J. R. R. Tolkien (1892–1973)
Author of The Hobbit
About the Author
A writer of fantasies, Tolkien, a professor of language and literature at Oxford University, was always intrigued by early English and the imaginative use of language. In his greatest story, the trilogy The Lord of the Rings (1954--56), Tolkien invented a language with vocabulary, grammar, syntax, show more even poetry of its own. Though readers have created various possible allegorical interpretations, Tolkien has said: "It is not about anything but itself. (Certainly it has no allegorical intentions, general, particular or topical, moral, religious or political.)" In The Adventures of Tom Bombadil (1962), Tolkien tells the story of the "master of wood, water, and hill," a jolly teller of tales and singer of songs, one of the multitude of characters in his romance, saga, epic, or fairy tales about his country of the Hobbits. Tolkien was also a formidable medieval scholar, as evidenced by his work, Beowulf: The Monster and the Critics (1936) and his edition of Anciene Wisse: English Text of the Anciene Riwle. Among his works published posthumously, are The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún and The Fall of Arthur, which was edited by his son, Christopher. In 2013, his title, TheHobbit (Movie Tie-In) made The New York Times Best Seller List. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:
Please do not combine this page with the John Tolkien author page. If any works by J. R. R. Tolkien appear on that page, they should be aliased to this one.
Also please don't combine it with the page of Christopher Tolkien, even though he edited a lot of his father's works posthumously.
Series
Works by J. R. R. Tolkien
The Shaping of Middle-Earth: The Quenta, the Ambarkanta and the Annals (1986) 2,414 copies, 8 reviews
The Annotated Hobbit (1988) — Cover artist, some editions; Illustrator, some editions — 2,147 copies, 20 reviews
Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary, Together with Sellic Spell (2014) — Translator; Contributor — 2,103 copies, 17 reviews
The Fall of Númenor and Other Tales from the Second Age of Middle-Earth (2022) 1,394 copies, 14 reviews
Tales from the Perilous Realm: Farmer Giles of Ham / The Adventures of Tom Bombadil / Leaf by Niggle / Smith of Wootton Major (1997) 952 copies, 16 reviews
The Nature of Middle-earth : Late Writings on the Lands, Inhabitants, and Metaphysics of Middle-earth (2021) 902 copies, 6 reviews
Tree and Leaf: Including "Mythopoeia" and "The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth" (2001) 856 copies, 10 reviews
Tree and Leaf. Smith of Wootton Major. The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth, Beorhthelm's Son (1945) 628 copies, 6 reviews
The Battle of Maldon together with The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth and 'The Tradition of Versification in Old English' (2023) 254 copies, 4 reviews
The Great Tales Of Middle-Earth: The Children of Húrin, Beren and Lúthien, and The Fall of Gondolin (2018) 206 copies, 1 review
Tolkien Fantasy Tales Box Set (The Tolkien Reader/The Silmarillion/Unfinished Tales/Sir Gawain and the Green Knight) (2003) 141 copies
Tolkien Myths and Legends Box Set: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún, The Fall of Arthur, Beowulf (2025) 32 copies
The J. R. R. Tolkien Deluxe Edition Collection: " The Children of Hurin " , " The Silmarillion " , " The Hobbit " and " The Lord of the Rings " (2007) 17 copies
Great Tales of Middle-earth Box Set: The Children of Húrin, Beren and Lúthien, The Fall of Gondolin (2025) 16 copies
The Return of the King (A Story of the Hobbits) Book and Record (See the Pictures; Hear the Record; Read the Book, 382) (1980) 10 copies
Parma Eldalamberon XXII: The Feanorian Alphabet Part 1; Quenya Verb Structure (2015) — Author — 8 copies
THE HOBBIT: PART SIX 8 copies
Parma Eldalamberon XVII: Words, Phrases & Passages in various tongues in The Lord of the Rings (2021) 8 copies
J.R.R. Tolkien : the Hobbit : drawings, watercolors, and manuscripts, June 11-September 30, 1987 Patrick & Beatrice Hagg (1987) 8 copies
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, The Fellowship of the Ring, and The Return of the King 8 copies
Fellowship of the Ring, The 8 copies
Parma Eldalamberon XI: i Lam na Ngoldathon - The Grammar and Lexicon of the Gnomish tongue (1995) 7 copies
The Book of Lost Tales I; The Book of Lost Tales II; Unfinished Tales of Numenor and Middle-earth (2003) 7 copies
The Two Towers 7 copies
The Silmarillion Boxed Folio Society 6 copies
The Devil's Coach-Horses 6 copies
Trzysta przekładów dla fanów pod nieba skłonem... : Ring Rhyme J.R.R. Tolkiena w językach żywych, martwych i zmyślonych (2007) 5 copies
Campaign and Adventure Guidebook for Middle Earth (Including the Wild Lands, East, South, & North) (1984) 5 copies
Selbstinspektion und Inspektion : GMP-Forderungen zur Qualitätssicherung im Arzneimittel-Bereich 3 copies
Las Dos Torres. Ilustrado por Alan Lee (NE revisada) (Biblioteca J. R. R. Tolkien) (2025) 3 copies, 1 review
Le Seigneur des Anneaux - Tome 1 édition reliée et illustrée : La Fraternité de l'Anneau (2025) 3 copies
Tolkien cards. The lord of the rings 3 copies
新版 指輪物語〈3〉/二つの塔〈上〉 3 copies
