Saturday, June 25, 2022

Tolkien and the Eagles

 I had wondered this myself, but I didn't expect this answer.



2 comments:

  1. Good answer.
    I guess it's a problem for any craftsman--work hard enough on making the story and background solid, and people expect it to be as good as the Craftsman's work.

    I suppose everybody makes typos, and because Gene Wolfe loved to make critical points depend on "throw-away" details like a woman's hair changing from one chapter to the next, fans confidently create very complicated explanations over things I suspect were typos.

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  2. And in one Lord Peter Wimsey short story, Dorothy L. Sayers disguised a vital clue as a typo.

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