:offtopic: My favourite is Lord of the RIngs - for the bit about Moria, now a 40 mile (?) wide "delving" has got to be good! I like to think of Oakeley as Moria, with the Lake at one end (Cwmorthin) and the vast halls illuminated by shafts of light at the other (Oakeley/Welsh Slate).
Cheers
Grahami
I noticed this on my first trip to Cwmorthin. The similarities may be pure coincidence, but there are just too many such coincidences here, eg the lake, it's general shape and forboding atmosphere, the position of the lake level adit in relation to the lake, the size of the chambers,the bridges in danger of collapse, the many floors and the vast scale of the place.
I have read somewhere that Tolkein was interested in Wales and the Welsh language, but have had no success so far in finding out if he actually based his Mines of Moria on Cwmorthin/Oakeley. His books which are a firm favourite of mine, are influenced by so many different folk traditions, mythologies and places and have such an erudite background to them that its left me wondering ever since I set eyes on Cwmorthin! 🙂
'I wonder how many breakfasts, and other meals we have missed inside that nasty clockless, timeless hole?'
'The Hobbit'
J R R Tolkien.