Racing Down the Mindon by Himring

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Fanwork Notes

 

Note on geography: Feanor and his household are here assumed to live a fairly short distance outside Tirion itself (pre-exile), as described elsewhere in fanon. Tirion itself, as a city, isn't huge (although Celegorm wouldn't agree with this). If people aren't meeting or seeing each other, in the following story, it is because how they organize their lives, not because they are physically a long way apart.

Note on names: Aikanaro=Aegnor, Angarato=Angrod, Arafinwe=Finarfin, Artaher=Orodreth, Artanis=Galadriel, Findarato=Finrod, Findekano=Fingon, Irisse=Aredhel, Nelyo (Nelyafinwe Maitimo)=Maedhros, Nolofinwe=Fingolfin, Turukano=Turgon. (Also: Atar=Feanor.)

Fanwork Information

Summary:

As tensions are rising between the factions of Feanor and Fingolfin in Tirion, Celegorm comes to see his brother Maedhros at the palace.

Very kindly nominated for the MEFAs 2011 by Angelica; it won Third Place in the category: "Character Study: House of Finwë".

Major Characters: Celegorm, Maedhros

Major Relationships:

Genre: General

Challenges:

Rating: Teens

Warnings: Expletive Language

This fanwork belongs to the series

Chapters: 1 Word Count: 2, 337
Posted on 31 July 2010 Updated on 31 July 2010

This fanwork is complete.


Comments

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My word. This is just... wow. I don't typically read fics about Turko- because he gets so much canon and fanon screentime that I get sick of him- but I am so grateful I read this one. Amazing.

There's something about it that calls to mind Dawn's Another Man's Cage, but, because of the narrower focus, deeper. Like there are more insights crammed in a smaller space (that would, in fact, make sense, as this is not fifty chapters long).

I love the way you explain his anger, and how you point out that little inconsistency that I've never noticed before, and Turko's voice won me over. Gyah. Nothing at all constructive to say.

Thank you so much for sharing this.

Thank you very much! I'm very happy you find Turko's voice convincing and I feel flattered by the comparison to Another Man's Cage. Have you also read Dawn's A Town Called Acceptance? I had it in mind, in a background sort of way, when I wrote this piece here, although I feel I haven't approached the subject in the same manner.