Subject: Sure: Turin.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-03-13 10:40:00 UTC
He's probably Tolkien's favourite character, he takes up huge chunks of the Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales, and History - and has his own book - and I honestly can't stand the guy. He's supposed to be a sympathetic character, I'm certain of it, but I just... can't empathise with him at all.
I realise he's supposed to be cursed, so that all his choices turn to ill, but Morgoth needn't have bothered. When we first meet adult Turin, he's an adopted son of the King of Doriath - the most powerful non-Morgoth person in Middle-earth. And what's the first thing we see him do? React to his mother being insulted by, a) physically assaulting the culprit, and b) when said culprit tries to get even, stripping him naked and hunting him through the woods. He then refuses to place any trust in his foster-father, and instead runs away to become a bandit.
And everything Turin does is like this. His only reactions to problems are to hit it, or run away and change his name. Why does Nargothrond fall? Because Turin had a bridge built so he could hit things better. And so on.
Seriously. I would give up ever having heard the name of Turin for a prose-length version of the story of Beren and Luthien, but for some unknown reason, Tolkien preferred the idiot.
And yeah, there are other things. I've commented recently on Legolas' vision, which apparently sees round corners. And I can never bring myself to look forward to Book 4 - Frodo, Sam, and Gollum taking a walk. I like it when I'm reading it ("Look, Sam, look! The king has got a crown again!"), but leading up to reading it always drags me down.
Oh, and: I wish Tolkien had actually been able to finish anything. There are so many brilliant stories which are only half-written, because Tolkien got distracted and moved onto something else. Valar preserve us, man, sit down and write, won't you?
That answer your question?
hS