So here I am, sitting in a train, idly reading the "Literary Review" from November, when lo and behold, I come across an article opening with the following lines:
"If Tolkien and C.S. Lewis were the Lennon and McCartney of the Inklings, then Charles Williams was the George Harrison. (And their Ringo? Possibly Owen Barfield. Another story.)"My
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Williams: same here. It's the equvivalent of fannish osmosis of shows you haven't watched but which are constantly referenced so you get many of the allusions anyway.
Lewis/Tolkien fantasy collaboration: phew. "Look, Tollers, we have to finish it before the decade. Actually, before the year. So MAYBE we should skip the part where you invent a language for everyone involved?"
"I think we should skip the embarrassing Ulster Protestantism in the main character's big monologue instead, Jack. You know what I think of allegory. Why you couldn't become a Catholic after I rescued you from the atheist dregs is beyond me, anyway."
Subject: since Lewis cheerfully confessed he wrote an emo Loki epic in school because he hated his schoolmates so much and projected them all into Thor, and since their shared love for Norse mythology was one of the things they bonded over orginally, I propose they tackle the Edda and write their version of it.
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Lewis and Tolkien collaborating over the Edda sounds much more promising than trying to write a completely invented fantasy together. As much as Tolkien's world-building is actual, well, world-building, I think he was slightly handicapped by being such a genius at what he did that it was hard for him to enjoy works which, though not up to his standard, were nonetheless still really good -- at least from the perspective of mere mortals :). (I remember one of his letters where he was ragging on Gaudy Night a bit, and thinking that it had to be painful to be SO GOOD that even that book didn't seem like much to you, and I really do not mean that sarcastically ( ... )
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Lewis and Tolkien collaborating over the Edda sounds much more promising than trying to write a completely invented fantasy together.
Yes, that's why I picked the idea. Tolkien's standards for world building being so high. But the Edda, no matter how you interpret it, already sets out certain parameters, and they really loved that mythology to bits.
Which monologue in Narnia is full of Ulsterior motive? Oh, I wasn't thinking of any one in particular, more about Tolkien's dislike of blatant allegory and ongoing digs at Lewis the Protestant Ulsterman (which were however mostly due to his disappointment ( ... )
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So maybe someone could do it justice in fic, though obviously not me. :-)
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