Wednesday, March 15, 2023

The Nature of Middle Earth

 
The Nature of Middle-earth is an interesting book. It's a collection of JRR Tolkien's writings as he fiddled and reevaluated his legendarium- the vast world behind the story. Tolkien clearly was revising and thinking about things throughout his life- the nature of his world, the relationship between elves and the Valar, the lifespan of various races-there's a lot here. At the same time, I'm not sure if Tolkien ever intended every last thing he wrote- even fragmentary notes- to be published. 

This volume is edited by a Tolkien scholar and is not really essential, to my mind, for the casual fan. If you're a purist and want to know everything, then this may be for you. It's well known that Tolkien often changed his mind or revised the history or background of certain characters, so once you get past The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion, there maybe is no definite canon. What he went with in the 50's he may have changed his mind about ten years later. But for reading his thoughts on everything from elven reincarnation to how tall certain characters are can be illuminating. 

So again not essential except for die-hards, and certainly not the Silmarillion- I got this primarily because I love that world and wanted to read more about the geography so I was a little less than impressed, I was expecting more essays and not just note fragments- but for a Tolkien fan there is some interesting material here for a night of tea and reading pleasure. 

13 comments:

  1. Amo Tolkien Tomo nota te mando un beso.

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  2. This sounds interesting. I know some "die hards" who might enjoy this.

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  3. This seems like it could be intriguing.
    WWW.MELODYJACOB.COM

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  4. love to read this kind of book.....
    thank you for sharing your review... interesting.

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  5. Wonderful to hear how he interpreted his own world within a world. I am sure it is fascinating on so many levels. Thanks so much for the wonderful review. At the moment we have most of his works on display at our library this month.


    Caitlin&Megan
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    Carefully Listening
    Ellie
    The Book Group
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    Better Left Unsaid

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  6. I'm working my way through Tolkien's stuff right now and am glad to see this pop up over at another blog! I do look forward to diving into it and see what the teacher had to say about his world. Thanks for sharing and cool blog, Greg. Glad to have discovered this today!

    https://roarsandechoes.com/

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  7. "At the same time, I'm not sure if Tolkien ever intended every last thing he wrote- even fragmentary notes- to be published."
    It's a bit predatory how, when a creator is dead, even the unfinished or personal (if art-related) business they left behind becomes public. I understand what you were looking for, that is, not exactly what you got. But it sounds like it was worth it to a point.

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  8. Not all books with the name of a great author on the front to entice readers are not worth the read or the cost. I wanted to expect more of them, but was always disappointing.

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  9. Very interesting to see his process!

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  10. I think this would be interesting. I'm a fan :)

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  11. I think my husband would enjoy this but I'll take a pass as I don't think I'm devoted enough to the stories to get much out of it this.

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  12. Ahh Tolkien, always good to read

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  13. Wow. I didn't know this I need to read this book! 😃

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