Tolkien vs. Donaldson
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Tolkien vs. Donaldson
Tolkien did it first but who did it better?! I'm assuming Donaldson will win this one, but as this thread is here, I'd like to hear why you voted. What about Tolkien do you like/dislike? What did Donaldson improve upon or do to make TCTC outshine LOTR? Or, what does LOTR do better than TCTC? Perhaps you feel Lord of the Rings shines brightest?! Sound off!
For now, I'll sound off later.
For now, I'll sound off later.
"I support the destruction of the Think-Tank." - Avatar, August 2008
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LF, I love them both. To me, they are both masterpieces for different reasons. I couldn't possibly say either was better than the other.
Tolkien, IMHO, is the godfather of fantasy fiction, his was the blue print for all that came later. His languages, his histories, his mythicism, his granduer..a master storyteller.
And then came Donaldson, who turned a thoroughly contemptable character into a loved hero.
I just can't pick...I love them both equally...
Tolkien, IMHO, is the godfather of fantasy fiction, his was the blue print for all that came later. His languages, his histories, his mythicism, his granduer..a master storyteller.
And then came Donaldson, who turned a thoroughly contemptable character into a loved hero.
I just can't pick...I love them both equally...
And I believe in you
altho you never asked me too
I will remember you
and what life put you thru.
~fly fly little wing, fly where only angels sing~
~this world was never meant for one as beautiful as you~
...for then I could fly away and be at rest. Sweet rest, Mom. We all love and miss you.
altho you never asked me too
I will remember you
and what life put you thru.
~fly fly little wing, fly where only angels sing~
~this world was never meant for one as beautiful as you~
...for then I could fly away and be at rest. Sweet rest, Mom. We all love and miss you.
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As much as I enjoy and admire SRD's work, it just doesn't bear close comparison with JRRT's. The reason: the Land vs. Middle-earth. As SRD himself has admitted, he didn't actually do huge amounts of world-building, designing languages, histories, etc., to build up the Land as a coherent setting for the Covenant books. What you see in the books is pretty much what you get; apart from outtakes like Gilden-Fire, there just isn't a lot of data about history, geography, languages, etc., beyond the published books themselves.
By the time Tolkien began to write LOTR, he had been developing Middle-earth as a mythological and legendary setting for over 20 years. The Silmarillion was a genuine document; the legends of the Elder Days and Númenor, so often quoted by the characters in LOTR, really existed; and while he worked on LOTR, he made sure to develop the histories of the Shire, Gondor, Rohan, and (though unsuccessfully) Lórien to the same high standard of detail and consistency. To take a particularly striking example, he once wrote a 3000-word essay on the kinship structures and birthday rituals of Hobbits, not for publication, but as a mere throwaway in a letter to a fan! (It's reprinted as #214 in Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien.)
Nowhere is the difference more striking than in the matter of languages. Despite much speculation on sites like this, Mr. Donaldson has told me that Melenkurion abatha! Duroc minas mill khabaal doesn't actually mean anything. Whereas, to take a phrase from Tolkien, Aiya Eärendil elenion ancalima has a definite and exact meaning, in a language so nearly complete that one could actually write whole books in it. Quenya and Sindarin are real languages, even though the Elves who were said to use them are not real people. Dictionaries, grammars, phonologies, and other reference works on those languages have actually been published, based on Tolkien's own notes. You can even take an online course in basic Quenya and Sindarin.
It is this richness of depth and scope, not any superiority of narrative technique, that gives JRRT the advantage over SRD. There are places where you can test the Covenant books and they ring hollow: the design behind the story is insufficiently worked out to bear close scrutiny. The only elements in LOTR that didn't have a real story behind them were the missing two Wizards (out of five) and 'the cats of Queen Berúthiel'. JRRT subsequently filled in both those gaps, not because it had any bearing on LOTR, but simply out of the creator's obsessive desire to make every detail of his world as convincing and lifelike as possible.
