John Ronald Reul Tolkein was born in South Africa in 1892. His parents died when he was young, but before she died his mother managed to make him firm in the Catholic Church. He was very good in school and interested in rugby. When he was twelve, he began to learn Middle English and Anglo-Saxon. He was married to Edith Bratt in 1916, a year when many people were not sure how long the war would last, or if they would survive it. Both did, and the war played a large part in The Lord of the Rings. Tolkein wanted to create a mythology for England, who only had the King Arthur tales. He succeeded. He created a work that is still regarded as amazing, and is able to make the reader feel as if they are in Middle Earth. He made his own languages. He died in 1973, known across the world.
Good. I found out a lot of things I didn't know: he was a Catholic (I'd always assumed he was Anglican); he moved twelve times in two years; the first publishers of The Lord of the Rings printed a very small number of copies because they did not think it would sell well; Tolkein despised The Chronicles of Narnia; etc. It seemed kind of short, but I don't know which part I would like more of.
It is recommended that one read The Hobbit or The Lord of the Rings before this.
Jane Eyre makes more sense now. Thanks
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
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...I just think of these things, and then I don't feel so bad!
- Barnes and Noble (and books in general)
- birthday parties
- friends
- fun words (like effervescent and uber)
- knitting
- learning languages
- RUF
- Scrabble...and other word games
- skiing
- sleep-overs
- swimming
- tea
- traveling (not the car part, so much!)
- weddings
- writing fantasy stories
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