:40
Spoilers!
Moreth's pair of drabbles, "Alqualonde", is about the first
Kinslaying. Each drabble is told from the point of view of a
participant; first, a Teler, and then, the Noldo who slays him.

It captures the shock and confusion of the attack from the defendants'
side very accurately. But it also shows the Noldo regretting his
actions afterward, when the heat of the battle is past and the
dreadful results begin to sink in.

The drabbles touched my heart, and made me feel some sympathy for each
participant in those terrible events.

Well done!

Title: Birthday Present · Author: Aranel Took · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 441
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 10:00:44
How absolutly cute. A story for a present and that from Bilbos mouth
and memories must surly be a real treat! I can understand why Pip
likes his cousin so much.

Title: Pippin and Tulip's Excellent Adventure · Author: Cathleen ·
Times: Mid Third Age: Eriador · ID: 595
Reviewer: Golden · 2008-11-30 10:03:38
Tulip surly had an veeeeery exciting day, hasnt she? And Pip the
Sherlock Homes under the Tooks. *g* Enjoyed reading your story a great
deal!

Title: Wonderful Tonight · Author: Violin Ghost · Genres: Romance:
Gondor · ID: 320
Reviewer: Raksha the Demon · 2008-11-30 10:03:55
What a wonderfully romantic story! Faramir and Eowyn's romance was one
of Tolkien's greatest, and I think they would have had a good
marriage, though not without some ups and downs. The song is put to
very good use here!

Title: Elrond's Farewell · Author: Armariel · Genres: Poetry · ID: 269
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 10:05:52
Spoilers!
Armariel's verse, "Elrond's Farewell", is from Elrond's point of view
as he bids his daughter, who has chosen to stay in Middle-earth and
become mortal, farewell before he sails for the Undying Lands.

I enjoy the use of vivid language and metaphor in this poetry, and its
rhythm is free, evocative of a maiden Arwen dancing freely.

Very nicely done!

Msg# 9606

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Early Evening,Part Four) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 17:15:57 Topic ID# 9606
Title: Wind of Change · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 47
Reviewer: Inkling · 2008-11-30 10:18:27
Spoilers!
A most unusual trio of perspectives is linked by the forceful wind (a
North wind, surely?) that heralds the arrival of the Shieldmaiden of
Rohan. I love that each has a flash of forethought, and that
Glorfindel knows only that the Witch King will fall, but not whether
it will be by [his hand or another's]. The closing image of the infant
Éowyn is glorious!



Title: Nightfall · Author: Jael · Times: Second and Early Third Age ·
ID: 87
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-30 10:18:50
Spoilers!
If you have a bit of time to spare and have not read this fabulous
story, do so. One does not need to have read its prequel to become
fully engrossed in this short story which takes place during the war
of the Last Alliance. Most who have read the UT also know that Oropher
and many of his men lost their lives during a rashly executed attack;
this piece of fiction gives the answer to that as how this has come to
pass and how Thranduil managed to continue to lead his people after
that. Jael gives this canon fact more body and also gives at the same
time Erestor a background story. It does not end with that however,
[Nightfall] is about so much more. Jael writes just about one day of
the many they fought there and during this day as the night falls,
valour is reclaimed at the loss of a life that hits one of the minor
characters so hard. [Nightfall] serves also a symbolical purpose here,
for many the night will fall, only to - maybe - awaken in the Halls of
Mandos. Who will know that truly? This is a greatly constructed story
where true heroes win the day and those we cannot miss are mourned,
this all poured in a tall full with actions and emotions. This is a
superbly crafted Jael, I wanted to read this story for a while now
since it has been recommended to me often and I am glad I did.

Title: The King's Time · Author: Larner · Genres: Drama: Final
Partings · ID: 333
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 10:19:54
Spoilers!
Larner's short story, "The King's Time", follows Aragorn as he
prepares for very special day, and finishes his work to hand it over
to his son, Eldarion.

For King Elessar has come to the end of his time, as Larner reminds
him -- and us -- with every opportunity to mention any kind of time
marker. Some are mechanical clocks (my favorite being the water-clock
from Harad, reminiscent of the water-clocks of the great Muslim
inventors of the past), some are candles and sundials, but some are
natural... like the awakening of the White Tree of Gondor from its
winter quiescence to its spring quickening.

This could be a melancholy story, but instead one is instilled with
the sense of, not resignation, but acceptance. Elessar's time has
come, and he knows it.

But it is also hopeful, because Elessar knows that Eldarion is [a man
full-ripe for kingship], mature and ready to lead the people.

A beautiful and sensitive vignette, which I truly enjoyed reading.


Title: Bombur's Diet · Author: Primsong · Races: Dwarves · ID: 677
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 10:28:49
Wonderful, awesome and laugh-filled story! The comedic timing is
perfection itself, and the characterizations are exactly out of the
books: Hobbity and Dwarvish by turns. I love every conversation, and
the descriptions of actions and expressions are sublime. This is one
of those stories that you tuck away to keep handy anytime you need a
good laugh and a day-brightener.

Title: The Night's Eye · Author: Vana Tuivana · Races: Men · ID: 343
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 10:29:01
["The Night's Eye"] is a powerful and moving story. I love the
tale-within-a-tale of Eirien and Belegund; the meaning behind the
candle-lighting is exactly the kind of thing people do to remind
themselves of their hope for a good outcome, and symbolize their
desire for loved ones to return.

The final passage concerning the brief return of the boy's father was
excellent, more than a bit unsettling, and a very somber and
reflective ending. Well done!

Title: Diamonds For Forever I, II & III · Author: Elen Kortirion ·
Genres: Romance: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 515
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 10:29:31
The jewelry acts as a very effective link between the three drabbles,
from one man and his ["Northern bride"] through to another. The
descriptions are wonderful, very rich and appropriate and evocative. I
love the way the author explores each individual's perspective
regarding the jewels, all different, and the transformation at the
end: flowering as the White Tree has. Lovely!

Title: Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast? · Author: viv · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 180
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 10:29:45
Oh, my... I may never read those lines in RotK the same way again.
Very clever take; the tone/language magnifies and carries the whole
situation so well. Great description of Merry!

Title: Seeking the Sun · Author: Linda Hoyland · Races: Men · ID: 488
Reviewer: dkpalaska · 2008-11-30 10:30:06
The focus on the less-than-fortunate here brings home an important
point: just because your side won the War does not mean that everyone
celebrates or thrives. The author deftly introduces us to one such
victim, a believable and realistic character who won't stoop to
charity and yet cannot find gainful employment. Her list of losses is
devastating, but a reader can't help but realize that many suffered a
same or similar fate.

Very nice writing; I particularly love, ["Sometimes I think my soul is
dead already. My body simply waits to follow."]

Her turnaround is lovely, and I love the tie to the title. Against all
expectations, we finish the story as hopeful as the narrator!

Title: Stewards · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Late Third Age: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 450
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 10:34:10
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble, "Stewards", is a perceptive contrast between how
Denethor II and Gandalf the Grey-or-White approach their
responsibilities to lead their charges.

Denethor's focus is cramped and limited, confining his concerns to the
remaining heart of Gondor, seeing Gondor as alone in the struggle
against the evil of Mordor, disregarding those not under his direct
control.

Whereas Gandalf has a much more expansive view of the Northwest of
Middle-earth, and tries to inspire all the disparate peoples of those
lands to fight together, building alliances against all forms of Darkness.

The comparison of the two leadership styles is striking, and Tanaqui's
words convey the clash of worldviews very well.

A beautiful piece; the title is ideal, and the utilization of maps is
perfectly suited to the theme.

Very well done!



Title: The Scribe and the Heir · Author: Dawn Felagund · Genres:
Drama: Featuring the Noldor · ID: 256
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-30 10:39:19
Spoilers!
This story is such a rich vignette, for parents it is hard to let go
of their children even when they have come of age. Fingolfin has a
hard time understanding his sons nature and as to why he rather wants
to spent time elsewhere but home, whereas Fëanor fears loosing his son
all the same to those in Tirion. You can just see how both struggle
with the thought of failure to their elder sons where as their heirs
simply do as they must. Finarfin is the diplomatic mediator here as he
holds up a mask of frivolity, yet he knows and tries to soothe the
deeper hurts that creates such a rift in the House of Finwë. Dawn's
portrayal of such a matter also gives us as a reader a reason how
Melkor could have used this to create a feud between these Elven lords
and it leaves me with the impression that Finarfin might have been
aware of where such risks these small quarrels might lead to. Very
thought provoking Dawn, you just shed some light on the conflict
between Finwë's eldest I have not thought of before!

