So I've mentioned in the Sci-Fi/Fantasy Reading thread that I've started in on a "Quest" of sorts: to read everything I can about J.R.R. Tolkien and Middle-earth (and in an awful lot of cases, re-reading). Not necessarily everything, just all the major stuff I can. This is the plan I've started off with (my sig should tell you where I am). It'll probably get adjusted in a couple places:
J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography by Humphrey Carpenter
The Hobbit
The History of 'The Hobbit', Parts I & II by John D. Rateliff
Tales From The Perilous Realm (Not strictly Middle-earth, but I remember "Farmer Giles of Ham" being awesome. I've learned that there's an Alan Lee-illustrated edition about to come out, so I want to wait to get that; thus, this might be delayed.)
The Lord of The Rings--50th Anniversary Edition (with The Lord of The Rings: A Reader's Companion)
Tolkien And C.S. Lewis: The Gift of Friendship by Colin Duriez
The Silmarillion
Unfinished Tales
The Children of Hurin
I'm also armed with Robert Foster's The Complete Guide To Middle-earth. And if I manage to get through all that and still want more, I have a plan for the History of Middle-earth series plus other stuff.
Now before you start going, "Oh goody, a first-time reader"... I'm hardly that! I've been quite familiar with The Hobbit and The Lord of The Rings since childhood, and this will mark my third reading of The Silmarillion. But one of the reasons I want to do this is because I find it very hard to discuss Tolkien with other people who know so much more than I do about the larger mythology, and can trace the lineages and backgrounds from memory. While I don't expect to be able to do that exactly, I'm hoping that I'll become as conversant in the stories of the First and Second Ages--the stories that, for some reason, I can follow as I read but slip out the back door of my mind afterwards; I know who Beren and Luthien are, for example, but I'd be hard-pressed to give you a good summary of their story. And it's always fun to share a journey with others. So with that in mind, here are some of the notes I made for myself while reading The Hobbit:
1) So Glamdring, Orcrist, and Sting were made in Gondolin (and Glamdring was the sword of King Turgon). How exactly did they end up in a troll's hoard at the eastern edge of The Shire? There's clearly a story to be told there, but Tolkien never wrote one.
2) Who are the "bold men of the South" making their way up into the regions between the Misty Mountains and Mirkwood (the people the Wargs and goblins are raiding)? Are they random humans, or connected to other groups like the Dunedain or Gondorians?
3) Exactly when did Gandalf meet and befriend Gwaihir, Lord of the Eagles?
4) So apparently the Wood-elves have taught the men of Laketown to make lembas, only the men call it cram (their own unique recipe?).
(Okay, so that all turned out so much longer than I thought it would. Sorry.
)
J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography by Humphrey Carpenter
The Hobbit
The History of 'The Hobbit', Parts I & II by John D. Rateliff
Tales From The Perilous Realm (Not strictly Middle-earth, but I remember "Farmer Giles of Ham" being awesome. I've learned that there's an Alan Lee-illustrated edition about to come out, so I want to wait to get that; thus, this might be delayed.)
The Lord of The Rings--50th Anniversary Edition (with The Lord of The Rings: A Reader's Companion)
Tolkien And C.S. Lewis: The Gift of Friendship by Colin Duriez
The Silmarillion
Unfinished Tales
The Children of Hurin
I'm also armed with Robert Foster's The Complete Guide To Middle-earth. And if I manage to get through all that and still want more, I have a plan for the History of Middle-earth series plus other stuff.
Now before you start going, "Oh goody, a first-time reader"... I'm hardly that! I've been quite familiar with The Hobbit and The Lord of The Rings since childhood, and this will mark my third reading of The Silmarillion. But one of the reasons I want to do this is because I find it very hard to discuss Tolkien with other people who know so much more than I do about the larger mythology, and can trace the lineages and backgrounds from memory. While I don't expect to be able to do that exactly, I'm hoping that I'll become as conversant in the stories of the First and Second Ages--the stories that, for some reason, I can follow as I read but slip out the back door of my mind afterwards; I know who Beren and Luthien are, for example, but I'd be hard-pressed to give you a good summary of their story. And it's always fun to share a journey with others. So with that in mind, here are some of the notes I made for myself while reading The Hobbit:
1) So Glamdring, Orcrist, and Sting were made in Gondolin (and Glamdring was the sword of King Turgon). How exactly did they end up in a troll's hoard at the eastern edge of The Shire? There's clearly a story to be told there, but Tolkien never wrote one.
2) Who are the "bold men of the South" making their way up into the regions between the Misty Mountains and Mirkwood (the people the Wargs and goblins are raiding)? Are they random humans, or connected to other groups like the Dunedain or Gondorians?
3) Exactly when did Gandalf meet and befriend Gwaihir, Lord of the Eagles?
4) So apparently the Wood-elves have taught the men of Laketown to make lembas, only the men call it cram (their own unique recipe?).
(Okay, so that all turned out so much longer than I thought it would. Sorry.
