Lord Of The Rings

Lord Of The Rings

...in 1939 after the success of "The Hobbit". The trilogy was published first in 1954-1955. In his letter to Carole Batten-Phelps the writer affirms that he wrote "The Lord of the Rings" for his own pleasure as an attempt to create a major work. Tolkien never thought that his fantasy adventure would become so famous worldwide. The writer's friend, C.S. Lewis, who wrote a review for the first part of "The Lord of the Rings", didn't believe the book would be a success either. However, his fears proved groundless.
The epic "The Lord of the Rings" became a real treasure of English Literature of the XX century. All the time critics find new ideas and draw analogies with reality. "The Lord of the Rings" formed the basis of such a literary genre as fantasy - a branch of fiction, which is based on mythological and historical traditions with a grain of magic. It became a so-called Bible for other writers working in this genre.
It was very difficult to link up a fairy-tale "The Hobbit" with a large-scale literary work addressed to a more serious audience. Many characters appear as if by themselves in the trilogy. In a letter to Auden Tolkien stated that he himself together with the Fellowship of the Ring had gone all the way up to Orodruin. We cannot help admiring Tolkien's careful elaboration of the history of Middle-earth. There are no unnecessary or unimportant characters or geographical areas. Every character plays his/her role in a complicated plot. Middle-earth can be compared with a symmetrical web, in the core of which there is the Ring of Power. There is an image of the spider in "The Hobbit" as well as in "The Lord of the Rings". That can be explained because Tolkien was bitten by a tarantula once. Probably, the writer introduced the image of a vile many-legged being from his personal experience. Tolkien himself didn't like to draw any parallels between...

View Full Essay

  • Category: English
  • Words: 446
  • Pages: 2

View Full Essay

Related Essays

  • Jrr Tolkien Tolkien has been called various things by various critics. Some have called him "the father of modern fantasy," "creator of England's mythology,&qu...
  • The Struggle Of Good And Evil Three Rings for the Eleven-kings under the sky, Seven for the Dwarf-lords in their halls of stone, Nine for Mortal Men doomed to die, One for the Dark Lord on his...
  • The Lord Of The Rings The One Ring to rule them all Thought-paper on J. R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings By Francis Byron P. Abao 97-06526 English 146 Inst. Emil Flores Department ...
  • Christianity And Lord Of The Rings Tolkien is no exception. "I am a Christian..." he writes(1), and his book shows it. Christianity appears not as allegory--Tolkien despises that(2)--nor ...
  • Feeling Left Behind? You might be if you have looked in the religion section of a bookstore recently. Since 1995, over fifty million books bearing the banner of the Left Behind series...

Saved Papers

Find papers more easily with our Saved Papers feature.

Join Now

Get unlimited access to over 190,000 essays and papers.

Join Now