Title: The War of Wrath · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Elves: Drabbles ·
ID: 120
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 10:43:07
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's poetry drabble, "The War of Wrath", is about Ingwion, the
son of Ingwe, who is High King of all the Elves in the Undying Lands,
as he leads the Vanyar to Middle-earth for the War of Wrath.

The result is impressive! I remember how in awe I was as I first read
this poem. It is reminiscent of the lay, "Earendil Was a Mariner", in
form and meter and heroic-saga like language.

But I am no judge of things like poetic form and meter and language! I
am simply astonished at the skill it took to write such a thing.

Tanaqui's skill at drabbles is second to none; this proves that she
can write poetry, too.

And I am sooooo impressed....

Most especially well done!

Title: PROPHECY: Changing the Future · Author: Fiondil · Genres: Humor
· ID: 11
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-30 10:49:23
Spoilers!
Having written a story featuring the Dagor Dagorath myself, this of
course ended up on my wish list immediately. I really love this spin
of those two Edain scribes, who altered the prophecy to make things
look better for second born. I surely can imagine that it must be
frustrating to read that not much of their final fate is known... yet
again, but be glad Mandos, they didn't insert another famed Edain hero
to fight next to Túrin - or even worse - replaced Túrin with Beren!
The ending makes me smile, two more prophecies, oh my!

Title: Boromir at the Bat · Author: White Gull · Genres: Poetry: Late
Third Age · ID: 632
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 10:50:37
Spoilers!
White Gull's poem, "Boromir at the Bat", is a well-written parody of
the venerable "Casey at the Bat".

I got a kick out of reading it, but also appreciated how well it
emulated the original. And the climax was laugh-out-loud funny, indeed!

Very well done!

Title: Kementari · Author: Marta · Times: First Age and Prior · ID: 99
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-30 11:02:22
Spoilers!
This is a gorgeous vignette where Marta explores the grief Yavanna
must have felt once both trees were slain. It also explains in a way
why the Valar themselves were not quick to move during the darkening
of Valinor and why later, when Yavanna recollected herself, strived so
hard for the possession of the Jewels to restore some of what she
created. I love the thought that she manages to seek some comfort with
her beloved creatures and that there is a bit of rebellious streak
inside her to leave Aman and create her own fame. What is also well
explored in this short work is how the darkening affected the nature
of Aman, with Arien no longer tending to her tree and the algae taking
over the ponds in Lorien. She simply feels forced to accept this,
resolving to heal her own hurts first. This is just a beautifully
crafted gap-filler Marta!

Title: Homeward Bound · Author: Werecat · Genres: Alternate Universe ·
ID: 430
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 11:06:33
Spoilers!
Werecat's short story, "Homeward Bound", is a vignette about a
wandering bird-loving hobo, Radagast, in modern times, who is on his
way home in the West. He stops to ask for food at a house by the
wayside, and meets characters known to him from ages past.

I like the descriptions in this piece... in particular [the scent of
cinnamon and apples] actually made me hungry. But there was a real
spark of surprise and pleasure when I realized who the lady of the
house and her pet were.

This is a fine work, and I like how it explores a little-known (to
anyone other than Werecat, that is) corner of canon.

Nicely done! That's two meows up from this critic. LOLOL!

Title: Care to Ride My Hot-Rod Fell Beast? · Author: viv · Genres:
Humor: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 180
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 11:14:36
Spoilers!
Viv's double-drabble, "Care to Ride My Hot-rod Fell Beast?", is a real
hoot, part pulp-fiction detective and part saucy teasing. It retells a
canon event in a decidedly uncanonical fashion.

I loved it!

Very well done!

Title: Philosophia to Philomythus and Misomythus · Author:
pandemonium_213 · Genres: Poetry · ID: 50
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-30 11:16:59
This poem was written as an answer to a challenge at the SWG, the Duel
of Songs. And that is exactly how it reads; the pacing is well chosen
here, I can simply see a scientist rise to his or her feet to answer
the challenge thusly, defending the craft of a scientist. It is just
not all dry matter, a scientist needs to be tickled just as a writer
is, driven by a muse, be it quite differently. One is surely not less
than the other, the execution is just differently. I really love the
meter used Pandemonium, I am certain you could most certainly engage
in a Duel of songs with these writers and I would most certainly love
to be present when that happens!

Title: The Night's Eye · Author: Vana Tuivana · Races: Men · ID: 343
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 11:25:50
Spoilers!
Vana Tuivana's story, "The Night's Eye" is an explanation of a
tradition of putting a candle in the window to wait for a loved one to
return. It is also a Middle-earth ghost story, but filled with love
and melancholy, rather than horror and dread.

I enjoyed reading it.


Title: Seaworthy · Author: Thundera Tiger · Races: Elves: Mirkwood
Elves · ID: 349
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 11:31:08
Spoilers!
Thundera Tiger's story, "Seaworthy", is at heart a story of friendship
between Imhiriel of Dol Amroth and Legolas of Eryn Lasgalen.

It is a warm tale of how a true friend will do what he can to keep his
friend from making a terrible mistake.

It is heart-warming, and I recommend it.

Well done!

Title: Cat's Paws · Author: pandemonium_213 · Races: Villains · ID: 58
Reviewer: Gandalfs apprentice · 2008-11-30 11:49:32
Manwe's stiff rod, what a story! BEginning with a moment of almost
clownish humor, continuing through drawing-room charm with an almost
Californian air, then--the hairs are still rising on my back. Poor kitty.

I hadn't read this one before--the crystallization of pandemonium's
to-die-for persona of Sauron. You know exactly why the Noldor were
taken in, Celebrimbor in particular.

On the other hand, "taken in" doesn't capture it at all. In fact, they
gained a lot from Annatar, who deserved his name of Lord of Gifts. The
list of life-changing achievements makes that clear. But it's all
with, ultimately, an ulterior motive. Although, I wonder--there's room
to speculate that perhaps, at one point, Annatar meant it all for the
good.

Pan, are you going to tell us the story of when and how he changed his
mind? At some time, somewhere, there was a struggle.

I'd like to know....

Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Oshun · 2008-11-30 11:55:48
Spoilers!
This highly original story of what life was like for Arwen after
Aragorn died is by oceans the best I have ever read. It is beautiful
and terrible in equal parts. It is also a compelling story of Maglor.
It is so wonderfully believable. The startling surprise for me was to
find them together in the abandoned and decaying Lothlorien. The
poignancy of bringing them together in this storyline and its
resolution is stunning. She enables the reader to understand with
compelling emotionality what Elrond must have meant to Maglor, what
Maglor himself has already suffered, and what it must have felt like
to meet Arwen under these circumstances. The story's power lies in how
Maglor and Arwen, vastly different in age and experience, interact so
completely believably. Arwen's pain is palpable. Maglor's reaction is
based first upon his attachment to her father and finally in the
personal affection he grows to feel for Arwen. Maglor shows great
compassion in how he finally decides that he will take upon himself
the unwelcome responsibility of helping Arwen in the way in which she
seems unable to help herself. I can't help but think that his action
brings redemption for himself in the end.

Title: Saruman of Many Colours · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Drama:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 439
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 12:03:08
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble series , "Saruman of Many Colours", depicts episodes
throughout the later career of Saruman the (supposedly) Wise as he
becomes more prideful and conceited. Some of the vignettes are mildly
amusing, but some are horrifying as he sinks into darkness.

The most horrific one is when he destroys an Ent to add magic to one
of his attempts at making a ring of power.

The language is evocative, and the acts are in some cases horrifying.

All together, this series makes a fascinating character sketch of
Saruman as he sinks into degradation.

Very well done!

Title: Handy With A Sword · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 437
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 12:06:56
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble series, "Handy with a Sword", is a sketch of an
encounter that Faramir has with his bride-to-be, Eowyn, on the
sparring field. He loses the match, but gains respect for her fighting
skills.

I especially like the last drabble, where Tanaqui references a song of
the same name, which is perfect for this scenario.

I enjoyed reading this, and it made me laugh.

Good work!

