Have any of you read J. R. R. Tolkien's work? I can't recommend it highly enough--I really--oh, it's just great, you ought to read it. I read a book a night, I just couldn't put them down.
I mean, The Hobbit was a good book, no denying that, I read it when it came out, but these Lord of the Rings stories of his are above and beyond in quality.
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((Read them, hated them, forgot the whole plot. This thread may be less factually accurate than our last one. T_T))
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((OOC: WE WILL TRY OUR BEST, DESPITE OUR TOLKIEN-HATING STATUSES. :|))
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I am afraid that I have never read the story, but... I may vaguely recognize the name.
... [Questioningly, because this is the part he latched onto the most:] Is there a reason you switch from "female" to "women" with your description? They are not the s-same identifier...
[Transgender rights: not a concept Kay is going to be familiar with. At all.]
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[At his question, she frowns at the book, completely unsure of what he means by "identifier."] No reason. She's just a great character--really strong, really well-written.
((OOC: And if you don't mind sidestepping the issue of Kay's complete and utter cluelessness regarding trans people, her character isn't at a point where she'd be able to discuss the subject without her being amazingly transphobic, and I feel like that isn't really fair to make you play through. ♥))
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[Well, the question seemed to be... more or less unanswered, but Robert blinks a few times. Well. It's not too unlikely for somebody to not understand the difference... as much of a shame as that is. Robert decides to let it go for now, though... He wants to pursue the topic, but this "Lord of the Rings" things seems fascinating.]
I am not entirely surprised that I do not recognize the series. Assuming multiversions with similar histories, most people here come from some point significantly in the past relative to myself.
... But I may have to look at this book then, at some point. It is a pity there is no way to read it via my nanocomputer... [Oh, how Robert longs for database access to Terra.]
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((OOC: Well, if/when the time comes when the conversation would have some promising long-term effects on her, you will be the person I hit up. ♥))
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((OOC: And I just want to apologize for not managing to get back to the thread they were in previously. BUT THEY COULD TALK NOW, THAT'D BE COOL. ♥))
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Eowyn was wonderful, but I sort of preferred Galadriel, among the women.
((OOC: \o/ Yay for literature discussions! /majored in English. And it's been too long since I read them, so we can muddle our way through together.))
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Oh, Galadriel was good, too, but she didn't get to do that much. I liked that she saw that she shouldn't hang on to the Ring right off the bat, though.
((OOC: ...Oh, my God, she'll have to read A Wrinkle in Time next and complain about plagiarism, because she and her husband wrote the in-world equivalent. >> /minored in English, likewise finds this fun))
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So what're these books about again?
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They're a quest, mostly. Frodo Baggins and his merry men have to get rid of an evil ring. There's a war going on, too, and a few other things, but the ring is the most important part.
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[Dryly:] An evil ring, huh? [Sounds... pretty interesting. Okay, you have Mildmay's curiosity piqued. You win this round.] So it's a story book, then? [He motions to the green be-treed tome in her hands.]
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Makes you invisible when you wear it, but it turns you evil. [She looks down at the book, shrugging--'story-book' implies something for children to her.] It's a long story, but--yeah, basically. [Pause.] Here, you want to hear some?
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[... alas, Kurt is not a Tolkien geek like his mun.]
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