Folio Society Lord of the Rings 2 copies
Der Herr der Ringe / Gesamtausgabe: Der Herr der Ringe, Audio-CDs, Tl.1-30, 11 Audio-CDs. 756 Min. 2 copies
Angles and Britons — Author — 2 copies
The Tale of Gondolin — Author — 2 copies
Lord Of The Rings Trilogy 1978 Second Edition Revised Boxed Set [Hardcover] J.R.R. Tolkien (1965) 2 copies
Kit Grandes Contos Tolkien 2 copies
On Translating Beowulf 2 copies
The Lord of the Rings 2 copies
The Children of Húrin Paperback Box Set: The Children of Hurin / The Silmarillion / Unfinished Tales (2008) 2 copies, 1 review
Hobbit Box Set 2 copies
English and Welsh 2 copies
Tolkien Cards. The Hobbit Series two 2 copies
Mythopoeia 2 copies
Smith of Wootton Major 1 copy
Сильмариллион 1 copy
Малые Произведения 1 copy
שר הטבעות 1 copy
Again 1 copy
The Lord of the Rings 01 1 copy
The Two Towers 25th Anniversary [Movie tie-in]: Being the Second Part of The Lord of the Rings 1 copy
Os fragmentos de Bovadium – Uma obra satírica inédita de J.R.R. Tolkien (Portuguese Edition) 1 copy
Book Of Lost Tales 2 Hme 2 by J.R.R. Tolkien (May 15 1992) — Author — 1 copy
Lord of the Rings, Omnibus 1 copy
The Lord of the Rings 02 1 copy
The Lord of the Rings 03 1 copy
A Gyrk Ura II. - A kt torony 1 copy
Leaf by Niggle. Illustrated 1 copy
Hª Tierra Media Nº05/12 - El camino perdido y otros relatos (Historia de la Tierra Media nº 5) (Spanish Edition) 1 copy, 1 review
Lo Hobbit e altri 5 volumi 1 copy
Hobit 1 copy
Pad Numenora 1 copy
Pad Gondolina 1 copy
Beren i Lutijena 1 copy
Deca Hurinova 1 copy
TLOTR - The Two Towers 1 copy
The Hobbit 1 copy
A Middle English Vocabulary 1 copy
The Lord of the Rings Pop-Up 1 copy
JRR Tolkien - The Hobbit 1 copy
El silmarillion 1 copy
Der Herr der Ringe, limitierte Amazon.de Sammleredition (11 CD's, Spielzeit 756 Minuten) (2001) 1 copy
Chúa tể những chiếc nhẫn 1 copy
Scrisori de la Mos Craciun 1 copy
Lord of the Rings The Hobbit 1 copy
Le due torri 1 copy
La Compagnia Dell'Anello 1 copy
Il Silmarillon 1 copy
Contes & légendes inachevés 1 copy
O SENHOR DOS ANÉIS 1 copy
Nezavršene priče 1 copy
Mathoms: A Treasury of Writings, Including a Brief History of, and Other Works Related to The Hobbit 1 copy
Básně I 1 copy
The King of the Golden Hall (The Lord of the Rings, #2) (The Two Towers, book 3, chapter 6) 1 copy, 1 review
Fifty new poems for children 1 copy
Umbar, haven of the corsairs 1 copy
Bombadil Goes Boating [poem] 1 copy
THE HOBBIT , COLLINS MODERN CLASSICS [Paperback] TOLKIEN , John Ronald Reuel and Wyatt , David 1 copy
Map of Beleriand 1 copy
Thror's Map 1 copy
A Spring Harvest 1 copy
Tales of Hurin 1 copy
lo hobbit 1 copy
The Trolls 1 copy
Osanwe-Kenta 1 copy
The Battles of Middle Earth 1 copy
2000 1 copy
Básně III 1 copy
Básně II 1 copy
Geschriften van Midden-aarde 1 copy
Hª Tierra Media Nº 04/12 - La formación de la Tierra Media: 4 (Biblioteca J. R. R. Tolkien) (2026) 1 copy, 1 review
Hobbit, ili, Tuda i obratno ; Fermer Dzailz iz Hema ; List raboty Niglja ; Kuznets iz bolšogo Vuttona (2002) 1 copy
Dvě věže 1 copy
The Book of Job 1 copy
Návrat krále 1 copy
Anotirani Hobit 1 copy
Beren e Lúthien 1 copy
Il cacciatore di draghi 1 copy
I figli di Húrin 1 copy
Le due torri 1 copy
La compagnia dell'anello 1 copy
Racconti incompiuti 1 copy
La caduta di Gondolin 1 copy
Il Silmarillion 1 copy
Il Signore Degli Anelli 1 copy
Appendices And Index 1 copy
THE SHAPING OF MIDDLE-EARTH (THE HISTORY OF MIDDLE-EARTH, BOOK 4): THE HISTORY OF MIDDLE-EARTH 4 1 copy
De smid van Groot-Wolding 1 copy
Associated Works
Beowulf: A Verse Translation [Norton Critical Edition] (2000) — Contributor — 1,033 copies, 9 reviews
Beowulf: A Prose Translation [Norton Critical Edition, 1st ed.] (1975) — Contributor — 415 copies, 2 reviews
The Poetry Pharmacy: Tried-and-True Prescriptions for the Heart, Mind, and Soul (2017) 196 copies, 5 reviews
Tales Before Narnia: The Roots of Modern Fantasy and Science Fiction (2008) — Contributor — 126 copies, 3 reviews
The Prentice Hall Anthology of Science Fiction and Fantasy (2000) — Contributor — 100 copies, 2 reviews
J.R.R. Tolkien: Master of Fantasy (Lerner Biographies) (1992) — Associated Name — 99 copies, 3 reviews
Fantasists on Fantasy: A collection of Critical Reflections by Eighteen Masters of the Art (1984) — Contributor — 93 copies, 1 review
Piers Plowman; with Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl and Sir Orfeo (anon.) (1975) — Translator, some editions — 71 copies
The Best of Both Worlds: An Anthology of Stories for All Ages (1968) — Contributor — 25 copies, 1 review
J.R.R. Tolkien: An Audio Portrait of the Author of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (2001) — Contributor — 20 copies, 1 review
Drawings by Tolkien [cat. exp., Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 14. Dec - 27. Feb 1977; National Book League, London, 2. Mar-7. Apr, 1977 (1976) 10 copies
Die englische Literatur 10 in Text und Darstellung. 20. Jahrhundert 2. (2001) — Contributor — 6 copies
Tolkien Studies: Volume XIX, Supplement — Author — 3 copies
Leeds University verse, 1914-24 — Contributor — 1 copy
A Northern venture : verses by members of the Leeds University English School Association — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Tolkien, J. R. R.
