Community Reviews

Rating(4 / 5.0, 106 votes)
5 stars
33(31%)
4 stars
43(41%)
3 stars
30(28%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
0(0%)
106 reviews
March 17,2025
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Considering that The Lord of the Rings is one of the most popular books of the last century, it's surprising to see how few reviews there are here. I get the impression that many people feel guilty about liking it. It's a phase you go through, and the less said about it, the better. I think this is unfair to the book, which, I am prepared to argue, is a whole lot better than it's generally made out to be; I don't think its huge success is just evidence that people have no taste. It's something that can be read at more than one level, and, before dismissing it, let's take a look at what those levels might be.

On the surface, it's a heroic fantasy novel, and quite a good one. It's a gripping, well-realized story, with an interesting fantasy world as background. Under the surface story, it's also clear that there's a moral discourse. It's not an allegory; as Tolkien points out in the foreword, he hated allegory, and we certainly don't have an in-your-face piece of Christian apology by numbers. None the less, the author has constructed some inspiring and thought-provoking symbols. The Ring confers great power, but the only way to defeat Sauron is to refuse that power, and destroy it, even at great personal cost. Frodo's self-sacrifice is quite moving. I also think that Gandalf is an unusually interesting Christ-figure; sufficiently so that many people refuse even to accept him as one, though, at least to me, the argument on that point seems convincing. He comes from Valinor, obviously the Heavenly Realm, to help the Free Peoples of the West. A central part of his message is the importance of mercy, as, in particular, shown by the memorable scene near the beginning, when he rebukes Frodo for wishing that Bilbo had killed Sméagol when he had the opportunity. As we discover, Sméagol is finally the one person who can destroy the Ring. And let's not miss the obvious point that Gandalf is killed, and then returns reborn in a new shape. I find him vastly more sympathetic than C.S. Lewis's bland Aslan, and he is the book's most memorable character.

But I don't think the morality play is the real kernel either. What makes LOTR a unique book, and one of the most ambitious experiments in literary history, is Tolkien's use of names. All authors knows how important names are, and use them to suggest character; though when you think about what is going on, it is rather surprising how much can be conveyed just by a name. Proust has a couple of long discussions about this, describing in great detail how the narrator's initial mental pictures of Balbec, Venice and the Guermantes family come just from the sounds of their names. Tolkien goes much further. Most of his names are based on a family of invented languages, linked by a vast complex of legends and histories, the greater part of which are invisible to the reader and only surface occasionally.

The astonishing thing is that the technique actually works. The interrelations between all the invented names and languages make Middle-Earth feel real, in a way no other fantasy world ever has. When some readers complain that characters and locations are hastily sketched, I feel they are missing the point. Tolkien was a philologist. He loved languages, words and names, and tracing back what the relationships between them say about their history. In LOTR, he's able to convey some of that love of language to his readers. You have to read the book more than once, but after a while it all comes together. To give just a few obvious examples, you see how "hobbit" is a debased form of the word holbytla ("hole-dweller") in the Old Norse-like language of Rohan, how the "mor" in "Moria" is the same as the one in "Mordor" and "morgul", and how Arwen Undómiel's name expresses her unearthly beauty partly through the element it shares with her ancestor Lúthien Tinúviel. There are literally hundred more things like this, most of which one perceives on a partly unconscious level. The adolescent readers who are typically captivated by LOTR are at a stage of their linguistic development when they are very sensitive to nuances of language, and programmed to pick them up; I can't help thinking that they are intuitively seeing things that more sophisticated readers may miss.

Perhaps the simplest way to demonstrate the magnitude of Tolkien's achievement is the fact that it's proven impossible to copy it; none of the other fantasy novels I've seen have come anywhere close. Tolkein's names lend reality to his world, because he put so much energy into the linguistic back-story, and before that worked for decades as a philologist. Basically, he was an extremely talented person who spent his whole life training to write The Lord of the Rings. In principle, I suppose other authors could have done the same thing. In practice, you have to be a very unusual person to want to live that kind of life.

Writing this down reminds me of one of the Sufi stories in The Pleasantries of the Incredible Mullah Nasrudin. The guy is invited to a posh house, and sees this incredibly beautiful, smooth lawn. It's like a billiard table. "I love your lawn!" he says. "What's the secret?"

"Oh," his host says, "It's easy. Just seed, water, mow and roll regularly, and anyone can do it!"

"Ah yes!" says the visitor, "And about how long before it looks like that?"

"Hm, I don't know," says the host. "Maybe... 800 years?"
March 17,2025
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As I’ve mentioned, I am a huge fan of both fantasy in general and the films specifically. My first read through the series occurred during my high school years and, I’m sad to say, was not very enjoyable. I saw the movies before reading the series and I think this did much to set my expectations up for an entirely different type of story-telling. In the last few months my husband and I played through Lego Lord of the Rings and it got me to thinking that maybe now, after getting both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in English literature, I’d be ready to read through the series again with an open mind.
March 17,2025
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È giunta la fine e già ne sento la mancanza....ma ci rivedremo presto
March 17,2025
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There's not really much to say other than EPIC. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this for the first time. I've seen the Peter Jackson trilogy and really enjoyed those as well. But this time it was fun to read the original story. J.R.R. Tolkien created so much in the Middle-earth realm and the LOTR books only capture a small portion. I feel he truly created a genre and set the standard for epic fantasy.

