New Challenge: Potluck Bingo
Sit down to a delicious selection of prompts served on bingo boards, created by the SWG community.
Tolkien loved to play with the idea that his Legendarium was not based purely on his imagination, but was in fact historical material that he merely compiled and translated. In many cases, he presented them as the work of in-universe historians, gone through many hands until they somehow ended up in his own. In other cases, he created intricate scenarios in which his characters - or even just his languages - travelled through time and space, interacting with history in strange ways.
Perhaps the most intriguing experiment with this mode of transmission is The Notion Club Papers, in which a member of an Oxford-based writing and discussion group unexpectedly dreams up fragments of Adûnaic and Quenya. Supposedly set in the imaginary 1980s and peopled with parodies and avatars of the real Inklings, full of dream-journeys and inherited memories, the meetings of the Notion Club unexpectedly uncover the final days of Númenor.
In the spirit of the Notion Club, this month's challenge presents you with several (more or less) mysterious "historical" documents. What's the story behind them? Well, that's up to you! You can select any (or several) of the documents and let them feature in your fanwork for this challenge somehow. Fanworks don't have to imitate The Notion Club Papers, nor do they have to be about time-travel, dreams, or Númenor (although we traditionally like to celebrate Akallabêth in August, and there might be a special stamp for contributions set in the Second Age of Arda). Let our collection of strange documents (discovered, perhaps, in the same sack of waste paper in the Examination Schools at Oxford that contained the records of the Notion Club...) inspire you in whichever way works for you!
This challenge opened in .
Choose your prompt from the collection below.
Click the image to view full-sized.
Alchemy Apparatus Description: A book page illustrating laboratory equipment for alchemy. Image Credit: British Library (public domain) |
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Cave System Map Description: A parchment fragment of a cave system map with labeled features. Text Transcript: List of map features Image Credit: Richard Ellsworth Call (public domain), modified by Dawn Felagund |
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Diary Page Fragment Description: Part of diary page, describing the writer's garden, torn along the edge and splattered with a red substance. Text Transcript: Transcript Image Credit: Dawn Felagund |
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Dwarven Botany Description: An ink drawing of pewterwort (Equisetum arvense), accompanied by a description written in runes. Image Credit: Lyra |
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Erotic Poem (NSFW) Description: A n erotic poem, done in calligraphy in red ink on parchment. Text Transcript: Transcript Image Credit: Dawn Felagund, based on "The Love Song of Shu-Sin," translated by Michael R. Burch |
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Map of "Oronto" (the Uttermost East) Description: A navigational map of "Oronto" or the "Uttermost East" in the Second Age, probably Númenórean in origin. Image Credit: Lyra, based on a map from Karen Wynn Fonstad's Atlas of Middle-earth |
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Musical Notation Description: Two drafts of the notation for a musical composition. In one version, the notes are represented as harp strings, with different symbols on the strings evidently denoting tone length. In the other version, the notes have been assigned Tengwar numerals from 0 to 11, and each tact is represented much like a duodecimal number, with symbols for tone length underneath. Image Credit: Lyra |
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Recipe Collection Description: Four recipes: for bottling currants, brewing ginger wine, and preparing pigeon and venison. Text Transcript: "To Bottle Currants" recipe transcript, "Ginger Wine" recipe transcript, and "Pigeon and Venison" recipe transcripts Image Credit: Wellcome Library (currants and ginger wine) and Art of Cookery (pigeon and venison, public domain) |
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Star Chart Description: A star map on a scrap of papyrus, illustrating well-known constellations such as Valacirca, Menelmacar, Wilwarin etc. Image Credit: Lyra |
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Tower Diagram Fragments Description: Fragments of an architectural drawing of a tower. Image Credit: Drawing by Florentin Granholm (public domain), modified by Dawn Felagund |
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Trebuchet Diagram Description: A page from a notebook, depicting a "stone-slinger" (trebuchet), along with an explanation in Quenya. A scribbled cartoon illustrates the “stone-slinger” in action. Image Credit: Lyra |
In captivity, Celebrimbor draws the diagram of the tower where he’s held.
Nargothrond, Midwinter:
Curufin attempts to recreate a warming cordial from Aman with Beleriand ingredients. ->
Celegorm tests it. ->
Shenanigans.
Aka the accidental invention of miruvor
This is a prequel (intro?) to a story of how young Fëanor and Nerdanel find an important cache of old documents. Posting it now while people are reading other entries into the Notion Club Revival Challenge--the element used herein is the Cave System Map: parchment fragment of a cave system map with labeled features. I get a kick out of the idea of Nerdanel and Fëanor, young and newly enamored with one another. Hope you enjoy it.
Sauron is now Ar-Pharazôn's greatest adviser.
Tar-Míriel has a letter with notes concerning a song of power and a kinslayer to comabt this.
The child Ancalimë makes plans for a kingdom.
Dorthaniel's college professor gives her class a seemingly impossible homework assignment: turn a fragment of strange music from the Second Age into a modern score, and then explain its origins. Well, her guess is as good as anyone's!
On an archeological expedition to Tol Himling, young Elrond and his girlfriend Celebrian encounter some First Age graffiti.
Arwen and Erestor have unearthed something interesting in the library of Imladris,
Learning went on in Ost-in-Edhel year round
The continent east of Middle-earth is said to be barren and empty of life. But is it, really? A group of Venturers is ready to find out.
Gimli is not the first dwarf to admire an elven lady--or a cave!
A Fingon at loose ends is a dangerous thing, though also amusing.
after Akallabêth, an architect of the Edain is summoned to meet Gil-galad.
Maglor makes a strategic retreat.
Maglor comes to Ost-in-Edhil some time after its destruction.
The Story of the Courtship of Curufin, son of Fëanor, told via a collection of objects left behind in Aman.
Collection of vignettes, really.
You're welcome to play 'Spot the object'; there are usually more than the title implies involved ;)