- Legal name
- Tolkien, John Ronald Reuel
- Other names
- Beren
Ronald - Birthdate
- 1892-01-03
- Date of death
- 1973-09-02
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Exeter College, Oxford (BA|1915|MA|1919)
King Edward's School, Birmingham, England, UK
St. Philip's School, Birmingham, England, UK - Occupations
- professor (English)
reader (English)
poet
philologist
fantasy writer
writer (show all 10)
novelist
translator
soldier
artist - Organizations
- Oxford University (Merton Professor of English Language and Literature, 1945-59)
Oxford University (Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon, 1925-45)
Oxford University (Leverhulme Research Fellow, 1934-36)
Merton College, Oxford University (Emeritus Fellow)
Pembroke College, Oxford University (Fellow)
University of Leeds (Reader in English; Professor of English Language) (show all 10)
Tolkien Society (Honorary President in perpetuo)
Oxford English Dictionary
Lancashire Fusiliers (Lieutenant, 1915-1918)
Inklings - Awards and honors
- Order of the British Empire (Commander ∙ 1972)
Royal Society of Literature (Fellow, 1957)
Benson Medal (1967)
SF Hall Of Fame (2013)
Gandalf Award (Grand Master of Fantasy ∙ 1974)
Bog & Idé-prisen (2002) (show all 14)
Sir Israel Gollancz Memorial Lecturer, British Academy (1936)
Andrew Lang Lecturer, University of St. Andrews, Fife (1939)
W. P. Ker Lecturer, University of Glasgow (1953)
O'Donnell Lecturer, Oxford University (1955)
Skeat prize (1914)
Honorary D. Litt (National University Of Ireland ∙ 1954)
Oxford University (Honorary D. Litt ∙ 1972)
Honorary Doctorate (University of Liège ∙ 1954) - Relationships
- Tolkien, Christopher (son)
Tolkien, John (son)
Tolkien, Simon (grandson)
Tolkien, Michael (grandson)
Tolkien, Priscilla (daughter)
Tolkien, Hilary (brother) (show all 15)
Tolkien, Tracy (granddaughter-in-law)
Tolkien, Baillie (daughter-in-law)
Mitchell, Bruce (student)
Bliss, Alan (student)
D'Ardenne, S. R. T. O. (student)
Burchfield, R. W. (student)
Auden, W. H. (student)
Sisam, Kenneth (tutor)
Tolkien, Edith (wife) - Short biography
- John Ronald Reuel Tolkien (3 January 1892 – 2 September 1973) was an English writer, poet, philologist, and academic. He was the author of the high fantasy works The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.
He served as the Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon and Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford, from 1925 to 1945 and Merton Professor of English Language and Literature and Fellow of Merton College, Oxford, from 1945 to 1959. He was at one time a close friend of C. S. Lewis—they were both members of the informal literary discussion group known as the Inklings. Tolkien was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II on 28 March 1972.
After Tolkien's death, his son Christopher published a series of works based on his father's extensive notes and unpublished manuscripts, including The Silmarillion. These, together with The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, form a connected body of tales, poems, fictional histories, invented languages, and literary essays about a fantasy world called Arda and Middle-earth[b] within it. Between 1951 and 1955, Tolkien applied the term legendarium to the larger part of these writings.
While many other authors had published works of fantasy before Tolkien, the great success of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings led directly to a popular resurgence of the genre. This has caused Tolkien to be popularly identified as the "father" of modern fantasy literature or, more precisely, of high fantasy. In 2008, The Times ranked him sixth on a list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945". Forbes ranked him the fifth top-earning "dead celebrity" in 2009. - Cause of death
- bleeding ulcer and chest infection
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Bloemfontein, Orange Free State
- Places of residence
- Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
West Midlands, England, UK
Leeds, Yorkshire, England, UK
Bournemouth, Dorset, England, UK
Bloemfontein, South Africa
Birmingham, Warwickshire, England, UK - Place of death
- Bournemouth, Dorset, England, UK
- Burial location
- Wolvercote Cemetery, Oxford, England, UK
- Map Location
- England, UK
- Disambiguation notice
- Please do not combine this page with the John Tolkien author page. If any works by J. R. R. Tolkien appear on that page, they should be aliased to this one.