The movies obviously left material out for time and added some for creativity along the way. In my opinion both are strong. This edition had appendices innthe back to help with time lines, back story, and touched on a lot of the mythos based in Tolkien's world. He created so much that The Hobbit and The Silmarillion are recommended reads to further explore this genre. Thanks!
March 17,2025
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4.5⭐️
حقش است. به جرات می‌گویم حقش است. خیلی از کسانی که زنده‌اند حقشان مرگ است. و خیلی از کسانی که می‌میرند حقشان زندگی است. تو می‌توانی ای زندگی را به آنها ببخشی؟ پس خیلی مشتاق نباش که به خاطر ترس از امنیت خودت به اسم عدالت مردم را به مرگ محکوم کنی. حتی خردمند هم نمی‌تواند انجام کار را ببیند.

مجموعه ارباب حلقه ها
رضا علیزاده
انتشارات روزنه

6⭐️
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
هابیت آنجا و بازگشت دوباره

5⭐️
The Silmarillion
سیلماریلیون

Tales of Middle Earth Series
4⭐️
The Children of Húrin
فرزندان هورین

Beren and Lúthien to-read
The Fall of Gondolin to-read
The Fall of Númenor to-read
March 17,2025
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What can you say about this book that has not already been said? What a huge creative power Tolkien had, that he could create such beautiful worlds (especially the Elves and the Ents are sublime). Basically, of course, it's about the classic struggle between good and evil, about real friendship and sacrifice, perseverance and courage. But it remains well-balanced and beautifully laced with a layer of sophisticated humor and introspection, a blissful panoramic epic that in many ways is reminiscent of the Iliad and the Odyssey, but with its own, slightly medieval references.

Some minor critical comments?: 1. the many songs of course are specific to those imaginative worlds, but unfortunately "work" not so well in ours; 2. women hardly come into the picture and if they do, they hardly transcend the archetype of the virtuous courtly Lady; only in the annexes Tolkien corrects this image slightly.

Ultimately, it is the diversity in the world of the Ring that most enchanted me: all those kinds of people, elves, hobbits, orcs, wizards, etc. with their own language, customs and history, their great and small flaws and defects. It's a rich variety which engenders wonder and interest. The most hopeful message the book gives is that Tolkien illustrates that even those different types beings can find "common ground" and make life more livable. What a glorious performance!
March 17,2025
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I loved returning to Middle-Earth <3
Everything is so lovingly crafted in The Lord of the Rings and has such background and history, like a perfect clockwork.
Some random observations per book below, if one has never read the books or seen the movie don't dive in.

Prologue:
- Interesting how the prologue is an info dump on hobbits and smoking, far from a traditional setup of a large adventure
- The last prologue says a lot about the fourth age, and sons of characters we well known from LotR

Book 1:
- How old do hobbits become normally that 33 is the threshold of adulthood?
- 22 september is Bilbo/Frodo day!
- If that’s queer, we could do with a bit more queerness in these parts
March 17,2025
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This was what I wanted it to be the first time I read it. It is a good thing not all tears are an evil, cause the words of the last few pages got pretty blurry

9.4
March 17,2025
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Very popular and influential fantasy novel. Although alternatively a non-multi-media version of the same concerns and inspirations as Wagner's Ring cycle.

I read it six and half times by the age of thirteen, at which point I was reasonably sure that I knew what was coming next. I didn't come back to it after that because I read Maxim Gorky and then Dostoevsky and learnt that books could be explosive, shocking and powerful in other ways, you know like the old Heiniken beer strap-line -'refreshes the parts other beers do not reach'.

After the Simarillion it seems odd how little of that prior history that Tolkien brought to bear on the Lord of the Rings, curious since he had been writing those other stories since he was a teenager, his creativity it seems could be compartmentalised at times in interesting ways. And what was the point of the elvish (and other) languages that could have been used to powerful verfremdungseffekt, but no, everything significant happens in English in the story.

I am happy that I read this in the transition from childhood to teenage years, but it has come to exemplify pretty everything that I dislike about fantasy as a genre, such as a map being a substitute for a plot and narrow emotional range. Moving from this to say Njal's Saga is a step change in sophistication (for a start the latter has women  ok technically there are female characters in Lord of the Rings but in comparison to other books with characters of both genders they are pretty flat and functionless). Equally though the map driven plot is a good way to tap into creativity, if the characters must travel from A to Z through B ( a forest) and C (mountains) etc you can see how the book begins to write itself - how will the characters react in the forest, who might they meet there, what is the forest like (Spooky? Beautiful? Flora and fauna?)

Watching the films some of the changes annoyed me hugely, but above all particularly noticing how much work the film score does I was reminded of another fantasy of my own - that many films would be better with out dialogue, just the music and the occasional card with explanatory text like in Silent films.
March 17,2025
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The epic fantasy against which all other epic fantasies are measured. And there is reason. Beautiful, lyrical, depth, enthralling. I love these books. I've read them many many times. Really they are not to be missed. Highly, highly, highly recommended.

'Nuff said!
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