The Hobbit
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The Hobbit (Middle-earth Universe)

4.18 of 5 stars 4.18  ·  rating details  ·  1,046,555 ratings  ·  20,301 reviews
Bilbo Baggins is a reasonably typical hobbit: fond of sleeping, eating, drinking, parties and presents. However, it is his destiny to travel to the dwarflands in the east, to help slay the dragon Smaug. His quest takes him through enchanted forests, spiders' lairs, and under the Misty Mountains, where he comes across the vile Gollum, and tricks him out of his 'Precious' -...more
Paperback, 287 pages
Published 1977 by Ballantine Books (first published September 21st 1937)

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Ceridwen
Sep 19, 2009 Ceridwen rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: the boy
Recommended to Ceridwen by: Grandma Dory
I've undertaken to read this to the boy; our first real book with chapters. Richard and I alternate reading at bedtime, so the experience is kind of fractured, but so far I'm loving it. I got to be trolls tonight. I do brilliant trolls.

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When I was six, my dad, who was more the reader-at-nighter of my parents, endeavored to read The Hobbit to me. He got to the part about the giant spiders in Mirkwood, and I promptly lost my damn mind, and begged him to stop reading. He did. My room at the ti...more
Matt
Aug 26, 2008 Matt rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Children, parents, all those that stay children in their hearts
Shelves: childrens, fantasy
Some books are almost impossible to review. If a book is bad, how easily can we dwell on its flaws! But if the book is good, how do you give any recommendation that is equal the book? Unless you are an author of equal worth to the one whose work you review, what powers of prose and observation are you likely to have to fitly adorn the work?

'The Hobbit' is at one level simply a charming adventure story, perhaps one of the most charming and most adventurous ever told. There, see how simple that w...more
Seak (Bryce L.)
Dec 28, 2012 Seak (Bryce L.) rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Seak (Bryce L.) by: Mrs. Burrows, my 8th Grade English Teacher
Shelves: fantasy
Amazing.

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The above was my first review of this and really summed things up quite succinctly. Below is actually a review of the first of the trilogy of movies following The Hobbit (kinda).
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There have been lots of thoughts on this movie already, but I felt I needed to add my two cents, because, well, lots of people are just plain wrong.

Okay, maybe people have good reason to be disappointed with The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, but I wanted to tell you why you shou...more
Scott
There are some days when I actually think that the humble Hobbit is superior to it's bohemoth brother, The Lord of the Rings . It's a much tighter story, and Bilbo is a much more appeal character than is Frodo. I also just love this poem, from The Hobbit

Far over the misty mountains cold
To dungeons deep and caverns old
We must away ere break of day
To seek the pale enchanted gold.

The dwarves of yore made mighty spells,
While hammers fell like ringing bells
In places deep, where dark things sleep,
In h...more
Will Byrnes
In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.
Books exist in time and place and our experience of them is affected by the specific time and place in which we encounter them. Sometimes an uplifting or inspiring book can change the path of a life that has wandered onto a wrong course. Sometimes a book, discovered early on, can form part of the foundation of who we are. Or, discovered late, can offer insight into the journey we have taken to date. Sometimes a book is just a book. But not The Hobbit...more
Jason Koivu
From a hole in the ground came one of my favorite characters of all time, the very reluctant and unassuming hero of the story, Bilbo Baggins. As a child, The Hobbit sparked my young imagination, causing wonderful daydreams and horrible nightmares. As a teen, the book made me want to become a writer of fantastical tales...or go shoeless, live in a hole and smoke a pipe. As an adult, Tolkien's novel maintains within me a link to my childhood, safekeeping cherished memories and evoking everlasting...more
Megan
Feb 18, 2013 Megan rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Everyone
Shelves: favorites, 2013
Honestly I'm not even sure about how to write this review. How do you review a book that has such an impact on your life, stretching all the way from your childhood? J.R.R. Tolkien was my first, and still is, my favorite author of all time. Ever since 5th grade when I stole my hermano's Lord of the Rings book (all three in one!) and trotted around school reading it every chance I got, even had it taken away once or twice, yeah I was that kid, I loved the world of Middle Earth. While I read The H...more
Traveller
Maybe one day soon I'll write a proper review of The Hobbit.