Also please don't combine it with the page of Christopher Tolkien, even though he edited a lot of his father's works posthumously.
Members
Discussions
J.R.R. Tolkien in Legacy Libraries (June 23)
J.R.R. Tolkien Published Titles and Related Books by The Easton Press in Easton Press Collectors (July 2025)
Hobbit LE in Folio Society Devotees (February 2025)
OT: What should a fine press Hobbit & Lord of the Rings include? in Fine Press Forum (February 2025)
Lord of the Rings LE 2022 in Folio Society Devotees (November 2024)
The Tolkien Thread (4) in Folio Society Devotees (November 2024)
Tolkien Lord of the Rings DLE in Easton Press Collectors (September 2024)
OT - Tolkien Interview of 22 March 1968 with The Daily Telegraph in Folio Society Devotees (September 2024)
Smaug’s wealth in Tolkien Lovers (June 2024)
Lord of the Rings LE Copy No.1 on eBay UK in Folio Society Devotees (July 2023)
Book Discussion: The Silmarillion in The Green Dragon (April 2023)
LoTR Limited Edition in Folio Society Devotees (April 2023)
OT: New The Silmarillion 2022 Illustrated Deluxe edition in Folio Society Devotees (November 2022)
OT - New Edition of LoTR with Tolkien illustrations in Folio Society Devotees (October 2022)
Interesting Tolkien-related links in Council of Elrond (September 2022)
The Tolkien Thread (3) in Folio Society Devotees (May 2022)
New Tolkien Book in Council of Elrond (March 2022)
History of Lord of the Rings Returns in Easton Press Collectors (October 2021)
Tolkien's own illustrations appear in LOTR for the first time in Council of Elrond (October 2021)
wishlist: LotR illustrated DLE in Easton Press Collectors (October 2021)
New Tolkien discovery in Council of Elrond (August 2021)
Lord of the Rings Group Read in 2019 Category Challenge (April 2021)
Silmarillion read-through in Council of Elrond (February 2021)
New Hobbit audiobook? in Council of Elrond (December 2020)
Did Clark Ashton Smith read Tolkien? in Council of Elrond (March 2020)
New website for Tolkien research; new book in Council of Elrond (March 2017)
The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun Slipcase Deluxe Edition in The Green Dragon (July 2015)
The Tolkien Thread (2) in Folio Society Devotees (July 2015)
Revisiting Middle Earth before The Hobbit hits the big screen in The Green Dragon (February 2015)
The Tolkien Thread in Folio Society Devotees (August 2014)
about test in Brightcopy Test Group (July 2013)
Group Read: The Hobbit (Spoiler-free thread) in Hogwarts Express (April 2013)
The Hobbit - Book vs. Movie (Spoilers Expected) in The Green Dragon (February 2013)
Silmarillion in Book talk (December 2012)
J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit reviewed by jseger9000 in Reviews reviewed (July 2011)
Gene Wolfe's tribute to Tolkien in Political Conservatives (June 2011)
Tolkein and Lewis in Friends of Jack (C.S. Lewis) (January 2010)
Fellowship of the Ring discussion, Part II chapters 4-6 in Hogwarts Express (October 2008)
The Children of Húrin Book Discussion: Post after you finish the book. in The Green Dragon (October 2008)
Fellowship of the Ring final discussion, Part II chapters 7-10 in Hogwarts Express (October 2008)
Fellowship of the Ring discussion, Part II chapters 1-3 in Hogwarts Express (October 2008)
Fellowship of the Ring discussion, chapters 7-9 in Hogwarts Express (September 2008)
Fellowship of the Ring discussion, chapters 4-6 in Hogwarts Express (September 2008)
Reviews
https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/the-letters-of-j-r-r-tolkien-revised-and-expande...
I’m a bit of a Tolkien obsessive, as you may perhaps have noticed, and this is the primary source for a lot of the stories about his life that I have known and loved for decades. I read all of the History of Middle Earth volumes a few years ago, but even so, it’s quite a delight to read about his writing in his own words. I knew that the process of writing The Lord of the Rings was painful and difficult; I show more had not realised that it was literally painful, given the extent of his and Edith’s ill health at the point that he was struggling to complete the book; perhaps there is a selection effect in that people in those days instinctively wrote openly to business partners about their medical problems?
He also complains bitterly about the costs of tax and housing – he and Edith moved several times to smaller and smaller places, and only at the end did Merton College provide him with free lodging and partial board, for which he was duly grateful.
His relationship with children and grandchildren seems to have been genuinely warm and loving. There are no letters to his daughter here, but that is presumably accidental, as she is mentioned in passing in other correspondence. He lived long enough to see his grandchildren starting on their careers, which obviously gave him much pleasure.
There are still some surprises. At the end of May 1945, writing to his sone Christopher about the coming end of WW2 in Asia, he says, “as I know nothing about British or American imperialism in the Far East that does not fill me with regret and disgust, I am afraid I am not even supported by a glimmer of patriotism in this remaining war.” There is also some poorly articulated but deep anger at the racist policies of the government of South Africa, where he was born. One of those cases where an icon slightly exceeds one’s hopes.
And there’s his lovely reminiscence of his first encounter with Finnish, in a 1955 letter to W.H. Auden:
"It was like discovering a complete wine-cellar filled with bottles of an amazing wine of a kind and flavour never tasted before. It quite intoxicated me."