By the time Tolkien began to write LOTR, he had been developing Middle-earth as a mythological and legendary setting for over 20 years. The Silmarillion was a genuine document; the legends of the Elder Days and Númenor, so often quoted by the characters in LOTR, really existed; and while he worked on LOTR, he made sure to develop the histories of the Shire, Gondor, Rohan, and (though unsuccessfully) Lórien to the same high standard of detail and consistency. To take a particularly striking example, he once wrote a 3000-word essay on the kinship structures and birthday rituals of Hobbits, not for publication, but as a mere throwaway in a letter to a fan! (It's reprinted as #214 in Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien.)
Nowhere is the difference more striking than in the matter of languages. Despite much speculation on sites like this, Mr. Donaldson has told me that Melenkurion abatha! Duroc minas mill khabaal doesn't actually mean anything. Whereas, to take a phrase from Tolkien, Aiya Eärendil elenion ancalima has a definite and exact meaning, in a language so nearly complete that one could actually write whole books in it. Quenya and Sindarin are real languages, even though the Elves who were said to use them are not real people. Dictionaries, grammars, phonologies, and other reference works on those languages have actually been published, based on Tolkien's own notes. You can even take an online course in basic Quenya and Sindarin.
It is this richness of depth and scope, not any superiority of narrative technique, that gives JRRT the advantage over SRD. There are places where you can test the Covenant books and they ring hollow: the design behind the story is insufficiently worked out to bear close scrutiny. The only elements in LOTR that didn't have a real story behind them were the missing two Wizards (out of five) and 'the cats of Queen Berúthiel'. JRRT subsequently filled in both those gaps, not because it had any bearing on LOTR, but simply out of the creator's obsessive desire to make every detail of his world as convincing and lifelike as possible.
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I see your point Variol Farseer, and I fully agree that JRR did create an entire world for his characters to live in, its complete.
But I think the story itself, LOTR, isn't as strong or moving as The Chronicles.
It's like someone spends 1 billion dollars on a state of the art theatre, and upon completion, you have a group of bums walk in from the street and put on some improv show.
The venue is amazing, while the performance is pretty formulaic.
If your more interested in getting lost in cultures and history and the world. LOTR is where you want to be hands down.
But if you want a story, about experience, about humanity, somthing that can move you, and literally change the way you view the world. Then I think that TCTC is the place to be.
It seems as though LOTR works wonders in Midworld.
While TCTC makes the jump into our own world.
That's all that comes to mind at the moment.
Talk to you later Variol!
- DarkReflection
But I think the story itself, LOTR, isn't as strong or moving as The Chronicles.
It's like someone spends 1 billion dollars on a state of the art theatre, and upon completion, you have a group of bums walk in from the street and put on some improv show.
The venue is amazing, while the performance is pretty formulaic.
If your more interested in getting lost in cultures and history and the world. LOTR is where you want to be hands down.
But if you want a story, about experience, about humanity, somthing that can move you, and literally change the way you view the world. Then I think that TCTC is the place to be.
It seems as though LOTR works wonders in Midworld.
While TCTC makes the jump into our own world.
That's all that comes to mind at the moment.
Talk to you later Variol!
- DarkReflection
And so on I walk the world,
a slave to this dark fiend,
traveling, traveling, held within a dream......
a slave to this dark fiend,
traveling, traveling, held within a dream......
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I vote Donaldson, even if I am and was totally dedicated to Tolkien and his works since I was a baby.
I just think Donaldson work is better. Tolkien may have a exceptional language, but Donaldson chron is better than LoTR. However, when it's about Silmarillion I would've voted on Tolkien. That book is almost unbeatable.
I just think Donaldson work is better. Tolkien may have a exceptional language, but Donaldson chron is better than LoTR. However, when it's about Silmarillion I would've voted on Tolkien. That book is almost unbeatable.
My God, it's full of stars!
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I hardly think Frodo's trek to Mount Doom was "some improv show" by a group of bums.
