(2023-03-08) Sloan How The Ring Got Good
Robin Sloan: How the ring got good. I’ve been tearing through a series of books I never expected to read, and they have revealed something breathtaking about where The Good Stuff comes from.
You have to understand: J.R.R. Tolkien, among writers of this kind, is revered as THE grand designer. The story goes: he’d worked it all out in advance
This is technically true — he HAD worked out the languages and legendarium years before — but (I have now learned) that story doesn’t capture or explain, in any way at all really, the process of composing these books. It doesn’t tell us how Tolkien came up with the things that actually made them good.
Aragorn, son of Arathorn, was missing entirely from early drafts. In his place was a ranger hobbit with wooden feet named Trotter
And a character as indelible as Galadriel — think of her powerful presiding role — was the product not of some grand architecture, but an errant note:
Tolkien discovered her on the page, just as we did.
if Tolkien can find his way to the One Ring in the middle of the fifth draft, so can I, and so can you.
Not even the MAP was mapped out in advance!
The long-running BBC show In Our Time is a treasure; I love the way Melvyn Bragg allows his scholarly guests to range and roam
Matt Webb has built a Braggoscope that allows you to explore the show’s archive in new and exciting ways.
Matt has not only constructed this cool thing, but winningly documented the process. He used OpenAI’s GPT-3 for the “heavy lift” of categorizing the episodes, which conforms to a pattern I’ve noticed more broadly: while the buzzy application of these GPT-alike language models is chat, the real workhorse seems to be something we might call “text understanding and transformation”.
I loved Tomihiko Morimi’s novel The Tatami Galaxy, translated into English by Emily Balistrieri
vibrates with a voice that is sharp and funny, wacky and winning. It’s a perfect slice of contemporary Japanese pop: a tangle of fates, simultaneously cosmic and comic. I loved my voyage through The Tatami Galaxy.
Ernest Rutherford: “We have no money, so we shall have to think.”
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