And I love this namedropping story from a January 1965 letter to his son Michael:
"An amusing incident occurred in November, when I went as a courtesy to hear the last lecture of this series of his given by the Professor of Poetry: Robert Graves. (A remarkable creature, entertaining, likeable, odd, bonnet full of wild bees, half-German, half-Irish, very tall, must have looked like Siegfried/Sigurd in his youth, but an Ass.) It was the most ludicrously bad lecture I have ever heard. After it he introduced me to a pleasant young woman who had attended it: well but quietly dressed, easy and agreeable, and we got on quite well. But Graves started to laugh; and he said: it is obvious neither of you has ever heard of the other before’. Quite true. And I had not supposed that the lady would ever have heard of me. Her name was Ava Gardner, but it still meant nothing, till people more aware of the world informed me that she was a film-star of some magnitude, and that the press of pressmen and storm of flash-bulbs on the steps of the Schools were not directed at Graves (and cert. not at me) but at her…."
I wouldn’t recommend this to anyone who is not a Tolkien completist; but there are a lot of us around. show less
I’m a bit of a Tolkien obsessive, as you may perhaps have noticed, and this is the primary source for a lot of the stories about his life that I have known and loved for decades. I read all of the History of Middle Earth volumes a few years ago, but even so, it’s quite a delight to read about his writing in his own words. I knew that the process of writing The Lord of the Rings was painful and difficult; I show more had not realised that it was literally painful, given the extent of his and Edith’s ill health at the point that he was struggling to complete the book; perhaps there is a selection effect in that people in those days instinctively wrote openly to business partners about their medical problems?
He also complains bitterly about the costs of tax and housing – he and Edith moved several times to smaller and smaller places, and only at the end did Merton College provide him with free lodging and partial board, for which he was duly grateful.
His relationship with children and grandchildren seems to have been genuinely warm and loving. There are no letters to his daughter here, but that is presumably accidental, as she is mentioned in passing in other correspondence. He lived long enough to see his grandchildren starting on their careers, which obviously gave him much pleasure.
There are still some surprises. At the end of May 1945, writing to his sone Christopher about the coming end of WW2 in Asia, he says, “as I know nothing about British or American imperialism in the Far East that does not fill me with regret and disgust, I am afraid I am not even supported by a glimmer of patriotism in this remaining war.” There is also some poorly articulated but deep anger at the racist policies of the government of South Africa, where he was born. One of those cases where an icon slightly exceeds one’s hopes.
And there’s his lovely reminiscence of his first encounter with Finnish, in a 1955 letter to W.H. Auden:
"It was like discovering a complete wine-cellar filled with bottles of an amazing wine of a kind and flavour never tasted before. It quite intoxicated me."
And I love this namedropping story from a January 1965 letter to his son Michael:
"An amusing incident occurred in November, when I went as a courtesy to hear the last lecture of this series of his given by the Professor of Poetry: Robert Graves. (A remarkable creature, entertaining, likeable, odd, bonnet full of wild bees, half-German, half-Irish, very tall, must have looked like Siegfried/Sigurd in his youth, but an Ass.) It was the most ludicrously bad lecture I have ever heard. After it he introduced me to a pleasant young woman who had attended it: well but quietly dressed, easy and agreeable, and we got on quite well. But Graves started to laugh; and he said: it is obvious neither of you has ever heard of the other before’. Quite true. And I had not supposed that the lady would ever have heard of me. Her name was Ava Gardner, but it still meant nothing, till people more aware of the world informed me that she was a film-star of some magnitude, and that the press of pressmen and storm of flash-bulbs on the steps of the Schools were not directed at Graves (and cert. not at me) but at her…."
I wouldn’t recommend this to anyone who is not a Tolkien completist; but there are a lot of us around. show less
I tried to read, this, I really did, back when I first finished The Lord Of The Rings and wanted more more MORE. The opening chapters defeated me, however, which really is a pity. I wasn't sure how to deal with a brand new creation myth, for one thing. As a Catholic teen, it seemed to close to blasphemy. As a Catholic teen who wasn't all that enamoured of being a Catholic, it was too much like religion. Then again the archaic language was also off-putting, and though the chapters were short, show more the reading was long, so it seemed to take forever to get to the point. So I gave up. Still, I must have dipped in and out of it, flicked through, read passages here and there, because this time I did read it, and quite a bit of it was oddly familiar.
I think the creation myth is interesting, because it isn't 'let there be light' or anything like it. Everything here starts with song, then comes the world. Getting light to the world is a long and fraught process, and, indeed, that's where a lot of the trouble comes from. First you have the lamps, which mean old Melkor knocks down, then you have the trees, which Ungoliant eats, then at last you have the sun and the moon, put up in the sky as a last resort where mean old Melkor can't get them.
Once you get past the creation myth and the descriptions of the Valar and the lands of the West, the story really kicks off, and keeps kicking all the way. We already know from the appendices that The Lord Of The Rings is only the tail end of a story that begins when Iluvatar starts the singing, a tale packed with the epic and the extraordinary, any one page of which could be spun into a trilogy of its own. The silmarils are created, Melkor steals them, Feanor, the first great elvish asshole, swears his vow, murders his kin, heads back to Middle Earth and the fun starts. So we have sieges and chases and betrayals and cruel fates and massive destruction and triumph in adversity and the whole damn thing. It gets especially Wagnerian around poor old Turin, a veritable Siegfried, and the whole shebang ends, appropriately, with a literal deus ex machina.
Marvelous stuff. Mythic grandeur, evocative with magic, drenched with evil, tragic with nobility and rife with unbearable sadness. I would have loved it.
