20 Jun, 2010
2010-6-20 7:22:26 AM UTC
Beren has published a long interview with Mark Faith on his site about the
Festival in the Shirehttp://www.tolkienlibrary.com/press/9 ... Festival_in_the_Shire.phpIt has a quote from Mark that seems relevant to Wellinghall's thread on the number of books in your collection.
https://www.tolkienguide.com/modules/n ... =ASC&type=&mode=0&start=0Often they are more concerned with the count of what they are collecting a neurotic sort of way than with what they are collecting and why? To me, these people aren’t true collectors, but have some compulsion.
I'm interested in what people think of some of Mark's other points in the article, such as his views on rarity, collectors and
Why did you decide to do this Tolkien festival in Wales?
Wales is where it all started. Tolkien’s very first inspiration was Welsh language and culture.
20 Jun, 2010
2010-6-20 12:32:22 PM UTC
Seems to me he's on the defensive about the money he's charging; while at the same time going on the attack against collectors who he perceives as not seeing things his way. Thus bracing everyone concerned in case the event folds perhaps?
Onto another issue:
Q. - "Why did you decide to do this Tolkien festival in Wales?
A. - "Wales is where it all started."
Rot! (as North Polar Bear might say). The reason why Mr Faith wants to hold his event in Wales is because that's where he happens to live! (he also owns a few acres with 'bunkhouses' for tourists).
If Mr Faith had settled in Scotland, then doubtless the area he lived in would then become 'the heart of Tolkien Country' (as he named Macynlleth, the event's original venue).
22 Jun, 2010
2010-6-22 12:56:22 PM UTC
The BBC news website has just put this up:
"Tolkien festival to recreate Middle Earth in mid Wales"
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/10374622.stmApparently, "Mr Faith said Tolkien, as a boy, was fascinated with the Welsh place names he saw on a train journey from Birmingham to Aberystwyth."
- wellinghall
22 Jun, 2010
2010-6-22 4:48:10 PM UTC
He said: "It wasn't an accident that I chose this part of Wales for the festival."
As I said earlier - I fancy that if Mr faith had chosen to settle in Scotland (or anywhere else in the British Isles) then that place -wherever it might be - would suddenly sprout a formerly unknown connection to Tolkien.
And, as I also noted; this venue was not Mr Faith's first choice; accident or not.
(some folk just enjoy making things up about Tolkien, esp. when there's money to be made.)
22 Jun, 2010
2010-6-22 10:04:28 PM UTC
I agree the whole Wales line is simply Mark with his business hat on, rather than his collector hat; the kind of antics I would have thought he would have objected to, judging by some of his other comments. That said, some of what Mark says is true enough. Unfortunately for him though, as a book seller, he becomes part of the very problem he criticizes. Upon close examination, many of the books he sells are neither rare nor scarce; & are are not, in my opinion, 'worth' what he is charging for them.
I also dislike all this 'true' collector rubbish. In the field of Tolkien collecting, bargains are few and far between; & the ony hope most collectors have of acquiring anything like a rarity are on sites like eBay --where many sellers are unaware of what they are selling. Otherwise everything is expensive & overpriced. You can be as knowledgeable as you like, you ain't going to get anything 'rare' without hard cold cash.
BH
3 Jul, 2010
2010-7-3 7:51:48 AM UTC
I also think the following comment by him is interesting (I think he has a point here):
I fear a complacency and constraint both due to the global economic environment and from increased fractionalisation from the different Tolkien interests and fan areas. There are too many clubs more interested in “their Tolkien” and not “our Tolkien”. There is a genuine fellowship within these clubs, which is charming, and I believe in, but in their desire to preserve the fellowship of their club, they create an unintentional atmosphere of elitism and exclusion to new comers. This will ultimately destroy and not preserve the future for Tolkien’s works, the essence in which all fans love.
For example, as a long time Tolkien book fan I resented the Lord of the rings Films being made. However, I now see had they not been made, Tolkien fandom and its essence were at risk of dying out one generation to the next. The films have opened the door to millions of new fans, but we have not provided a vehicle of learning and education to develop them as new fans or to perhaps inspire them to create their own interpretations of Tolkien’s great works. There are too many barriers with more going up and not coming down. Their needs to be a one-world Tolkien, but the prejudice must be broken down first.