I love both authors, and, despite that my name is Lord Foul, I must go with Tolkien. Don't get me wrong, I think both authors have great merits. I think both stories are wonderful. Tolkien's was more simple and more about everyday virtues and friendship, whereas SRD's was very deep and psychological. I love the complexity of Middle-Earth. But I think, as Variol Farseer said, Tolkien edges out SRD with the rich background. The Silmarillion is truly my bible.
I love both authors, and, despite that my name is Lord Foul, I must go with Tolkien. Don't get me wrong, I think both authors have great merits. I think both stories are wonderful. Tolkien's was more simple and more about everyday virtues and friendship, whereas SRD's was very deep and psychological. I love the complexity of Middle-Earth. But I think, as Variol Farseer said, Tolkien edges out SRD with the rich background. The Silmarillion is truly my bible.
- Iryssa
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I think it's a little too much like comparing apples to oranges...I mean, despite a bunch of similarities, the stories, characters, and even magics are just too different to compare...imho.
I will say that I think they are both equally skilled in their art, and that I was equally--though differently--touched by both Middle Earth and The Land.
I will say that I think they are both equally skilled in their art, and that I was equally--though differently--touched by both Middle Earth and The Land.
"A choice made freely is stronger than one compelled"
- Stephen R. Donaldson's The Wounded Land
https://www.xanga.com/Iryssa
- Stephen R. Donaldson's The Wounded Land
https://www.xanga.com/Iryssa
I'm with Iryssa. If I may quote myself from a post I made to a Covenant thread:
Grimm.
disclaimer: Reading the Covenant books and LOTR were major events in my life, and I mean no disrespect in this post. I am most critical to those things closest to my heart.
Here and there I read about people comparing the Chronicles Of Thomas Covenant to Lord Of The Rings. This is an unfair comparison. Let’s just remember: The Chronicles is a story about a man in this world who struggles to deal with his problem (living as a leper). Lord Of The Rings is a pure fairy tale with no real correlation to the world as we know it. I believe Donaldson wanted the reader to decide for himself weather or not The Land was real. I think the first set was written so that The Land could be both real and imaginary. This adds substance to Tom’s “unbelief”. Steve writes of the land as if it is a dream; Things are simple, cut and dry. (that’s bad, this is good, people are simple and trustworthy, pure. The Lords are all knowing and regal …). Tempting. Though beautifully written, it is more believable as a dream (how’s THAT for a paradox!)
But if I HAD to pick one, it would have to be based on technical merit alone. Having said that, I think Steve did it better. Tolkien seemed to be a writer writing for himself as well as for the reader; he tended to have side-plots (Tom Bombadil for one) that, however endearing, you really wouldn't notice if they were left out. Donaldson, on the other hand, is more of a story teller, seeming to write for the reader only. There is a nice pace set for the plot so we the "reader" might not get bored or loose interest. The Chrons, while being as intelligent as LOTR, are just easier to read for the average reader.A valid point or not, I just wanted to make it clear that The Chronicles is a very different kind of story (at least the 1st Chronicles) than LOTR, and that any comparison of the two should be carefully thought out.
Grimm.
"Well, jynnan tonnyx all around then."
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Although I can't vote for one above the other, I think you touch exactly on the difference between them. In fact, I think that Tolkein was writing for himself rather than the reader.Grimm wrote:Tolkien seemed to be a writer writing for himself as well as for the reader;
Afterall, the real reason for the existence of LotR seems to have been to create a "world" in which his language could have evolved and developed. He was first and foremost a linguist, and almost all of his writing stemmed from his creation of a seperate, independant and wholly imaginary language. The "story-value" thereof were distinctly secondary.
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I'd love to add something new to this, but Variol Farseer summed it up about better than I could have.
Tolkien all the way. He created an entire cosmology, and dozens upon dozens of different stories. Nothing in fantasy compares, although admittedly Donaldson does things with character that Tolkien does not. But that simply can't trump - IMHO - something which spawned a twelve-book History of Middle of Earth (really 14, if you count The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales).
Where's Morgoth? Manwe? The rest of the Valar? There's a completeness to Tolkien's work that Donaldson just doesn't touch.