Title: Silver Blossoms Blown · Author: Ignoble Bard · Races:
Cross-Cultural · ID: 646
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-30 12:08:32
Spoilers!
No matter what mistakes the Valar have made regarding the Eldar, this
short work also reminds us of the awe and equality Varda felt towards
the elves as they appeared with Oromë on their doorstep. I love
Varda's voice here, feeling like a child herself and most certainly
she does not see herself above these three. In a way this portrayal
feels more balanced, it makes more sense to me that a child of Eru
would recognise the eager spirit in a fellow kindred. IgnobleBard
captured that immensely well here. Varda's wistful voice strikes me as
immensely beautiful (would she appear just as beautiful, I am inclined
to say so) and his writing reflects on how all First born would
continue to admire her and call to her in hours of need in songs and
praise.

This work is so beautifully worded, gently paced and oh the end
reflects her pain so immensely well, knowing that at a certain point
she will not be able to help those who she embraced in her heart.

Title: With Many "Fond" Acknowledgments · Author: Thundera Tiger ·
Genres: Humor · ID: 472
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 12:08:38
Spoilers!
Thundera Tiger's short story, "With many "Fond" Acknowledgements", is
about the trouble Sam has in completing the Red Book to the
satisfaction of everyone who appears in it.

In fact, no one is happy with their part in the tales contained
therein, and their increasingly shrill litany of complaints are well
thought out, and funny, to boot.

Highly recommended!

Msg# 9607

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Late, Part One) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 20:01:56 Topic ID# 9607
Title: Spoiled · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Alternate Universe:
Drabbles · ID: 119
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 12:18:03 Score: 6
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble, "Spoiled", poses the question, "What if Aragorn had
grown up knowing who he was?"

And the answer in this drabble is chilling: Aragorn is a
self-centered, pompous fop, expecting everything to be handed to him
on a silver platter.

Gilraen must have trod a very fine line in raising such an honorable
man... how easily he could have turned out
arrogant!spoiled!obnoxious!Aragorn, as in this drabble! He was lucky
to have his down-to-earth, straightforward Dunedain mother with him in
Rivendell to keep him grounded.

Not that the Elrond would have encouraged him to take on airs, but if
he had grown up with such a profound sense of entitlement, he could
have turned rotten to the core.

Thank heavens that never happens in real life. *snerk*

Very well done!


Title: Alter/native · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Alternate Universe:
Drabbles · ID: 478
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 12:22:35 Score: 3
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble, "Alter/native", is a delightful and successful
attempt at turning canon on its staid old head.

I laughed myself silly! The music is well-chosen, and the title is
just perfect!

Well done!

Title: Birthday Outing · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 386
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 12:28:46 Score: 3
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble, "Birthday outing", is a humorous look at a spry and
sprightly Aragorn on his two hundredth birthday.... leaving his son
and Faramir's grandson in the dust. Well, mud, to be exact.

It gave me a big smile. Well done!

Title: The World Is Changing · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Late Third
Age: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 719
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 12:39:31 Score: 4
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble, "The World Is Changing", is a somewhat melancholy
vignette with Elladan and Elrohir in Rivendell after the War of the
Ring. They realize that there will be no more young Heirs of Isildur
to foster, now that Estel/Aragorn has become Elessar, the King of the
Reunited Kingdom.

I like the description of the place ([the slender bridge arching over
the Loudwater]), but also the fact that Elrohir is so supportive of
Elladan, using both humor and empathy.

Very nicely done!

Title: The Vault of the Dead · Author: Soledad · Genres: Mystery · ID: 103
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-30 12:44:34 Score: 8
Spoilers!
Soledad has a rich mythology of her own that backs her stories,
dealing with the Moriquendi and how they interacted with the Elves of
Mirkwood and the rest of Arda. They feel (as I often have) that the
Valar did no service to the Elves by drawing some over the Sea to live
with them while leaving the others to fend for themselves. Her
Moriquendi are independent of the rest of Arda and totally
isolationist and delightfully snippy with it. When Legolas chastises
one of them for leaving the rest of Middle-earth to fight the long
darkness without their help, she replies ["What possible interest
could we have in some cursed jewels, made by a maddened smith in the
West, that had already caused the deaths of many of our own kind? We
have no obligations towards those who had chosen to leave the land of
their birth behind, unprotected, to the mercy of Mbelekôro, as long as
they had their warm and cozy lives in Valinor."]

Yet despite this isolationist philosophy, they have taken in and
succored Boromir's dead spirit and sent for Faramir so that he might
speak one last time to his brother and obtain closure, for the
brothers Mir are descendents of Mithrellas and as such they count them
kin. Legolas and Gandalf accompany the new Steward of Gondor on this
quest and they too receive startling revelations. The heart-warming
scene with Boromir aside, the story contains vivid depictions of an
Elven settlement and culture that no one even knows exists any more.

Title: Lost Love · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 271
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 12:54:22 Score: 4
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble pair, "Lost Love", is a look at the ill-fated
marriage of Imrazor the Numenorean and Mithrellas, the Elf-maiden from
Lorien.

The first one, from Imrazor's point of view, gives us a glimpse of the
kindness he showed to Mithrellas, that lead to their marriage, and his
disbelief at his own good fortune.

The second, from Mithrellas' perspective, suggests a possible answer
to where she went and why she did not return.

This is a perceptive look at a very sad legend of Middle-earth. Nicely
done!

Title: Small Strengths · Author: Elwen · Races: Hobbits: Hurt/Comfort
· ID: 238
Reviewer: SurgicalSteel · 2008-11-30 12:59:35 Score: 3
Elwen's a wonderful writer, and this is a gorgeously angsty
hurt/comfort piece by her in which Frodo requires treatment for a
spider bite post-Quest. The comfort part really is - well, comforting
to read, for lask of a better word!

Title: Songs of Innocence and Experience · Author: Tanaqui · Races:
Men: General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 440
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 13:02:40 Score: 4
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble trio, "Songs of Innocence and Experience", deftly
portrays how Faramir learns fairly young that women may use their
charms to influence him, and that, as the Steward's son, he is a
target for such wiles. But then he is confronted with Eowyn, who has
[a history of deception] -- but finds that what he expects from such
women is not necessarily what he will receive from her.

The contrast between Eowyn and the other woman shows Tanaqui's
perceptive eye for character, and Faramir seems true to his canon
self, as well.

Well done!



Title: The Edge of the Knife · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Other Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 274
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-30 13:06:43 Score: 4
Spoilers!
Eight scintillating AU drabbles about Isildur, a canon character whose
triumphs and failures were both equally profound. Dwimordene presents
a kaleidoscope of alternative Isildurs-Isildur as King of Numenor,
sworn to Annatar, Isildur as Annatar's long opponent on Numenor,
Isildur as a prisoner without hope in the bowels of Barad-dur, slave
to the Ring, an Isildur who has the strength to cast the Ring away and
several others. Each Isildur triumphs or fails as completely as does
canon Isildur.

Title: Moon of the Sea · Author: pandemonium_213 · Times: Second and
Early Third Age · ID: 213
Reviewer: SurgicalSteel · 2008-11-30 13:08:33 Score: 5
Tolkien wrote so very little about the women that must have populated
his world - in most cases, if we have any information about a ruling
king's wife, it's a name on a family tree and nothing more. In this
series of short vignettes, Pandemonium has created a living, breathing
woman for Elendil's wife: complete with doubts, emotions, a loving
relationship with husband and son, and so forth. Pandemonium's work
generally leaves me saying 'yes, this is how the Second Age must have
been.' This series is no different, and I hope to see more of it!

Title: Supporting Acts · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Fourth Age and
Beyond: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 436
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 13:14:04 Score: 6
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble series, "Supporting Acts", reminds me of all the
wonderful instances where someone would call me for technical support,
and I could solve their problem over the phone... and the problem was
from their own code, not mine!

The armourer's apprentice in this case feels undervalued by the
armourer, but he is able to work out why the weapon doesn't work for
Faramir's men in the damp air of Ithilien... and the problem was
caused by an "improvement" that his boss introduced.

Furthermore, Faramir sees to it that he gets more than just emotional
reward for his solution.

Ah, all is right with the world, in these drabbles, where the engineer
solves the problem, and is recognized and rewarded for it!

(So totally unlike the real world.)

Fine work!

Title: Meddling · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Mid Third Age: Eriador ·
ID: 695
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-30 13:18:25 Score: 6
Spoilers!
Dwimordene has explored many different possibilities in her stories
about Halbarad and Aragorn, different glimpses of how their friendship
might have developed and the directions it might have taken. But in
all of them, the friendship is a constant. In this charming vignette,
a young and somewhat surly Halabarad, dismayed by Aragorn's leaving to
take service in Rohan, blames Gandalf for his friend's decision and
courageously (or foolishly!) decides to confront the wizard about it
when the two of them meet in Bree. Their conversation touches upon the
thankless job Gandalf's "meddling" over the years has been-Halbarad is
wanting a reassurance that is difficult for the wizard to give. These
are two characters that are not often shown together, but they work
well here, their interaction giving new insights about both.