In the meantime, I want to say this:

If you are a child, you need to read this for Gollum's riddles.

If you are an adult, you need to read this book to children (if you don't have children, rent some) for at least one opportunity to roleplay Gollum.


GOLLUM ROOOLZ!!!!!




See here, he even won an award!!

Of course the most compelling reason to add this to your reading list in haste is that it's coming to the MOOVIEZZZ!!

Soon at a cinema house...more
Kat Lowe
So you're a modern person. Would you like to see how someone who lived during another time looked at life? Take Tolkien, for example...

He wrote this book between WWI and WWII. So this story is centered on the effects of warfare, the cost of it, and also the ability of individuals to sacrifice for things that they believed in. The modern PC world has a conniption fit at the idea of kids reading anything but the most white washed version of warfare. And yet, when this was released, it was unabashe...more
Jonathan

I love this book. Have I mentioned before how much I love Tolkien's books? They are part of my childhood and my memories are incredibly fond of them (yes I'm a nostalgic type of person alright). The Hobbit in many ways is of all my books part of my childhood. I was certainly the first time that I entered Tolkien's world when I first read it ten years ago. So I decided to re-read this for the fifth time ever as part of a fantasy challenge and to re-familiarise myself with a story I know by heart....more
Chris
2012 - Reread - What to add to my original review for this site? I don't. There is something everlasting and yet almost tragic about this book. Thorin doesn't fail but he does not live very long to enjoy his victory, if you can call it his. Perhaps that grey zone is what make the book last.

Some time ago, Harold Bloom went on a Harry Potter rant. He is hardly the only academic to do so. In fact, A. S. Byatt wrote a wonderful essay on how strange and annoying she finds adults who read Harry Potter...more
Loederkoningin
The Hobbit and LOTR are so epic that even now when I go on a hike, I always pretend that my chocolate chip cookies to go are actually Lembas.
Eh?Eh!
May 31, 2010 Eh?Eh! rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: parents (maybe)
Recommended to Eh?Eh! by: Caris, Ceridwen C
I wish I could count this among my childhood nostalgia books.

I remember trying to read this book in grade-school and stopping because there was too much boring scenery and background. I must've been too young because it isn't boring at all, and there isn't all that much scenery as I'd thought and hardly any background. But as I kept reading, this flipped into a feeling that I'm reading this far too old, not young. The voice of the narrator is odd, generally the vague omniscient overlooking tone...more
Kwesi 章英狮
Sep 28, 2011 Kwesi 章英狮 rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Kwesi 章英狮 by: Emir Never
Shelves: j-r-r-tolkien, 2011, owned
Bilbo Baggins is a normal hobbit, only wanted is a peaceful life and a home loving type. But one day when Gandalf tricked Bilbo to host a party for Thorin and the gang, he was ridiculed and forced to join the team to explore the land within the imagination of Tolkien. Bilbo, the band and the reader met new faces from orcs, eagles, and other mystical creature that fought within stories by stories. Imaginative Tolkien once again made his famous children's book of all time.

If I'm a little bit you...more
Joel Simon
There are not many books that I have read twice. The first time I read The Hobbit, I liked it a lot. But I hadn't read The Lord of the Rings trilogy, and still haven't (so I guess I didn't like The Hobbit enough). But it brought a smile to my face when I saw it on our shelf this past summer and I decided that I would read it aloud to my 10 year old daughter. In reading it aloud, a few things happened. First, it took a very long time to read the whole book (8 months, in fact). Some of this was du...more
Archer
Well hello my fellow book worms.