There's also a bit about that fecker Sauron and the fall of Numenor, more detailed than the account from the appendices, and another chapter about the lead-up to the War of the Ring, more detailed in some ways and less in others, so they both make good additions if you're into that sort of thing. I know I am.
2021 - listened to this on audio, the recording by Martin Shaw is justifiably legendary in its own right. show less
I think the creation myth is interesting, because it isn't 'let there be light' or anything like it. Everything here starts with song, then comes the world. Getting light to the world is a long and fraught process, and, indeed, that's where a lot of the trouble comes from. First you have the lamps, which mean old Melkor knocks down, then you have the trees, which Ungoliant eats, then at last you have the sun and the moon, put up in the sky as a last resort where mean old Melkor can't get them.
Once you get past the creation myth and the descriptions of the Valar and the lands of the West, the story really kicks off, and keeps kicking all the way. We already know from the appendices that The Lord Of The Rings is only the tail end of a story that begins when Iluvatar starts the singing, a tale packed with the epic and the extraordinary, any one page of which could be spun into a trilogy of its own. The silmarils are created, Melkor steals them, Feanor, the first great elvish asshole, swears his vow, murders his kin, heads back to Middle Earth and the fun starts. So we have sieges and chases and betrayals and cruel fates and massive destruction and triumph in adversity and the whole damn thing. It gets especially Wagnerian around poor old Turin, a veritable Siegfried, and the whole shebang ends, appropriately, with a literal deus ex machina.
Marvelous stuff. Mythic grandeur, evocative with magic, drenched with evil, tragic with nobility and rife with unbearable sadness. I would have loved it.
There's also a bit about that fecker Sauron and the fall of Numenor, more detailed than the account from the appendices, and another chapter about the lead-up to the War of the Ring, more detailed in some ways and less in others, so they both make good additions if you're into that sort of thing. I know I am.
2021 - listened to this on audio, the recording by Martin Shaw is justifiably legendary in its own right. show less
First sentence: Dear John, I heard you ask daddy what I was like and where I lived. I have drawn me and my house for you. Take care of the picture. I am just off now for Oxford with my bundle of toys--some for you. Hope I shall arrive in time: the snow is very thick at the North Pole tonight. Your loving Father Christmas.
ETA: I listened to this on audio read by Derek Jacobi! It was AWESOME. Cannot overstate it. Absolutely recommend this audio. There are other voice actors for the polar bear show more and I believe another recurring character.
Premise/plot: The earliest letter from 'Father Christmas' to the Tolkien children is 1920. The latest letter is dated 1943 to his daughter, Priscilla. The letters speak of Father Christmas' affairs--his adventures and misadventures. Little details about the Tolkiens slip through, of course. He refers to their letters in which they mention pets and toys, etc. He speaks of Polar Bear, his greatest assistant. He speaks of red elves--some. But Father Christmas has a war to fight of his own--against the goblins! (Christmas is almost sabotaged several times!)
My thoughts: How quickly time flies! These letters capture moments. I suppose that's as good a way as any to describe this one. We don't get to see the children's letters to Father Christmas through the years, but, we do get to see Father Christmas's letters to the Tolkien children... But children don't write letters to Father Christmas forever, one by one they grow up and grow out of belief. Still these are moments where we catch glimpses of Tolkien as both loving parent and creative artist.
Near the North Pole
Christmas 1925
My dear boys,
I am dreadfully busy this year—it makes my hand more shaky than ever when I think of it—and not very rich; in fact awful things have been happening, and some of the presents have got spoilt, and I haven’t got the North Polar bear to help me, and I have had to move house just before Christmas, so you can imagine what a state everything is in, and you will see why I have a new address, and why I can only write one letter between you both.
It all happened like this: one very windy day last November my hood blew off and went and stuck on the top of the North Pole. I told him not to, but the North Polar Bear climbed up to the thin top to get it down—and he did. The pole broke in the middle and fell on the roof of my house, and the North Polar Bear fell through the hole it made into the dining room with my hood over his nose, and all the snow fell off the roof into the house and melted and put out all the fires and ran down into the cellars, where I was collecting this year’s presents, and the North Polar Bear’s leg got broken.
He is well again now, but I was so cross with him that he says he won’t try to help me again—I expect his temper is hurt, and will be mended by next Christmas. I send you a picture of the accident and of my new house on the cliffs above the North Pole (with beautiful cellars in the cliffs). If John can’t read my old shaky writing (one thousand nine hundred and twenty-five years old) he must get his father to. When is Michael going to learn to read, and write his own letters to me? Lots of love to you both and Christopher, whose name is rather like mine.
That’s all: Good Bye
Father Christmas
Cliff House
October 31st 1931
Dear Children,
Already I have got some letters from you! You are getting busy early. I have not begun to think about Christmas yet. It has been very warm in the North this year, and there has been very little snow so far. We are just getting in our Christmas firewood.
This is just to say my messengers will be coming round regularly now Winter has begun—we shall be having a bonfire tomorrow—and I shall like to hear from you: Sunday and Wednesday evenings are the best times to post to me.
The Polar Bear is quite well and fairly good—(though you never know what he will do when the Christmas rush begins.) Send my love to John.
Your loving
Father Nicholas Christmas
Glad Father Christmas has wakt up. He slept nearly all this hot summer. I wish we kood have snow. My coat is quite yellow.
