Begin Your Journey With The Return Of The King (The Lord Of The Rings, #3) By J.R.R. Tolkien Offered As Electronic Format

on The Return of the King (The Lord of the Rings, #3)

book was so good! This was an epic and exciting fantasy about hardship, war, friendship, power and sacrifice, The Return of the King follows Frodo and his companions as they go
Begin Your Journey With The Return Of The King (The Lord Of The Rings, #3) By J.R.R. Tolkien Offered As Electronic Format
on separate journeys to fight the war, defeat the enemy and destroy the ring,

It took me a while to get into this book, but once I did I was immersed in this fantastic and detailed world that the author created.
I am blown away by how detailed this world is, the author created his own languages, a unique world and awesome people such as elves, orcs, wizards, dwarves, hobbits, and more.
At times though I felt overwhelmed by the world, The characters are so awesome and complex, My favorite characters are Sam, Gandalf, Aragorn and Legolas, Honestly Sam is the best, he is brave, honest, loyal, kind, and helpful, Sam's character development was excellent, he really grew so much as a person and learned to be brave during difficult times, Gandalf is great, he is wise, helpful, loyal and powerful, Aragorn is charming, strong, resilient, kind and brave, I wish there was more focus on Aragorn and Legolas' character development and perspective, I wanted to learn more about them and read the events from their perspective, I was very happy with how the book ended, I'm glad that everything was resolved and ended on a happy note, I'm sad this series is over, but my experience while reading this book will stay with me for a long time,

I recommend this book to anyone who loves fantasy, excellent world building and awesome characters! Writers who inspire a genre are usually misunderstood, Tolkien's reasons for writing were completely unlike those of the authors he inspired, He didn't have an audience, a genre, and scores of contemporaries, There was a tradition of high adventure fairy tales, as represented by Eddison, Dunsany, Morris, MacDonald, Haggard, and Kipling, but this was only part of what inspired Tolkien.


His writing was chiefly influenced by his familiarity with the mythological traditions of the Norse and Welsh cultures, While he began by writing a fairy story with The Hobbit and sitelinkother early drafts, his later work became a magical epic along the lines of the Eddas.
As a translator, Tolkien was intimately knowledgeable with these stories, the myths behind them, and the languages that underpinned them, and endeavored to recreate their form,

Contrarily, those who have followed in his footsteps since have tended to be inspired by a desire to imitate him, Yet they failed to do what Tolkien did because they did not have a whole world of mythic tradition, culture, and language to draw on, They mimicked his style, but did not understand his purpose, and hence produced merely empty facsimiles,

If they had copied merely the sense of wonder or magnificence, then they might have created perfectly serviceable stories of adventure, but they also copied those parts of Tolkien which do not fit a wellbuilt, exciting storylike his work's sheer length.
Tolkien made it 'okay' for writers of fantasy to produce books a thousand pages long, and to write many of them in succession, Yet Tolkien's length had a purpose, it was not merely an affectation,

Tolkien needed this length in order to reproduce myth, The Eddas were long and convoluted because they drew from many different stories and accounts, combined over time by numerous storytellers and eventually compiled by scribes, The many digressions, conflicts, repetitions, asides, fables, songs, and minutiae of these stories came together organically, Each had a purpose, even if they didn't serve the story, they were part of a grand and strange world, Epics often served as encyclopedias for their age, teaching history, morals, laws, myth, and geographyas may be seen in Homer or The Bible,

This was the purpose of all of Tolkien's long, dull songs, the litany of troop movements, the lines of lineage, the snippets of didactic myths, and sideadventures.
To create a realistically deep and complicated world, he felt he needed to include as many diverging views as the original myths had, He was being true to a literary conventionthough not a modern one, and not one we would call a 'genre',

He gave characters similar names to represent other historical traditions: that of common prefixes or suffixes, of a house line adopting similar names for fathers, sons, and brothers.
An author who copies this style without that linguistic and cultural meaning just makes for a confusing story, breaking the sensible rule that main characters should not have similar names.


Likewise, in a wellwritten story, sidecharacters should be kept to the minimum needed to move the plot and entertain the reader with a variety of personalities.
It is another rule Tolkien breaks, because he is not interested in an exciting, driving pace, He wants the wealth of characters to match the number of unimportant side characters one would expect from a historical text,

The only reason he sometimes gets away with breaking such sensible rules of storytelling is that he often has a purpose for breaking them, and is capable of drawing on his wealth of knowledge to instill further depth and richness in his world.
Sometimes, when he slowed his story down with such asides, they did not have enough purpose to merit inclusion, a flaw in pacing which has only increased with modern authors.