Title: Possessing the greatest powers · Author: Tanaqui · Times:
Multi-Age: Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 387
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 13:22:26 Score: 4
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble series, "Possessing the Greatest Powers", is a
unique view of the three Elven Rings of Power, what each represents,
and what happened when the One Ring was destroyed.

I am especially intrigued by the unique idea that the three rings each
draw strength from the spirit of a Vala: Manwe for the Ring of Air,
Varda for the Ring of Fire, and Ulmo for the Ring of Water.

And the consequences as each ring lost power when the One was
destroyed are well-told and creative.

I enjoyed reading this series. Well done!

Title: To Be A King · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves · ID: 252
Reviewer: Rhapsody · 2008-11-30 13:23:21 Score: 8
Spoilers!
This story gives one an intriguing insight in Gil-galad's thoughts and
how he became the last High King of the Noldor or perhaps all elves
during the Second Age. Keiliss shows us how this all started, by
fleeing Eglarest after the tragic failure of the fifth battle. On
Balar Gil-galad is taught and raised by his foster father, gently
instilled with diplomatic and political knowledge. I love how Keiliss
shows him as a boy slowly growing into adulthood to a King who tries
to give this High Kingship a new meaning. The portrayal of Círdan is
fabulous here as well!

Gil-galad's views on this are differently than we know from the
previous Noldo rulers, maybe it had to do by being risen on an island
with so many groups, but the tack he intends to take is unique,
differently and much needed. This story serves as a magnificent
character portrait of Gil-galad and it shows how many at the end of
the Second Age wanted to follow his banner as they all took part in
the famous Last Alliance. Well done Keiliss, your writing is once more
graceful, not forced and yet so rich of detail and insights.

Title: The King's Colors · Author: Dwimordene · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 482
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-30 13:24:45 Score: 5
Spoilers!
An AU vignette that would have served very well as the first chapter
of a longer story (hint, hint). Here, Faramir took the quest to
Imladris and it is Boromir who stands upon the Pelennor to greet the
stranger who stands beneath the "splendid-dreadful" banner.

Boromir is very much Denethor's son here-cautious and canny even in
his grief over hearing of Faramir's death. It is apparent that Aragorn
will have to tread carefully with both him and his father to have his
claim as King approved. There is no resolution or closure in this
brief piece, but it leaves the possibility of such in the future and
leaves the reader wanting to know how things actually fell out.

Title: The Fire of Hope · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men:
Pre-Ring War Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 625
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-30 13:42:15 Score: 4
Spoilers!
There's a fairy-tale quality to the tale of Aragorn and Arwen, in that
Elrond stands as the king of legend who sets his daughter's suitor an
impossible task before he can claim her hand. In this delightful short
vignette, Raksha shows the very young but undaunted Aragorn, smitten
by love and desire, daydreaming about the deeds he will do to win the
bride his heart has chosen. It's a sunny prelude to what will be some
very dark days.

Title: The Conscience of the King · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres:
Humor · ID: 649
Reviewer: Isabeau of Greenlea · 2008-11-30 13:48:10 Score: 4
Spoilers!
A while back, Altariel and I wrote a story where Eomer and Faramir
struggled to get to know one another. Here, Eomer is consumed with
brotherly jealousy on his sister's wedding night, because of course
that Gondorian fellow can't possibly be good enough for her...

His sensible side gives himself a good talking to, [Lackwit! Would you
have her remain chaste all her life? Grow old without children at the
back of your hall while you take a bride and sire sons?] and gets him
to relax that purely instinctive brotherly clench that occurs at the
thought of someone bedding his sister.

This is a very likeable, plausible Eomer, handled as deftly as Raksha
usually handles Faramir.


Title: Maglor's Harp · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Genres: Horror · ID: 660
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 13:52:52 Score: 5
Spoilers!
This is a story that is chilling to the bone. The question what
happened to Maglor through the ages has been good for many an
interesting fanfic idea, and the idea that he eventually lost his mind
is not far off, but the way that idea is tackled here is both very
compelling, and perfectly executed, the way the horror slowly creeps
out of the hole and becomes ever more haunting is what makes tis
little story so great and gives it such a lasting impact on the mind
of the reader. Perfect!

Personally, I prefer the idea that Maglor somehow recovered from the
loss and kept/ regained his dignity after the loss of the Silmaril,
but this version is hauntingly possible, as well. Applause!

Title: Vodka · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 714
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 13:59:25 Score: 3
Spoilers!
This is a sad and gripping view at a very cynical Maglor, haunted by
guilt and on the way to self-destruction, with the help of some potent
alcohol. I like the interaction between the two brothers, and the way
the brilliance of Maglor still shines through. Chilling! And very well
done!

Title: I Married for Love · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Genres: Poetry ·
ID: 661
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 14:05:24 Score: 3
Spoilers!
Beautiful poem from the view of Indis, showing the pain and the regret
of the second woman who is haunted by the feeling of never being
enough, never being all her husband wanted. The images are very
poignant. Still, I love the ending of this, since it ends on a hopeful
and self-respecting note: for herself, she did the right choice. Very
well done!

Title: Trajectory · Author: Galadriel · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 153
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 14:16:23 Score: 2
Stunning piece, playing with several different layers of unexpected
twists to canon. I like the strong and elegant images woven into this.
Nice! :)

Title: An Elf-lord Revealed · Author: Tanaqui · Times: Multi-Age:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 406
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 14:21:31 Score: 10
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble series, "An Elf-lord Revealed", contains selected
scenes from the life of the magnificant Elf-lord, Glorfindel of
Gondolin and Rivendell.

Tanaqui has an extraordinary facility with the English language. Her
drabbles are vivid word-pictures that evoke images or emotions as
needed. For example, [Fëa from Ost-in-Edhil, jostling in the Halls of
Mandos] so clearly suggests the horrendous death-toll from the War of
Elves and Sauron, and [battle, retreat, refuge] neatly sums up, in a
mere three words, the entire history of Eriador during the Second Age.
As a drabblist myself, I am frankly impressed by such economy of language.

But I especially appreciate her creativity in choosing what to write
about. For example, when Glorfindel awakens in the Halls of Mandos, it
is the damage to his soul, not his body, that is apparent, as he
remembers the fates of those he left behind in the Fall of Gondolin.

And because, in Mandos, Celebrimbor shuns his own kin to hang out with
the sons of Fingolfin, Glorfindel learns of the fate of Turgon's
descendant, Elrond, which sparks a growing desire to return to
Middle-earth to be of service to his king's line.

But especially creative are Tanaqui's versions of Glorfindel's
encounters with Gandalf, casually comparing notes about
balrog-fighting, and with Faramir and Eowyn after Elessar's
coronation. It is here that we truly begin to grasp the enormous
differences in outlook between an immortal being and mere fleeting
mortals.

This series is a masterpiece, all the more astonishing because Tanaqui
wrote each drabble (except one) separately for her Tolkien
drabble-a-day challenge, yet they complement each other beautifully.

Bravo!


Title: Another Country · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 438
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 14:27:28 Score: 5
Spoilers!
I teasingly call Tanaqui the "Mistress of Misdirection", and we can
see why in her drabble series, "Another Country". The first drabble
gives us a clear picture of Boromir, impatiently waiting to leave the
halls where he finds himself; yet, in the final line, we find out that
he is not where we assumed he was, because of Tanaqui's deft
scene-setting.

And in the second drabble, Tanaqui draws a parallel between the
actions of Denethor and Boromir that I had never noticed and would
never have imagined.

Together, these complement each other and make a powerful pair of
word-pictures.

Well done!

Title: Silenced · Author: Illwynd · Genres: Horror · ID: 31
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 14:27:34 Score: 4
Spoilers!
What a compelling and chilling AU! Rarely I have seen the idea of what
would have happened had Boromir succeeded in taking the One Ring
executed in a more compelling way. That the story is told out of
Boromir's perspective makes it even more fitting - we can feel the way
the shredded remains of his conscience rebel and try to wake him up,
but are engulfed and drowned in the shadow that has overtaken his
soul. Very, very well done! Thank you for writing and sharing!

