[Home]History of J. R. R. Tolkien

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Revision 17 . . (edit) December 13, 2001 9:34 pm by Cayzle [added link to Letters of JRRT]
Revision 16 . . (edit) December 13, 2001 9:22 pm by Cayzle [*added links]
Revision 15 . . November 10, 2001 5:57 pm by (logged).105.21.xxx [LOTR is not a trilogy. It's a three-volume novel.]
Revision 14 . . November 8, 2001 2:59 pm by Sjc
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

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The Hobbit (1937), intended for children but read by adults as well, achieved popularity. His most famous work was the richly inventive epic trilogy The Lord of the Rings (1954-55), which, though a direct sequel to The Hobbit, was intended for a much older audience, drawing upon the immense back-story of Middle Earth that he had constructed and that eventually saw publication as The Silmarillion and in other posthumous volumes. Tolkien at first thought that The Lord of the Rings would be another children's book like The Hobbit, but it quickly grew more dark and serious in the writing.
The Hobbit (1937), intended for children but read by adults as well, achieved popularity. His most famous work was the richly inventive epic three-volume novel The Lord of the Rings (1954-55), which, though a direct sequel to The Hobbit, was intended for a much older audience, drawing upon the immense back-story of Middle Earth that he had constructed and that eventually saw publication as The Silmarillion and in other posthumous volumes. Tolkien at first thought that The Lord of the Rings would be another children's book like The Hobbit, but it quickly grew more dark and serious in the writing.

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* 1964 [Tree and Leaf]? (On Fairy-Stories and Leaf by Niggle in book form)
* 1964 [Tree and Leaf]? (On Fairy-Stories and Leaf by Niggle in book form)

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Christopher Tolkien continued over subsequent years to publish lots of background material on the creation of Middle Earth, beginning with [Unfinished Tales]? (1980), an edition of his father's Letters (1981), and an essay collection, [The Monsters and the Critics]? (1983), and continuing with:
Christopher Tolkien continued over subsequent years to publish lots of background material on the creation of Middle Earth, beginning with [Unfinished Tales]? (1980), [The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien]? (1981), and an essay collection, [The Monsters and the Critics]? (1983), and continuing with:

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