Posted on 07/29/2014 3:38:10 AM PDT by Perdogg
Sixty years ago today, The Fellowship of the Ring, part one of J.R.R. Tolkiens masterwork, The Lord of the Rings, was published in the United Kingdom.
Tolkien conceived of the novel as one book, not three. He would have preferred for its approximately 1,200 to 1,500 pages (depending on the edition) to appear between just one set of covers. But his publisher, George Allen & Unwin, decided to mete out the fantasy narrative and release it as a trilogy over 15 months. The Two Towers came out in November, 1954, and The Return of the King hit bookstore shelves the following October.
The trilogy decision was prescient and would become the forebear of the generation-spanning Star Wars sequels, the blockbuster Harry Potter series and the Game of Thrones franchise that is thriving today in bookstores (and on cable). Among Tolkiens gifts, arguably (and what his publisher was, no doubt, betting on), was his ability to create a richly-imagined world in which a reader might want to linger for months on end, until the next in the series was issued, and then go back again and again.
With Tolkien, theres always a fuzzy corner of the map, a village or forest or sea, or a character or sub-plot we want to know more about, but cant, because Tolkien didnt write it.
What accounts for Middle-earths appeal? And why do so many readers want to make a return visit?
Though detailed most extensively in The Lord of the Rings, Tolkiens fantastical Middle-earth is the thru-line in several of his works, from The Hobbit, published in 1937, and The Adventures of Tom Bombadil, which came out in 1962, to the posthumously-published The Silmarillion, which appeared in 1977. Each story, poem, appendix and unfinished tale adds further layers and echoes to Middle-earth. Like concentric circles, each of Tolkiens books overlaps to create his legendarium.
That legendarium seems real. Its rules and history, even its geography and weather, are plausible. The appendices to The Return of the King list family trees, Annals of the Kings and Rulers, and glossaries for Elvish and Dwarvish, Tolkiens invented languages. In some places, bloodlines, legends and myths that Tolkien spread over thousands of years get full descriptive treatment; in others, theyre merely hinted at. This means that for every tale fully told, there are a dozen other tales that are suggested. With Tolkien, theres always a fuzzy corner of the map, a village or forest or sea, or a character or sub-plot we want to know more about, but cant, because Tolkien didnt write it.
That gap between what Tolkien made explicit and what he merely hinted at is his genius. As we yearn for more, we fill in the unknowns ourselves, charging our imaginations with the task of taking us there.
In a bare-bones timeline at the back of Lord of the Rings, Tolkien hints at further adventures of the major characters. He is clever, even mischievous, about drawing us in with ambiguity. Phrases such as, it is said or, there is no record of, keep readers guessing. Legolas and Gimli may have sailed off across the seas. Or they may not have. We dont know, and thats part of what draws us closer to his flickering storytelling fire.
We cant travel to [Tolkien's] magical realms, embark on epic quests, feel the weight of ancient rivalries or wage good wars. But he makes us want to.
As fantasy, Lord of the Rings manages the neat trick of ringing true.
Middle-earth maybe be filled with dwarves, hobbits, elves and orcs, but they seem human. Like the protagonists of any work of fiction, they have desires and motivations and complexities. They get entangled in complicated plots. The novels themes of good and evil, fellowship and corruption, sacrifice and treachery, are universal.
And in spite of his efforts to make the fantasy relatable, Tolkien also understood that its the un-real that grabs our attention. This cant happen to you, the author seems to suggest, but I want to you to dream that it might. We cant travel to his magical realms, embark on epic quests, feel the weight of ancient rivalries or wage good wars. But he makes us want to.
This push and pull, this drawing us in while keeping us at arms length, is what makes his Middle-earth all the more enticing.
As Bilbo Baggins once sang:
The Road goes ever on and on Down from the door where it began Now far ahead the Road has gone And I must follow, if I can.
May we keep following you, J.R.R. Tolkien.
And Happy Birthday, Lord of the Rings.
Or Melville! LOL!
(JFTR, I have just finished reading “Moby Dick” for the fifth time.)
Oh wow, thanks.
With LOTR, Tolstoy, and Moby Dick, the RHYTHM of the writing is as important as the story.
I just finished reading MD again, and experienced once more the rolling unresolved cadence of that ceaseless main, rocking , like a cradle teeming with life, through my feverish, restless heart. And that was just through the boring parts! LOL!
Old? No, it makes you “classic” and a “collectible”...lol!
Dang! Who peed in your cornflakes this morning?
The world needs more good books like those for sure.....so many novels today are lame, predictable, and poorly written.
lol
I'll never understand the posters that think FR articles should be geared for their own personal likes and dislikes........
Did it ever occur to you to just pass the article on by if you don't want to read it?
Ha Ha ha!
Everyone here is free to pick and choose what we read, and what we ignore.
I agree.
There’s quite a bit actually and The Silmarillion is a good place to start but like other’s have said, its not in the “novel” style of LOTR.
Even denser are the dozen or so volumes of “The History Of The Peoples Of Middle Earth” compiled from JRR’s notes over 50 years by his son Christopher. It’s like poring through 100,000 pages of heavily annotated academic text, but great for the true fanatic.
There’s also “Lost Tales” and “Forgotten Tales”, also compiled by Christopher, more like The Silmarillion in style. “The Children of Hurin” is a fuller version of some of the stories in the Silmarillion about men.
There’s a ton of stuff on the web too, it’s been a huge subject since the early days of the Internet. The flame war over “Do Balrogs have wings?” in the usenet newsgroups is still talked about.
Try http://tolkien.slimy.com/ , the Tolkien meta faq for some interesting stuff.
He created his own languages for the stories as well. Trekkies are still jealous with their attempt making Klingon a language.
Cool thanks.
So what’s the consensus now? Do Balrogs have wings?
most definitively
clown. Grow the hell up
Nope, no wings.
i think there is a line that mentions it spreading its wings as it approaches that “you shall not pass” guy
"drew itself to a great height, and its wings spread from wall to wall"
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