Title: Celevon a Mallen · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Romance: Other
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 279
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 14:43:52 Score: 6
Spoilers!
Tanaqui's drabble series, "Celevon a Mallen" (Of Silver and Of Gold),
is about Celeborn and Galadriel meeting in Doriath.

The language of these drabbles is beautiful and evocative. For
example, I especially like the first line, [Sunlight filtered slowly
down amongst the shadowed boles, sieved green and sepia.]; words like
that cannot help but draw a vivid picture in our minds.

And we learn so much about the character of these two: [The new lights
– even the errant moon – still troubled Celeborn, familiar only with
soft starbeams breaking into the long groves.], and [Committing (the
blooms') graceful forms to memory, she already saw in her mind's eye
the tapestry she would weave to make permanent their transient
beauty.].... so quintessentially Sindar, and Noldor!

I loved the creative touch that, when they first meet, Celeborn points
out that they are kin... and Galadriel is disappointed; until she
realizes that their kinship is distant enough to not interfere with
the possibility of a closer relationship. That could only hearten any
potential suitor!

The rest of the drabbles follow their romance throughout the ages,
despite separation. The whole series together can only warm the heart
of the most romantic of us.

Well done.

Msg# 9608

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Late, Part Two) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 20:03:01 Topic ID# 9608
Title: The Pillar Perished Is · Author: Imhiriel · Times: First Age
and Prior: House of Finwe · ID: 356
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 14:44:54 Score: 3
Spoilers!
A gripping view in Feanor's mind after the embarking for Ennor, and
the way his own guilt and grief are torturing his soul. The idea that
the loss of his father is the driving moment of this mad and powerful
quest for revenge, even more dominant than the wish to regain the
Silmarils, is convincing. Powerful piece! I like!

Title: Writer's Bloke · Author: stefaniab · Genres: Humor: Drabbles ·
ID: 431
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 14:55:08 Score: 3
Spoilers!
Stefaniab's drabble, "Writer's Bloke", is a cleverly humorous metafic
about Faramir visiting a struggling fanfiction writer (which I can't
help but identify with). Faramir is very much in character here -
whether we are speaking of the book or the movies.

The result gave me a big smile! Nice work.

Title: Parth Galen · Author: Isabeau of Greenlea · Genres: Alternate
Universe: Steward's Family · ID: 705
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 14:59:04 Score: 3
Spoilers!
What a nice alternate universe and what a nice version of the old
"What if" theme. Here, we get a Boromir who does not fail, and yet the
story subsequently unfolds as it would have if he had. This is a nice
idea, and I like it! Well done!

Title: Even Legends Fade · Author: Star In Ruin · Races: Elves · ID: 555
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 15:01:10 Score: 1
A melancholy, yet hopeful piece, and emotionally moving. Well done!

Title: The Consuming Darkness · Author: Isil Elensar · Genres: Drama ·
ID: 467
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 15:09:27 Score: 2
Good story. Miriel's view and her decisions in tghis are very
poignant, and you describe the dramatic situation grippingly. I like
te scene in the palace. Very well done!

Title: Dark Dreams · Author: SlightlyTookish · Races: Hobbits:
Hurt/Comfort · ID: 550
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 15:10:53 Score: 2
Spoilers!
I enjoyed this glimpse of Pippin acting as caretaker for Merry when he
is overcome by dreams re-enacting the horror on the Pelennor. Nicely done!

Title: The Houseless · Author: Jael · Genres: Horror · ID: 178
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 15:20:52 Score: 3
Spoilers!
Very nice execution of a familiar ghost story set in the Mirkwood
setting. I like the way Legolas reacts to the unknown Elven maid he
meets and his relief to finally find somebody who does not knows him
from the time he was in diapers; and the way the truth comes out when
he is meeting with the parents of the girl is told both painful and
believable. I like!

Title: Seven Stones and Seven Stars and One White Tree · Author:
shirebound · Races: Other Beings · ID: 121
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 15:26:16 Score: 5
Spoilers!
Shirebound's ficlet, "Seven Stones and Seven Stars and One White Tree"
is a trio of vignettes about the changes coming at the end of the
Third Age, each told from an unusual point of view: the stone of
Hollin, the elanor of Lorien, and the White Tree on Mindolluin.

Each voice is distinctive and appropriate, and the language evokes
pictures in my mind.

The overall concept is fresh, unique, and creative, and the title,
adapted from an old rhyme of the Numenoreans, is perfectly suited to
the story.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading these three vignettes. Very well done!


Title: The Roses of Imloth Melui · Author: Aervir · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 435
Reviewer: annmarwalk · 2008-11-30 15:28:19 Score: 10
First of all, I love the imaginative framing of your tale: the
strictly fixed format of the drabble, one hundred words exactly, yet
expanded as a drabble series to present ten distinct scenes from a
woman's life. It never occurred to me to tell stories in this manner
until I read yours; now, (as you know), I'm a firm believer in the
format, so thank you for the trick that has made my own writing both
easier (always a good thing), and more expressive.

Secondly, your juxtaposition of Ioreth, one of the best-loved and
memorable minor characters of the canon, with the theme of "roses", is
inspired, and richly imaginative. From the imagery of a little girl,
casting rose petals over the grave of her pet, through the optimistic
young woman gathering flowers for a festival, and on to an abandoned
lover, a drudge, and finally, a wise-woman (almost a prophet without
honor in her own country) whose memory of old tales unmasks a king and
saves a prince and princess. Each brief sequence is both immediately
identifiable in terms of fairy tale and legend, but also speaks to us
as women of the twenty-first century, for have we not all shared
Ioreth's experiences of love and loss, disrespect, career challenge,
growing confidence, and ultimate serenity? You've told Everywoman's
story, and told it magnificently, within the context of a peripheral
character who hardly had the respect or affection of her own author.

As to the writing itself - it's gloriously vivid; I particularly love
your imagery of the autumn garden of Ioreth's last days [the gardens
outside the window – leaves downed with silver and veined with gold,
grass-green and olive, crimson, purple, scarlet], probably because
that's what I'm seeing outside my window today.

Thank you for bringing Ioreth to life in such an extraordinarily rich
and memorable story!

Title: Messengers from the West · Author: Jay of Lasgalen · Genres:
Drama: Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 98
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 15:28:35 Score: 3
Spoilers!
Heartwarming and nice little piece about Thorongil having a birthday
greeting he truly would enjoy. I love the idea that he would not have
been completely cut off his family even during his stay in Rohan and
in Gondor. In like!

Title: Galadriel Remembers · Author: Savageseraph · Genres: Poetry:
Drama · ID: 583
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 15:32:38 Score: 3
Savageseraph's dramatic poem, "Galadriel Remembers", describes the
reflections of Galadriel in the Undying Lands as she hearkens back to
all the things she misses from Middle-earth.

The language is lovely and lyrical, and the reflections seem
well-suited to her character.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this. Well done!

Title: Maglor's Song · Author: Robinka · Genres: Poetry: Drama · ID: 398
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 15:42:31 Score: 2
Spoilers!
A somber and melancholy Maglor remembers the day he rid himself of the
Silmaril. The language is haunting and emotionally touching.

Well done!

Title: Spaces in the Heart · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of
Elrond · ID: 251
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 15:46:10 Score: 2
Spoilers!
A lovely view at the way a reborn Glorfindel slowly adapts to the
changed Ennor, and the beginning of his friendship with Elrond. I like!

Title: The Sky Is Over · Author: Robinka · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 83
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 15:46:32 Score: 2
Spoilers!
A powerful and evocative drabble. Finrod's shock and anguish at his
realization are vividly portrayed.

Well done!

Title: Blood and Iron · Author: Ribby · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 122
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 15:52:23 Score: 2
This drabble has a nice rhythm to it, almost as if it was written to
be spoken out loud.

Well done!

Title: The Search · Author: rhyselle · Genres: Poetry: Late Third Age
· ID: 501
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 15:57:53 Score: 3
Spoilers!
I like how clearly Gollum's obsession with the Ring is shone in this
verse. He will follow it anywhere and do whatever it takes to be able
to seize it, and possess it once again.

Nicely done!

Title: Tide of Destiny - Part One: Choices · Author: Lady Bluejay ·
Genres: Drama: Incomplete · ID: 159
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-30 16:05:44 Score: 5
A wonderful study not only of Eomer and Lothiriel themselves, but of
their families and their lives as well. I usually prefer shorter
elf-centric stories, but this story, if any, shows that reading
outside the box is sometimes a rewarding experience. I enjoyed this
one very much. The author's style and characterization and spot-on and
captivating - so much in fact that I read through the entire story in
one sitting and then wondered how fast the time had passed and where
my day had gone. Lady Bluejay, thank you for sharing this, and welcome
to the ranks of 'Elleth's new favourite authors'. I will definitely
come back for more.

