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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This is one of the best stories ever written--EVER! It's profoundly beautiful epic fantasy. I have never been so sucked into the world of a book the way I have been with the Silmarillion. I nearly cried the first time I finished it because I was no longer in Middle Earth (I was 13 or 14, if that makes it better)!Tolkien is one of the few authors who I never question while reading. You know how in some books you stop and think things like why the author explained something strangely, why a certain character seems so out of place in the story, or why a piece of dialogue is painful and unnecessary? That doesn't happen with Tolkien! He tells stories so perfectly, so succinctly that you just accept it without question.Yes, you will have to flip back to the index of names many times, especially at the beginning, but tough through it because it's worth it! ( )i was disappointed in the silmarillion. i only read the lord of the rings trilogy this year, and was so amazed at how enthralling it all was. i just flew through them, absolutely great books. but the silmarillion i found to be so dull, with the exception of a chapter or two. mostly a chore to read. The Silmarillion was never really a completed work, being completed and published posthumously. So, unfortunately it does not shine in its own right. However, it is a wonderful companion to The Hobbit/The Lord of the Rings saga. It portrays the foundation and very creation of that well-known land, and gives a glimpse of the world of Middle-Earth prior to and during the creation and existence of the One Ring in the power of Sauron. It's a fascinating read, and one I think any lover of that magical world should look into. I really enjoyed reading "The Silmarillion," though I'll admit it was one of those books I didn't make it all the way through the first time I tried reading it (I think it was a reading level thing). Now that I've actually finished it, I think it is a very interesting in-depth description of Tolkien's world, and it gives the Lord of the Rings trilogy more depth through background knowledge. Read it! The book is an account of the First Age which precedes the action in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.
At its best Tolkien's posthumous revelation of his private mythology is majestic, a work held so long and so power fully in the writer's imagination that it overwhelms the reader. Like Tolkien's other books, The Silmarillion presents a doomed but heroic view of creation that may be one of the reasons why a generation growing up on the thin gruel of television drama, and the beardless cynicism of Mad magazine, first found J.R.R. Tolkien so rich and wonderful. If "The Hobbit" is a lesser work that the Ring trilogy because it lacks the trilogy's high seriousness, the collection that makes up "The Silmarillion" stands below the trilogy because much of it contains only high seriousness; that is, here Tolkien cares much more about the meaning and coherence of his myth than he does about these glories of the trilogy: rich characterization, imagistic brilliance, powerfully imagined and detailed sense of place, and thrilling adventure. Not that these qualities are entirely lacking here.
References to this work on external resources.
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)
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