The thing is, the reason I back out, is, I find myself (inevitably) wondering what on earth Sauron and the Mouth of Sauron and the Orcs and Saruman and all the rest were going to do with Middle Earth once they had it.
Don't feel like the Lone Ranger, vison, you're not the only one who has stopped to consider these questions.
Several posts ago, I wrote:
Eh, the question raised is valid enough although I suspect it's likely Tolkien, ever disdainful of the contemporary psychological novel, never bothered to speculate on the ramifications of 'what if' the other side is victorious? Most of his villains (Gollum and Saruman excepted) are uncomplicated with no motivation beyond being driven by a desire for total domination. In LotR (and the Sil) they exist merely as a foil against which the complexities of good men/hobbits/elves play out.(I stop to wonder what if. What if the hobbits fail and the Ring goes back to Sauron? He has already made a desert of Mordor. What if he makes a desert of Middle-earth and it can no longer sustain life, what then? What will he rule when there is nothing left to conquer? How can death be ordered then? How ruled? If all spark of good is extinguished, can evil flourish? If the very meaning for Sauron's existence is gone, what would he do? Would he squat atop of Barad dur and gloat forever? )
Wasn't this a criticism often leveled against the book when it was first published? I seem to recall reading complaints about the depiction of one-dimensional evil.
ETA: cross-posted with Faramond. Off to read it now.
PS: 10 pages! W00t!!! Ten! What a thread. I haven't had this much fun since my early days at TORC.