Title: The Night's Eye · Author: Vana Tuivana · Races: Men · ID: 343
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-30 16:07:05 Score: 4
Spoilers!
I love traditions and legends, not surprising as I grew up in a home
that honoured such things, and I enjoy a good ghost story. Put the two
together...

I really liked this, even though the ending was predictably sad. Loved
the story behind the tradition of lighting the candle and the way it
was passed down the generations. And I liked the gift of a final
farewell from his father, something not given to many.

Title: Alter/native · Author: Tanaqui · Genres: Alternate Universe:
Drabbles · ID: 478
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-30 16:14:27 Score: 4
Spoilers!
Yes, I laughed - the idea and execution is too funny and well-written
not to. But aside from the clever spin on the meeting of Aragorn and
Arwen I'm also wondering, what if... and with Aragorn calling Aron
Adanedhel I can't help but wonder if anything at all would have
happened, and how the quest would have turned out, and how it might
have ended. Adanedhel being a name of Turin Turambar, it seems like a
dark omen, somehow (like Arwen being called Tinuviel foreshadowed her
ultimate fate) - interesting, very interesting indeed.

Title: Moonset over Gondor · Author: Raksha the Demon · Genres: Drama:
Gondor Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 652
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 16:15:25 Score: 2
Spoilers!
I like how much Faramir's sense of history shows through, as befits a
scholar-leader and one who has lived through mighty events.

Nicely done!

Title: Legacy · Author: Raksha the Demon · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 500
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 16:19:29 Score: 3
Spoilers!
I enjoy Elboron's thoughtful consideration of the legacy of his uncle
Boromir, and his determination to name his son something not related
to Boromir's name, but still to pass along the stories that Faramir
has told him... ensuring that his uncle is remembered.

Well done!

Title: The Dark One · Author: NeumeIndil · Genres: Drama · ID: 411
Reviewer: Robinka · 2008-11-30 16:20:46 Score: 10
Spoilers!
Neume's saga "Nights in Rohan" has had me hooked since the posting the
first part (ahem , how many years ago it was, Neu? Three, already?).
Neume takes us on an excellent journey, and this time round the
venture is particularly dark, but still as much fascinating as always.
I highly recommend reading the whole series about Morwen the
prostitute from Gondor and Gamling if you look for an engaging,
fully-developed and mature story set within the universe of "The Lord
of the Rings". It should be noted that most of the stories are for adults.

This part, "The Dark One", I knew prior to publishing a bit, because
Neume and I discussed the appearance of the Captain-General of the
White Tower some time ago. I knew she was going to go for the idea
(fangirlish squeee here), but of course I had no idea of the details –
the development of the character -- the character that is so very
popular among the fanfiction writers. And yet, I find the
characterization of Boromir fresh and very well executed – he is
proud, demanding respect from the very start -- also has a great deal
of humor when needed. Just a brief appearance as far as the whole saga
is concerned, but the reader can feel that this is Boromir, and no other.

This is also one of the greatest advantages of Neume's story (ok,
stories, all of them, if I'm to be honest): whenever she takes a
character to write about, they come to life in a very strong,
convincing and captivating way. I mean, honestly, every single person
that I "met" in Nueme's saga felt very real, flesh and blood, with
their flaws and qualities, fleshed out with care and knowledge. One
should be a very good psychologist to create such characters and built
them out of a few mentions in the original text – Theodred for that
matter. Well, not only the king's son, but all of them I know as if
they were my good friends, and that's when I sweep a deep bow before
Neume's talent to create real people – not only the equivalents of the
LotR characters.

"The Dark One" is a tale of darkness. The darkness of pain and
suffering – and the innocent, common people aren't free from those, as
we can see in the scenes throughout the tale. Morwen tries to handle
those situations. Those are described in detail, but still with care a
great respect for the readers. I have always thought that Neume
respects her readers very much and she balances her stories in a way
that requires involvement and offers simple joy of reading in equal
measures.

One of Neume's reviewers said that they would love to have her tales
on their bookshelf, in a hardcover, and I can wholeheartedly agree
with this opinion. If you look for a beautiful, captivating story,
excellently set within the universe you love, "Nights in Rohan" and
"The Dark One" offer you an engaging plot, perfectly balanced angst
and humor, eroticism and realism, and totally believable characters.
What to want more?

Thank you, my dear Neume, for writing this story.

Title: Sing All Ye People! · Author: Raksha the Demon · Times: Late
Third Age: Gondor · ID: 249
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 16:22:04 Score: 2
This vignette is rich with joy, and so much more emotionally powerful
than Tolkien's almost dry telling of this event.

Lovely job!

Title: Terra Incognita · Author: Branwyn (Lady Branwyn) · Genres:
Humor: Drabbles · ID: 723
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-30 16:28:50 Score: 3
Few words as there are in a drabble, the author knows how to use them
effectively to set the mood, introduce the setting, the characters and
bring everything to a killer finish. I enjoyed reading this
snapshot-like ficlet immensely, and can just imagine the lieutenant's
odd smile, his books, and his maps. Wonderfully done.

Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 16:35:00 Score: 6
Spoilers!
This story is absolutely stunning. I love Maglor in this, the
description of his very different sense of time, moving through the
mortal world like a slow stream; and on the other hand Arwen, also an
oddity because of her choice, which she now has to live with. The two
fit together astonishingly well. The idea that Arwen has his company
during these last few days in Lothlorien is comforting, and it also
works very well: both of them outcasts and singularities in their own
way, Arwen set apart by her choice, Maglor by the oath. Also, I like
the way the references to the kinship of the two are woven in the
story. A wonderful reflection of what it means to be Elven in a fast
changing world in the Fourth Age. Thank you for writing this gem, and
for sharing it!

Msg# 9609

MEFA Reviews for Sunday, November 30, 2008 (Late, Part Three) Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 20:03:56 Topic ID# 9609
Title: I Married for Love · Author: Ford of Bruinen · Genres: Poetry ·
ID: 661
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-30 16:37:35 Score: 10
Spoilers!
Nicely done, Uli. And cleverly done, too - an entire history covering
so many lives and events through well chosen hints and remarks 'in
passing', so to speak. I have always liked the fact that this author
does not 'talk down' at her audience. This poem is about the times
before the First Age, and she assumes her readers will understand the
many references, she is never tempted to bog things down with
excessive detail..

I love the different moods encompassed in this poem, from hope to
sorrow, from anger to something close to resignation. Deeply poignant,
very much the age old tale of the second wife, marrying with a belief
that they can forge something different, something intrinsically their
own, and discovering slowly and devastatingly that while most things
are possible if there is enough love, no one can fight a ghost. The
poem touches on the pain of watching her own children always placed
second behind her dead rival's son until she finally believes she was
never loved, her children not really wanted. And yet at the end, after
her husband has passed to the Halls to no doubt join his first wife
and her children have left, her love is still there, still strong, and
we realise that even with all these sorrows she would not have done it
differently. Sad, lovely, and very authentic emotions. I have always
believed it is the mark of real love that it is not dependent on the
response it receives or of being returned, and that is a truth that
shines out in every word, even when she is angry, even when she despairs.



Title: Star's End · Author: Keiliss · Races: Elves: House of Elrond ·
ID: 283
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-30 16:38:56 Score: 4
Spoilers!
Beautiful descriptions, poetic language, a sombre tone and a plot that
left me in tears in the end - this story has it all. Keiliss has
crafted a masterpiece here that I wish I had read sooner - a strangely
plausible what-if scenario that has Maglor and Arwen meet on her last
road to Lothlorien, follows their stay in the former Golden Wood, and
ends with a twist that seems as natural as it was unexpected, and
perhaps really at last was a kindness to the Arwen the readers were
shown in the story.

Title: A Little Misunderstanding · Author: Radbooks · Races:
Cross-Cultural: Elves and Men · ID: 275
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 16:44:21 Score: 3
Spoilers!
I really enjoy how this story sees the world through the eyes of the
very young Halbarad, who is already fiercely protective of Aragorn.
His misunderstanding is so logical, at least to a seven-year-old, and
his behavior also makes sense for one so young.

Very nicely done!

