One Last Spring by anthropologyarda

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Fanwork Notes

A wether is a castrated male goat or sheep. Just to avoid confusion, you should know that this story uses a Silmarillion compatible version of the Round Earth creation story.

Originally posted as part of the Silmarillion40 event.

Fanwork Information

Summary:

The world is changing. Strange dreams drive an Avari chieftain to embark on a quest, where he unknowingly stumbles upon his people's doom.

Major Characters: Avari, Original Female Character(s), Original Male Character(s)

Major Relationships:

Artwork Type: No artwork type listed

Genre:

Challenges:

Rating: Creator Chooses Not to Rate

Warnings: Creator Chooses Not to Warn

This fanwork belongs to the series

Chapters: 1 Word Count: 101
Posted on 28 September 2017 Updated on 28 September 2017

This fanwork is complete.


Comments

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This was fascinating and lovely.  I was worried for Nuin the whole journey, hoping that what awaited him among all the strangeness and danger would not be doom.

This really unpacks from those few little bits in the canon about how the earliest Men learned from the Dark Elves in the wild (but then all the textual love goes to the Edain who fell in love with the Noldor!).

Such an irony of the Silmarillion: the published text is so enamoured of the "civilized" Elves who chose "following the gods"/exodus/city-building/knowledge and craft . . .but there is something so compelling about the idea of those who remained in their original lands, living in ancient ways and figuring out their own path, even though the concept of their unprotectedness against Morgoth is terrifying.

 

Ohhh, this was really good. I loved the whole nomadic, tribal aspect of their lives  Near the end, as he travelled on and lost his animals one by one, I was on the edge of my seat (metaphorically, as I'm actually lying on the bed, lol). Wonderful writing and a unique idea. 

I thoroughly enjoyed the glimpse at Kinn-lai community (and their interactions with other Avarin groups). I wouldn't have minded reading a whole novel about them. Like other readers, I didn't grasp where this was headed, so I was feeling really anxious for Nuin (especially after the threatening start of loosing all the animals, and then the ominous mountain and the near-cataclysm Nuin experiences!), and was so relieved when he survived and discovered the Edain. Excellent descriptions and use of suspense!