But underneath all of that, Tolkien does have an appealing and exciting story to tell, of war and succession and moral strugglesthe same sort of story that has been found in our myths since the very earliest writings of man.
He does not create a straight monomyth, because, like Milton, he presents a hero divided, Frodo takes after the Adam, placing strength in humility and piety, not martial might or wit, Aragorn is an attempt to save the warlike, aristocratic hero whom Milton criticized in his portrayal of Satan,

Yet unlike Satan, we do not get an explanation of what makes Strider superior, worthy, ormore importantlyrighteous, And in this, Tolkien's attempt to recreate the form of the Eddas is completely at odds with the Christian, romantic moral content with which he fills the story.
This central schism makes his work much less true to the tradition than Anderson's sitelinkThe Broken Sword, which was published the same year,

Not only does Tolkien put forth a vision of chaste, humble, 'everyman' heroes who persevere against temptation through piety, he also presents a world of dualistic good and evil, of eternal, personal morality, prototypical of the Christian worldview, particularly the postMiltonic view.
His characters are bloodless, chaste, and nobleand if that nobility is sometimes that of simple, hardworking folk, all the better for his sitelinkMerrie England analogue,

More interesting than these is his portrayal of Gollum, one of the few characters with a deep psychological contradiction, In some ways, his central, conflicted role resembles sitelinkEddison's Lord Gro, whose work inspired Tolkien, But even this internal conflict is dualistic, Unlike Gro, Gollum is not a character with an alternative view of the world, but fluctuates between the hyperbolic highs and lows of Tolkien's morality,

It is unfortunate that both good and evil seem to be external forces at work upon man, because it removes much of the agency and psychological depth of the characters.
There is a hint of very alien morality in the outofplace episode of Tom Bombadil, expressing the separation between man and fairy that sitelinkDunsany's work epitomized, Bombadil is the most notorious remainder of the fantastical roots of Tolkien's story which he painstakingly removed in editing in favor of Catholic symbology,

Yet despite internal conflicts, there is something respectable in what he achieved, and no fantasy author has yet been capable of comprehending what Tolkien was trying to do and innovating upon it.
The best modern writers of fantasy have instead avoided Tolkien, concentrating on other sources of inspiration, The dullards of fantasy have merely rehashed and reshuffled the old tropes back and forth, imagining that they are creating something,

One cannot entirely blame Tolkien because Jordan, Martin, Goodkind, Paolini, Brooks, and Salvatore have created a genre out of his work which is unoriginal, cloying, escapist, and sexually unpalatable if often successful.
At least when Tolkien is dull, ponderous, and divergent, he is still achieving something,

These authors are mostly trying to fix a Tolkien they don't understand, trying to make him easy to swallow, The uncomfortable sexuality is an attempt to repair the fact that Tolkien wrote a romance where the two lovers are thousands of miles apart for most of the story.
Even a libertine like me appreciates Tolkien's chaste, distant, longing romance more than the obsessively fetishistic consummation that has come to define sexuality in the most repressive and escapist genre this side of fourcolor comic books.


I don't think Tolkien is a great writer, I don't even think he is one of the greater fantasy writers, He was a stodgy old Tory, and the Shire is his false golden age of 'Merrie Olde England', His romance wasn't romantic, and his dualistic moralizing cheapened the story, His attempt to force Christian theology onto a heroic epic is as problematic and conflicted as monks' additions to Beowulf,

Tolkien's flaws have been welldocumented by notable authors, from Moorcock's sitelink'Epic Pooh' to Mieville's sitelinkadroit analysis, but for all that, he was no slouch.
Even if we lament its stolid lack of imagination, The Lord of the Rings is the work of a careful and deliberate scholar of language, style, and culture.
It is the result of a lifetime of collecting and applying knowledge, which is a feat to behold,

Each time the moon is mentioned, it is in the proper phase as calculated from the previous instance, Calendar dates and distances are calculated, Every name mentioned has a meaning and a past, I have even heard that each description of a plant or stone was carefully researched to represent the progression of terrain, though I can find no support for this theory.


Yet what good is that to a story It may be impressive as a thought exercise, but to put that much time and work into the details instead of fixing and streamlining the frame of the story itself seems entirely backwards to me.
But for all that The Lord of the Rings may be dull, affected, and moralistic, it is Tolkien's, through and through,

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