Title: Lost Love · Author: Tanaqui · Races: Cross-Cultural:
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 271
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-30 16:45:13 Score: 3
Especially the phrase [vanished fairy wife] stuck in my mind after
reading this set of drabbles for the first time, and did much to shape
my own version of the story of Imrazor and Mithrellas. Beautifully
done, and with a sense of that very fairytale-like wonder (and
sometimes dread) that seems to come upon Tolkienian Men when they are
faced with the Elder Race.

Title: Incarnation · Author: Gandalfs apprentice · Genres: Humor:
Drabbles · ID: 242
Reviewer: Keiliss · 2008-11-30 16:52:29 Score: 3
Spoilers!
Yeah, now, I never thought about that. Old age, mortal form - things
can go wrong, the human body being what it is. I always figured the
Istari were sent back in the guise of elderly mortals to keep them
from the distractions of youth, but I guess that was no protection
against what ails poor Gandalf, lol. Unusual idea, very well presented.

Title: The Kindly Airs · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Late Third Age:
General Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 480
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-30 16:55:16 Score: 5
Spoilers!
It's difficult to write from the point of view of a non-living entity
but Dwimordene does a wonderful job here with the much maligned East
wind. The sense of freedom it feels when at last liberated from the
evil that had ensnared all of the East is palpable and sweet. That she
is the one lifting the Eagles bearing Frodo and Sam to safety is just
and fitting after her long domination by Sauron's dark wickedness.
What I like about drabbles is the challenge of bringing a scene to
life within the limits of the hundred word rule. In this drabble,
Dwimordene makes the task look effortless.

Title: The King's Time · Author: Larner · Genres: Drama: Final
Partings · ID: 333
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 16:58:53 Score: 1
Spoilers!
Powerful short piece regarding Aragorn last hour. Very fitting the
title. I like!

Title: Yrch Song · Author: Phyncke · Genres: Poetry · ID: 564
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 17:01:34 Score: 1
How funny!

Title: The Ritual Disturbed · Author: Larner · Genres: Horror · ID: 68
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 17:04:32 Score: 4
Spoilers!
This is a gripping piece: the ritual that was nearly the end of the
four Hobbits in the Barrow-Downs out of the point of view of the
Wight! The background references and information that is woven is
enriching, and we sit and hold outr breath watching the wight's
struggle for corporal form, although we know the outcome already.
Great gap-filler, very well done! Thank you for writing and sharing!

Title: The Ring That Sauron Forged · Author: Larner · Genres: Poetry:
Hobbits · ID: 645
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 17:07:48 Score: 3
Spoilers!
What a stunning way to set a nursery game into a form that tells
poignantly the story of the ring, and its demise, down to poor Samwise
left alone in Middle Earth after the departure of his master! Very
well done!

Title: The Haradric Whore and Her Son · Author: annmarwalk/EdorasLass
CoAuthors · Races: Cross-Cultural · ID: 124
Reviewer: foxrafer (csevans8) · 2008-11-30 17:14:30 Score: 10
Spoilers!
I've tried to write this review several times but haven't known where
to start. I love this story so much and finding the words to explain
it is hard. This story is engaging from the very beginning. The depth
in this story is incredible. Between the vivid characters and how they
bring Minas Tirith to life through beautiful details of the streets
and buildings, they create a well-defined background that is
incredibly enjoyable to see this story unfold from each distinct
perspective.

Knowing that Boromir senses he won't ever return to Gondor adds even
more gravity to what we know will occur from his mission and journey.
The care with which he introduces himself to Gaersum and his mother is
both respectful and a little crafty, and it provides so much insight
into Boromir's character. And the conflict of Boromir's feelings about
his tastes, his attraction to men, is so realistic. I can't help but
feel for his dilemma and also feel proud that he doesn't deny his
feelings and his affection for Theodred and Gaersum.

Ciranoush's story is sad and compelling, but there is also so much
strength in her that it also feels full of hope. Finding her way to a
good and comfortable life, practical choices and taking things as they
come, she is a beautiful character, yet another non-canon character
that annmarwalk and edoraslass create that not only bring Gondor to
life but add a distinct color to the culture and its people. Gaersum
shares his mothers practicality, and I particularly enjoy how they
portray his love for his mother and Boromir. They have created a
character that I believe anyone reading the story would want to meet.
I want to know more of him, to have more stories written about him.
The authors show their great skill in completely involving you in this
families' life and wanting only good things and great joy in their future.

This is a wonderful story, beautifully crafted and full of strong
emotions. Every time you read it you notice another detail or aspect
that adds to the richness of the tale. This will be a favorite that
I'll return to again and again.

Title: Blood and Iron · Author: Ribby · Races: Elves: Drabbles · ID: 122
Reviewer: foxrafer (csevans8) · 2008-11-30 17:14:44 Score: 5
I love the symbolism of having Elrond personally reforging the sword.
Both Elrond and Anduril being links between Aragorn and his ancestors,
it's particularly appealing to imagine his hands-on involvement in
returning the sword to Aragorn. Ribby shows the time and care
involved, the craftsmanship and love that Elrond uses beautifully. It
has been mentioned before, but that final line is absolutely
wonderful. It's the kind of spot-on phrasing that makes you pause,
read again and then go back to enjoy the entire piece again. Beautiful
piece.

Title: My Shining Stars · Author: Oshun · Races: Elves: House of
Elrond · ID: 371
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 17:22:47 Score: 3
Spoilers!
Ah, I enjoyed this! It seems so likely to me that Elrond and Elros
would remember best the foster parents who nurtured them as they got
older (and better able to remember), rather than the father who was
nearly always absent and the mother who flung herself out of the
tower, abandoning them to their fate.

Nicely done!

Title: As Was Dwarven Tradition · Author: Nieriel Raina · Races:
Dwarves · ID: 553
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 17:27:16 Score: 4
Spoilers!
I cannot understand why it took me so long to read this story. It
shows the differences between the races of Elves and Dwarves in a very
poignant way - by dancing - but also shows how grace and beauty can be
found and be appreciated in the very difference of things and customs.
I like the images in this, and the change of the POV works very well.
Very well written, and a nice and fitting tale of the friendship
between Elf and Dwarf. Thank you for writing and sharing!

Title: Trajectory · Author: Galadriel · Races: Men: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 153
Reviewer: foxrafer (csevans8) · 2008-11-30 17:28:02 Score: 3
This is so haunting. How terrifying to have this kind of dream but
know in your heart that this was more than a nightmare. The imagery is
absolutely gorgeous and the emotions in the piece are stirring.
Wonderfully done.

Title: Utúlie'n Aurë · Author: Nieriel Raina · Genres: Drama: General
Fixed-Length Ficlets · ID: 163
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 17:29:52 Score: 2
Spoilers!
A very hopeful vignette! It is good that these Elves have lived to see
the day when the hope is fulfilled.

Nicely done!

Title: The Last Dance · Author: pippinfan88 · Races: Hobbits: Family ·
ID: 397
Reviewer: Garnet Took · 2008-11-30 17:36:51 Score: 5
This is such a sweet story. I spend the time I read it with the song
"May I Have This Dance" going through my head. I know that was not the
inspiration, but it works for me.

Poor Diamond has a double burden to bear. She shares a birthday with
the biggest holiday of the year. That is not easy. combine this with
both her and Pippin's new responsibilities and you have a recipe for
stress.

If I'd been in her place, I'd have been as upset, or more so, than
Diamond was.

I'm glad Pippin is so perceptive and sees just what his wife needs most.

Hope they enjoyed the turning of the year.

Title: Burdens · Author: Meril · Genres: Drama: General Fixed-Length
Ficlets · ID: 219
Reviewer: crowdaughter · 2008-11-30 17:38:41 Score: 2
Spoilers!
Poignant blinks in the situation and the regrets and despair of the
Exiles on their way through the ice, brought into focus by small
things they carry with them. Very well done!

Title: Tower of the Moon · Author: Nath · Times: Multi-Age · ID: 577
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 17:44:29 Score: 4
Spoilers!
This series of vignettes about Minas Ithil range from the end of the
Second Age to the beginning of the Fourth; from Isildur to Elessar.

It is sad to see that a creation that was once so beautiful could
become so tainted with Darkness that it cannot be mended, only torn down.

The words are evocative, and the idea that Elessar has at the end is a
surprise, but thought-provoking. What will the creations of any of us
come to in the end?

Very well done!

