Founded in 2005, the Silmarillion Writers' Guild exists for discussions of and creative fanworks based on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Silmarillion and related texts. We are a positive-focused and open-minded space that welcomes fans from all over the world and with all levels of experience with Tolkien's works. Whether you are picking up Tolkien's books for the first time or have been a fan for decades, we welcome you to join us!
New Challenge: Everyman Create a fanwork about an ordinary character in the legendarium using a quote about an unnamed character as inspiration.
Cultus Dispatches: Fanworks, AI, and Resistance by Dawn and Grundy The fan studies column Cultus Dispatches returns with a history of how Tolkien fanworks fandom has reacted and resisted generative AI by drawing strong boundaries in a way that is not typical for the fandom.
Finrod and Bëor stop for a while on the road to Nargothrond to rest. The bodies of the Secondborn often grow weary, and Finrod laments, massaging Bëor's back and renewing his beloved's vigor with the work of his hands. But Finrod has other burdens of his own, Bëor soon discovers, returning…
Maglor without Maedhros, Daeron without Lúthien. Alone, they are nothing, but together, they can be something more. Where do you turn, when you have no one else left?
Written for Tolkien Reverse Summer Bang 2023, featuring artwork by athlai.
It was only the second time Finwë had come out foraging with them, and of course this would happen—of course the Hunter would come, the Dark Rider on his steed with its terrible, heavy footfalls, and the deep-throated laughter that held no mirth, only malice.
“Come on.” Maedhros grabbed his hand and pulled him along down the path, both of them quickening their pace now, until the trees opened up into a wide meadow filled with flowers, bright yellow celandine and dandelions and sweet-scented pale chamomile mingling with cornflowers and irises. On…
Haleth leaves to find her brother, even though her father does not permit her to.
Current Challenge
Everyman
Create a fanwork about an ordinary character in the legendarium using a quote about an unnamed character as inspiration. Read more ...
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Akallabêth in August
Every August, we focus on one of the most tumultuous times in Arda's history: the Second Age and the rise and fall of Númenor. Any story that is or might conceivably be part of the Akallabêth is acceptable for this challenge. Read more ...
By definition, fanworks fandom does not draw a lot of boundaries, but community archives and events have taken a strong stance against AI-generated fanworks due to ethical considerations and member input.
In a book as full of death as the Quenta Silmarillion, grief and mourning are surprisingly absent. The characters who receive grief and mourning—and those who don't—appear to do so due to narrative bias. Grief and mourning (or a lack of them) serve to draw attention toward and away from objectionable actions committed by characters.
This presentation for Mereth Aderthad 2025 discusses the parallels between the concept of abnegation in the scientific work surrounding the atomic bomb and in The Silmarillion. The relinquishment of self-interest in favor of the interests of others, abnegation was identified by Tolkien as a powerful act of spirit and reason. The legendarium has many examples of the complexities of abnegation, which parallel similar discussions held by physicists during and after World War II.
For most of my life, when reading Lord of the Rings, I read it through the perspective of Gandalf's words about Éowyn, that she'd spent years trapped as a caregiver, watching the realm she love fall from honor into disgrace.
But what if Éowyn was also a student of history?
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Angbang Week 2026
Angbang Week is a tumblr event focusing on the relationship between Morgoth and Sauron, running from May 5-11, 2026
Gondor Week 2026
A Tumblr week event focusing on the history of the realm of Gondor.
Crablor Day
A day dedicated to everyone's favourite warcriminal crustacean - April 26, 2026
The Silmarillion Writers' Guild is more than just an archive--we are a community! If you enjoy a fanwork or enjoy a creator's work, please consider letting them know in a comment.
What a powerful reflection on social judgements, perspective, passivity and hindsight. It was uncomfortable (complimentary) in that Elendil's actions toward the begger are the kind of pushing the unsightly or uncomfortable problem under the rug that we're all faced with some point or another. It does not seem he is in accord with the crowd, but unwilling to go against it.
It is likely that the reactions of the others are influenced by what they think Elendil wants to hear (the townspeople, at any rate, his fellow Numenoreans less so).
My thoughts in this piece were that Elendil has not established himself as King of Arnor yet. The situation here does not offer him much of a framework to guide himself by, which is one of the reasons he does not handle it better.
But Elendil does choose to lay claim to that crown, and his descendants also, apparently without fully acknowledging what the Numenorean legacy entails.
Three meals and a donkey and let's hear no more of this. That was a knee-jerk reaction and I'm glad Elemdil had second thoughts, and yet ... he's inheriting more than he might be willing to acknowledge and certainly more than he can make amends for, even if it was under his predecessor's rule ...
... which is, as you point out, not the be all and end all since the rot extends far beyond the fugurehead, embedded throughout society.
He did not ask the name of the beggar who celebrated the death of Ar-Pharazôn and said that the Númenoreans had destroyed his village, and he didn't let someone poison the King when the opportunity arose? Probably far too principled. It ran in the family all the way down to Aragorn.
It was Amandil, Elendil's father, who according to this piece didn't allow the poisoning to happen.
But, yes, they are a family that mostly tends to stick to the letter of the law! (Not quite always, though, I think.) And there is much to be said for that principle, except it does not always preserve you from being implicated anyway.
Elendil is regretting not having learned the name because it forecloses any possible attempt at further compensation later, but of course anonymity also helps to protect the beggar from possible pursuit by anyone who thought he deserved punishment.
you know me, I'm always here for problematizing numenorean colonialism. what a heart-wrenching and difficult piece, and the haunting question of choices made and choices regretted
Yes, so many things might have been different, and maybe Numenor might have survived. But as the saying goes, if wishes were horses, beggars would ride.
Very true! The past cannot be fixed; the world has irrevocably changed.
However, Elendil and his sons, in canon, seem very quick to claim rule in Middle-earth, not just over fellow Numenoreans, but also over other inhabitants of Arnor and Gondor. In some ways, that turns out to be a good thing, I guess, as it also means they are better prepared to fight Sauron in the War of the Last Alliance.
But it also means that they and their followers are carrying quite some baggage with them that will have more unfortunate consequences. Faramir points out some of those later on, in retrospect.
I wanted Elendil to have at least some second thoughts, here.
Comments on After the Cataclysm
The Silmarillion Writers' Guild is more than just an archive--we are a community! If you enjoy a fanwork or enjoy a creator's work, please consider letting them know in a comment.