And - I love Donaldson. I put him at #2 (although Martin is on his heels), but that here's how that's set up: Tolkien sits on the throne of Gondor, and Donaldson gets the Stewards "chair".
Tolkien all the way. He created an entire cosmology, and dozens upon dozens of different stories. Nothing in fantasy compares, although admittedly Donaldson does things with character that Tolkien does not. But that simply can't trump - IMHO - something which spawned a twelve-book History of Middle of Earth (really 14, if you count The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales).
Where's Morgoth? Manwe? The rest of the Valar? There's a completeness to Tolkien's work that Donaldson just doesn't touch.
And - I love Donaldson. I put him at #2 (although Martin is on his heels), but that here's how that's set up: Tolkien sits on the throne of Gondor, and Donaldson gets the Stewards "chair".
"Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." (Anais Nin)
Grimm, just wanted to say that the LOTR most definitely DOES have a correlation in this world. The ring represents temptation to do that which we know we shouldn't do, but deep down have the craving to do, and Frodo's battle to resist that temptation and finally destroy the source. Plus, I believe Tolkien had a thing about machine vs nature, if I remember from the introduction in The Silmarillion.
--Andy
"Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur."
Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.
I believe in the One who says there is life after this.
Now tell me how much more open can my mind be?
"Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur."
Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.
I believe in the One who says there is life after this.
Now tell me how much more open can my mind be?
As for which is better, as seems to be the majority's opinion, how can you pick one over the other? I bet for alot of people, whichever they read first would tend to be their "favorite". I think if you really liked the first series you read, you would naturally compare any other series to it, and tho they may both be great, that first usually has a little bigger spot.
--Andy
"Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur."
Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.
I believe in the One who says there is life after this.
Now tell me how much more open can my mind be?
"Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur."
Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.
I believe in the One who says there is life after this.
Now tell me how much more open can my mind be?
Sorry to confuse you with my bad grammar; my point was that no part of LOTR takes place in our world, while The Chrons has a lot to do with our own world (characters from it, in it, etc). In that post, I was trying to point out just how different the two stories are.Cybrweez wrote:Grimm, just wanted to say that the LOTR most definitely DOES have a correlation in this world. The ring represents temptation to do that which we know we shouldn't do, but deep down have the craving to do, and Frodo's battle to resist that temptation and finally destroy the source. Plus, I believe Tolkien had a thing about machine vs nature, if I remember from the introduction in The Silmarillion.
As for your feelings on picking a favorite, I agree with you, as this was the point of my posting; Tolkien and Donaldson are two very different writers. BTW, I read Steve first, and picked him as my fav!
Grimm
"Well, jynnan tonnyx all around then."
Sorry Grimm, got your point now. True, TC relates much more to the real world in that sense.
And I read TC first also, so you can guess which I would lean towards if I had to pick a favorite.
And I read TC first also, so you can guess which I would lean towards if I had to pick a favorite.
--Andy
"Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur."
Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.
I believe in the One who says there is life after this.
Now tell me how much more open can my mind be?
"Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur."
Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.
I believe in the One who says there is life after this.
Now tell me how much more open can my mind be?
hmmmmmmmmmmm. <weighing up who is better>
cant decide...
oh well ill just have to reread them both to find out
cant decide...
oh well ill just have to reread them both to find out
But if you're all about the destination, then take a fucking flight.
We're going nowhere slowly, but we're seeing all the sights.
And we're definitely going to hell, but we'll have all the best stories to tell.
Full of the heavens and time.
We're going nowhere slowly, but we're seeing all the sights.
And we're definitely going to hell, but we'll have all the best stories to tell.
Full of the heavens and time.
That's my position on this one too.Warmark wrote:hmmmmmmmmmmm. <weighing up who is better>
cant decide...
oh well ill just have to reread them both to find out
I just can't bring myself to vote on this. It's like being asked to choose between caviar and champagne, BMW and Mercedes, Charlise Theron and Scarlett Johannsen.
They are the two highest trees in the forest. I think i'll abstain.
Even the very wise cannot see all ends.
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