Title: Meddling · Author: Dwimordene · Times: Mid Third Age: Eriador ·
ID: 695
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-30 17:49:59 Score: 6
Spoilers!
It's interesting to read a story of Gandalf in Bree, visiting the
Prancing Pony inn as part of his travels. Seeing the wizard this
setting, his easy familiarity with the inn and its denizens, is
amusing but also nice foreshadowing of events to come. Gandalf notices
a group of rangers and hopes to speak with them but gets more than he
bargained for when confronted by a truculent Halbarad. This is a nice
little character piece showing Halbarad's bravery and loyalty and
Gandalf's wisdom and benevolence. I enjoyed their interaction but
especially liked Gandalf seeing in Halbarad a person who will be as
instrumental to Aragorn's later success as Aragorn himself will be.
None of us, not even the greatest among us do it alone. So true, so true.

Title: Pride and Despair: A Defense of Ecthelion's Son · Author: Marta
· Genres: Non-Fiction: Character Studies · ID: 624
Reviewer: Elena Tiriel · 2008-11-30 17:57:39 Score: 1
Very thorough and well-thought-out.

Good work!

Title: Engineering · Author: SurgicalSteel · Races: Men: Minas Tirith
· ID: 696
Reviewer: Cuthalion · 2008-11-30 18:01:00 Score: 5
Spoilers!
For those who have a real love for extremely well written OFC's,
Serinde of Dol Amroth has always been a pure delight. Here we get to
see the beginning of her formidable medical career; a frightened and
yet stubborn little girl with a badly healed foot stump - and Master
Talagan (who becomes her tutor and more or less her foster father),
who immediately recognizes her natural curiosity and her ability to
see the right things and ask the right questions. She may not yet be
the great surgeon she will be in later years, but you can recognize
the roots, as Talagan does in this lovely little tale. And this is not
only the beginning of Serinde's apprenticeship but also of a deep and
heartfelt friendship. Wonderfully done!

Title: Upon the Pebbled Shore · Author: aranelgoldenflower · Genres:
Drama: Final Partings · ID: 171
Reviewer: Ignoble Bard · 2008-11-30 18:03:03 Score: 5
Spoilers!
A beautifully touching piece presenting the final parting between
Elladan and Elrohir upon an unnamed shore. The descriptions are poetic
and the parting of the twins bittersweet. It's difficult to imagine
the two apart but not entirely surprising considering the decision
made by their father and his brother, Elros. I liked that Legolas also
made an appearance to wish them farewell since he knows, probably
better than anyone, the pull of the sea and the difficulty of leaving
the only homeland he had known. This vignette could have been mawkish
but it has just the right balance of emotion and character interplay,
while the final line is understated and elegantly poignant.

Title: A Sleep Over · Author: Phyncke · Times: First Age and Prior:
House of Finwe · ID: 160
Reviewer: Elleth · 2008-11-30 18:06:09 Score: 5
Spoilers!
Oh dear - at first I felt a little guilty for laughing out loud
several times while reading the story, then came back to the site and
saw that it was filed away under humor - that, obviously, lessened the
feeling of guilt. In respect of that, well-written indeed! The tone
was sufficiently light-hearted, and young Galadriel and Aredhel are
quite cute in their stubborn Noldorin ways; it is easily obvious how
certain character traits could have developed to make them the women
we see in the published works. A cute tale, with an end to take the
edge off Galadriel's ominous, because true, prediction.

Title: A Promise · Author: Golden · Races: Hobbits: Childhood · ID: 149
Reviewer: Garnet Took · 2008-11-30 18:06:31 Score: 3
I cried when I first read this and I'm crying after rereding it now. I
can relate very well to Pippin's family. My own daughter was in a very
simular position to Pippin's earlier this year. You always miss your
pets when they are gone, but there has to be hope that it is not
forever. I know Pippin did a wonderful job of caring for Jule's daughter.

Msg# 9610

Upcoming review postings Posted by annmarwalk November 30, 2008 - 20:07:04 Topic ID# 9610
The remaining 590 reviews (!) will be posted by Wednesday evening. I
plan to post twice a day, morning and evening, with four parts to each
post. Thank you for your enthusiastic reviewage!

Msg# 9611

Re: Upcoming review postings Posted by Súlriel of Menegroth November 30, 2008 - 20:51:07 Topic ID# 9610
another amazing year. !!

when will the final results be posted?

Sulriel

On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 8:07 PM, annmarwalk <ann@marwalk.com> wrote:

> The remaining 590 reviews (!) will be posted by Wednesday evening. I
> plan to post twice a day, morning and evening, with four parts to each
> post. Thank you for your enthusiastic reviewage!
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 9612

Re: Upcoming review postings Posted by Agape 4Rivendell November 30, 2008 - 22:03:46 Topic ID# 9610
I just really wanted to profusely apologize for letting the reviews go until
the last moment. There is no excuse for my tardiness except to say that life
is interesting.

But to place such a heavy burden upon the MEFA staff - please accept my
heartfelt apologies. I promise I will not let this happen next year.

Blessings and thank you - especially for the incredibly fast 'notification'
of winners!

Agape


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 9613

2008 MEFAs - Voting Closed Posted by aure\_enteluva November 30, 2008 - 23:25:22 Topic ID# 9613
Hey guys,

As you may have noticed, voting for the 2008 MEFAs ended a few hours
ago. The results were really quite astounding this year. Nearly 5,400
reviews for 660 stories! I am always blown away by so many people,
plugging away for so much of the year, often giving comments to
authors they don't know outside the awards. Makes my heart go
pitter-patter with fannish glee. :-)

I have a few "tying notes," to borrow the name of a drabble from this
year's competition. Topics that probably deserve a word or two.

RESULTS

The authors who placed or received an honorable mention have been
informed of their results by private email to the address registered
at our website. You may want to check your spam mail box; the emails
should have come from mefasupportATgmailDOTcom.

Full results will be posted here by mid-week. I'll also send out an
announcement through the promoters to inform people at various groups.

REVIEWS

Annmarwalk will continue posting reviews here until Wednesday, to
space out the many reviews submitted near the end of the awards. Do
read them if you're interested, because it's always fun to see what
other people thought of a story.

You can also view all of the available banners at our website,
www.mefawards.net/MEFA2008/. Just log in and click "Reviews" at the
top of the site.

BANNERS

We would like to give winning authors a banner of their choice. You
can find the banner selections at three places.

1. http://mefawards.net/fanart/categories.php?cat_id=799
2. http://s47.photobucket.com/albums/f163/Elena_Tiriel/
All banners at these two sites are available to you.
3. http://mefawards.net/fanart/categories.php?cat_id=801
This is the banners for nominated authors. The following banners can
be converted into banners for winning authors: 19; 72-86, 88-96, 104-111.

Once you find a banner you'd like to use, please email
mefa.banners@gmail.com with which one you prefer and it will be
customized with the place and category that you won. The finished
product will then be emailed to you.

SUGGESTIONS FOR 2009

Every year at the end of the awards we have held what's known as a
post-mortem, where participants can make suggestions and debate
subbestions made by other people. We're going to handle that a tad
differently this year, since the awards have grown larger and also
because of some non-fannish commitments of mine (and other key
volunteers). We will be accepting your suggestions, though, have no fear.

Once we finish up the 2008 awards and get the results announced, I'll
discuss this in more detail. In the mean time, you can start thinking
about if there are any areas of the awards that you think could be
improved.

THANKS

Finally, I want to thank everyone who has participated so fully in
these awards. Authors, thank you for sharing your work with us.
Reviewers, I really appreciate your investment of times. Volunteers
deserve a special gratitude; many deserve quite more than that, but
unfortunately my gratitude is all I have to give.

In particular, thank you to:

--- Tanaqui and Aranel, for managing the technical end of our website.
--- Elliska, for approving and processing new members.
--- Radbooks and Inkling, for their invaluable advice and help on
special projects as they came up

--- Annmarwalk for posting the reviews at the MEFAwards Yahoo group
and mefas LJ - EVERY DAY;
--- Elea24 and PipMer, for forwarding on author responses to their
reviewers

--- Fiondil and Beruthiel's Cat, who managed the banner team, including
------- The banner creators: Baranduin; Cactuskim; Elea24; Elena
Tiriel; Marta; nau_tika; and viv
------- The banner customizers: Cactuskim, Elea24, Elena Tiriel;
mistry89; nancylea; Nath; Nieriel Raina; and viv

These are just the people who have volunteered extensively since
categorization. For a full list of all the volunteers, please see
http://mefawards.net/MEFA2008/index.php?page=FAQvolunteers

*Thank you.*

Marta
(MEFA Admin.)