Love Polar Bear
Cliff House,
near North Pole
Christmas Eve 1940
My Dearest Priscilla
Just a short letter to wish you a very happy Christmas. Please give my love to Christopher. We are having rather a difficult time this year. This horrible war is reducing all our stocks, and in so many countries children are living far from their homes. Polar Bear has had a very busy time trying to get our address-lists corrected. I am glad you are still at home!
I wonder what you will think of my picture. “Penguins don’t live at the North Pole,” you will say. I know they don’t, but we have got some all the same. What you would call “evacuees”, I believe (not a very nice word); except that they did not come here to escape the war, but to find it! They had heard such stories of the happenings up in the North (including a quite untrue story that Polar Bear and all the Polar Cubs had been blown up, and that I had been captured by Goblins) that they swam all the way here to see if they could help me. Nearly 50 arrived.
The picture is of Polar Bear dancing with their chiefs. They amuse us enormously: they don’t really help much, but are always playing funny dancing games, and trying to imitate the walk of Polar Bear and the Cubs.
Very much love from your old friend,
Father Christmas show less
ETA: I listened to this on audio read by Derek Jacobi! It was AWESOME. Cannot overstate it. Absolutely recommend this audio. There are other voice actors for the polar bear show more and I believe another recurring character.
Premise/plot: The earliest letter from 'Father Christmas' to the Tolkien children is 1920. The latest letter is dated 1943 to his daughter, Priscilla. The letters speak of Father Christmas' affairs--his adventures and misadventures. Little details about the Tolkiens slip through, of course. He refers to their letters in which they mention pets and toys, etc. He speaks of Polar Bear, his greatest assistant. He speaks of red elves--some. But Father Christmas has a war to fight of his own--against the goblins! (Christmas is almost sabotaged several times!)
My thoughts: How quickly time flies! These letters capture moments. I suppose that's as good a way as any to describe this one. We don't get to see the children's letters to Father Christmas through the years, but, we do get to see Father Christmas's letters to the Tolkien children... But children don't write letters to Father Christmas forever, one by one they grow up and grow out of belief. Still these are moments where we catch glimpses of Tolkien as both loving parent and creative artist.
Near the North Pole
Christmas 1925
My dear boys,
I am dreadfully busy this year—it makes my hand more shaky than ever when I think of it—and not very rich; in fact awful things have been happening, and some of the presents have got spoilt, and I haven’t got the North Polar bear to help me, and I have had to move house just before Christmas, so you can imagine what a state everything is in, and you will see why I have a new address, and why I can only write one letter between you both.
It all happened like this: one very windy day last November my hood blew off and went and stuck on the top of the North Pole. I told him not to, but the North Polar Bear climbed up to the thin top to get it down—and he did. The pole broke in the middle and fell on the roof of my house, and the North Polar Bear fell through the hole it made into the dining room with my hood over his nose, and all the snow fell off the roof into the house and melted and put out all the fires and ran down into the cellars, where I was collecting this year’s presents, and the North Polar Bear’s leg got broken.
He is well again now, but I was so cross with him that he says he won’t try to help me again—I expect his temper is hurt, and will be mended by next Christmas. I send you a picture of the accident and of my new house on the cliffs above the North Pole (with beautiful cellars in the cliffs). If John can’t read my old shaky writing (one thousand nine hundred and twenty-five years old) he must get his father to. When is Michael going to learn to read, and write his own letters to me? Lots of love to you both and Christopher, whose name is rather like mine.
That’s all: Good Bye
Father Christmas
Cliff House
October 31st 1931
Dear Children,
Already I have got some letters from you! You are getting busy early. I have not begun to think about Christmas yet. It has been very warm in the North this year, and there has been very little snow so far. We are just getting in our Christmas firewood.
This is just to say my messengers will be coming round regularly now Winter has begun—we shall be having a bonfire tomorrow—and I shall like to hear from you: Sunday and Wednesday evenings are the best times to post to me.
The Polar Bear is quite well and fairly good—(though you never know what he will do when the Christmas rush begins.) Send my love to John.
Your loving
Father Nicholas Christmas
Glad Father Christmas has wakt up. He slept nearly all this hot summer. I wish we kood have snow. My coat is quite yellow.
Love Polar Bear
Cliff House,
near North Pole
Christmas Eve 1940
My Dearest Priscilla
Just a short letter to wish you a very happy Christmas. Please give my love to Christopher. We are having rather a difficult time this year. This horrible war is reducing all our stocks, and in so many countries children are living far from their homes. Polar Bear has had a very busy time trying to get our address-lists corrected. I am glad you are still at home!
I wonder what you will think of my picture. “Penguins don’t live at the North Pole,” you will say. I know they don’t, but we have got some all the same. What you would call “evacuees”, I believe (not a very nice word); except that they did not come here to escape the war, but to find it! They had heard such stories of the happenings up in the North (including a quite untrue story that Polar Bear and all the Polar Cubs had been blown up, and that I had been captured by Goblins) that they swam all the way here to see if they could help me. Nearly 50 arrived.
The picture is of Polar Bear dancing with their chiefs. They amuse us enormously: they don’t really help much, but are always playing funny dancing games, and trying to imitate the walk of Polar Bear and the Cubs.
Very much love from your old friend,
Father Christmas show less
What’s left to be written about “The Hobbit”, one of the great masterpieces of classic fantasy, written by the “founding father” of high fantasy, John Ronald Reuel Tolkien?
“The Hobbit” was lauded by Tolkien’s friend and fellow author C. S. Lewis, by poet W. H. Auden, celebrated for its influence on the entire fantasy genre.
To me, it was the metaphorical door to new worlds... I own both several physical copies as well as several ebook editions. I have read “The Hobbit” in show more both English and German.
The one edition I value the most is a German paperback by “DTV” from November 1974 with the title (mis-)translated as “Der kleine Hobbit” (“The Little Hobbit”).
It has a ridiculous cover featuring a squint-eyed Smaug with butterfly wings and a tiny spider in front of him.
It’s probably the worst cover in “The Hobbit”’s publication history.
This very book, though, is the one my mother read about 35 years ago while we were on holidays in the middle of nowhere in the Bavarian Forest. I asked her what she so concentratedly read and she showed me the cover - I was appalled! A children’s book, obviously!
And she even recommended it to me! To me! Someone who had OBVIOUSLY outgrown childhood at my advanced age of… ten!
I harrumphed and condescendingly told her I had more serious things to do - like beheading the advancing army of stinging nettles with my stick-sword or fighting the fly amanita invasion!
Only after my mother likened the house of our relatives which we were visiting to Elrond’s home (which wasn’t too far off the mark!), after her telling me about the dark depths of Mirkwood, only after all of that did I take her up on her offer and read “The Hobbit” for the first time.
This is how I opened the doors to (high) fantasy for myself and Tolkien was followed by Terry Brooks, Robert Jordan, Joel Rosenberg and many many others. I taught myself reading with Sherlock Holmes but I really started reading with “The Hobbit”.
Since then I’ve read it many times for myself and always felt at home. When my children were old enough, I read “The Hobbit” to them every night and, to make it more “real”, I gave them laminated map print-outs from Karen Wynn Fonstad’s wonderful “Atlas of Middle-Earth” for every step of the journey. For easier collecting, all three got a binder.
I read to them every night and when we were finished with “The Hobbit”, we moved on to “The Lord of the Rings”. (Plus printed maps again, of course!)
Sometimes, I was throat-sore, sometimes I read way past their bedtime but we had a wonderful time. I kept reading to them for many years. (If you wonder: The magic didn’t “stick” fully - none of them are true readers but at least they still own their binders of maps…)
Now my children are adults and I’m back to reading for myself. For me, it was time for a return to the magical world Tolkien created. It was time to return to the cherished memories of my late mother and those reading nights.
For You, though, it is now time to pick up a copy of “The Hobbit” and create your own memories.
Five out of five stars - and two asteroids to beat: 2991 Bilbo and 2675 Tolkien
Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram show less
“The Hobbit” was lauded by Tolkien’s friend and fellow author C. S. Lewis, by poet W. H. Auden, celebrated for its influence on the entire fantasy genre.
To me, it was the metaphorical door to new worlds... I own both several physical copies as well as several ebook editions. I have read “The Hobbit” in show more both English and German.
The one edition I value the most is a German paperback by “DTV” from November 1974 with the title (mis-)translated as “Der kleine Hobbit” (“The Little Hobbit”).
It has a ridiculous cover featuring a squint-eyed Smaug with butterfly wings and a tiny spider in front of him.
It’s probably the worst cover in “The Hobbit”’s publication history.
This very book, though, is the one my mother read about 35 years ago while we were on holidays in the middle of nowhere in the Bavarian Forest. I asked her what she so concentratedly read and she showed me the cover - I was appalled! A children’s book, obviously!
And she even recommended it to me! To me! Someone who had OBVIOUSLY outgrown childhood at my advanced age of… ten!
I harrumphed and condescendingly told her I had more serious things to do - like beheading the advancing army of stinging nettles with my stick-sword or fighting the fly amanita invasion!
Only after my mother likened the house of our relatives which we were visiting to Elrond’s home (which wasn’t too far off the mark!), after her telling me about the dark depths of Mirkwood, only after all of that did I take her up on her offer and read “The Hobbit” for the first time.
This is how I opened the doors to (high) fantasy for myself and Tolkien was followed by Terry Brooks, Robert Jordan, Joel Rosenberg and many many others. I taught myself reading with Sherlock Holmes but I really started reading with “The Hobbit”.
Since then I’ve read it many times for myself and always felt at home. When my children were old enough, I read “The Hobbit” to them every night and, to make it more “real”, I gave them laminated map print-outs from Karen Wynn Fonstad’s wonderful “Atlas of Middle-Earth” for every step of the journey. For easier collecting, all three got a binder.
I read to them every night and when we were finished with “The Hobbit”, we moved on to “The Lord of the Rings”. (Plus printed maps again, of course!)
Sometimes, I was throat-sore, sometimes I read way past their bedtime but we had a wonderful time. I kept reading to them for many years. (If you wonder: The magic didn’t “stick” fully - none of them are true readers but at least they still own their binders of maps…)
Now my children are adults and I’m back to reading for myself. For me, it was time for a return to the magical world Tolkien created. It was time to return to the cherished memories of my late mother and those reading nights.
For You, though, it is now time to pick up a copy of “The Hobbit” and create your own memories.
Five out of five stars - and two asteroids to beat: 2991 Bilbo and 2675 Tolkien
Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram show less
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Awards
Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary, Together with Sellic Spell (Finalist – Inklings Studies – 2015)
Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary, Together with Sellic Spell (Finalist – Inklings Studies – 2016)
Lord of the Rings Book 2 Fellowship of the Ring Part 1-2 {Japanese New Edition} (Hebrew Translation – 1980)
Lord of the Rings Book 3 Fellowship of the Ring Part 2-1 {Japanese New Edition} (Hebrew Translation – 1980)
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