I have been remiss in my reviewing of late and for that I apologise. I could bury you with excuses but I find that honesty has always been the best policy for this kind of crap.

I lost my passion for it in the latter half of 2012. I didn’t want to write. Yes, most of you can guess the reasons why, but then I realised that I wasn’t changing anything by letting it get on top of me so I retreated into the novel that got me through a lot of my childhood. I hid in the a...more
Tanu
The Hobbit is the epic journey of Bilbo Baggins, our titular 50 something hobbit. Bilbo though might as well be 10 year old, since he has almost no experience of the outside world and likes to sit in his Hobbit hole, resting in his armchair having breakfast, supper and dinner and numerous meals in between. That is, until Gandalf the great comes barging in with a dozen of dwarfs, urging him to take up the role of the burglar in their quest to The Lonely Mountains. The dwarfs question Gandalf’s de...more
Brigid *Flying Kick-a-pow!*
Actual Rating: 4.5 Stars

This was my second experience reading The Hobbit. My first was that my dad read it to me and my sisters back when I was 12, I think. Since I'm 20 now that means it had been ... 8 years. Shit I'm old.

I admit, I re-read this mostly because the movie was coming out. And I had to see it because MARTIN FREEMAN.



I MEAN, JUST LOOK AT HIM. HOW CAN YOU RESIST. <3 (Also he was perfect in the movie and just UGHH YESSS. The movie was good. But this isn't a review of the movie so I'...more
Suna
Apr 07, 2011 Suna rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Humans, Hobbits, Elves, Beornings. But not Trolls, Wargs, or Goblins.
In anticipation of the movie - and I anticipate, eagerly! - I thought I'd pull my socks up and try to do what I've copped out of doing before: Reviewing Tolkien's work.

This is the easiest book to review though, as it is also the most accessible of his writings.
There is none of the poetically archaic lyricism that emerges in LOTR.
It's the thing most people I know get into contact with first:
Through having had it read to them by their parents when they were but bairns.

I read it when I was fourte...more
Terry
I have a long and very personal history with _The Hobbit_. My first experience of it was, I think, at the age of 7 or 8 when my older brother (13 years my senior) read the story to me and I was immediately captivated. After that came readings from the LotR and I was a Tolkien fan forevermore. My re-reading of _The Hobbit_ immediately prior to my most recent one was a bit of a disappointment. Somehow the same old magic didn’t all seem to be there and I was perhaps most discomfited by the gaps in...more
Adam
My parents had a BBC version of this on vinyl when I was about 3-4 years old, and they taped it for me onto four or five analog tapes that I listened to every morning. I'd spend hours and hours at the beginning of each day listening to the British actor read these words, taking them to heart and memorizing them until they became rote. By the time I was five, you could start me at any point in the book and I could continue on, word for word spilling out of my young mouth. I remember gathering thr...more
Jenny
(Finished the book but my readalong group won't finish until end of December, so I'll update the blog links as they post, and return for a full review.)

Reading this along with a group of book bloggers in November and December, so this will be a long read (the book itself is not that long!). In December, the Sword & Laser group is also reading it, so this book will be in our collective memory.

My thoughts on chapters I-II.
My thoughts on chapters III-V (I have questions about the creatures, com...more
Eric Allen
The Hobbit
By J.R.R. Tolkien

A Retroview by Eric Allen

Long, long ago, in the era of big hair, terrible, low budget movies, and New Coke... The eighties, people, I'm talking about the eighties. I was a young whipper snapper who idolized his father... and Luke Skywalker... but mostly my father. My favorite time of day was when he came home from long hours working construction on several prominent buildings amongst the present day Seattle skyline, tossed his jacket into the closet without bothering t...more
Stefan
Jun 17, 2012 Stefan rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Everybody
Recommended to Stefan by: My Dad
Shelves: favorites
I received this beautiful 1966 leather-bound edition of The Hobbit as a result of winning a contest on author G.T. Denny's blog. I wanted to publicly thank him for such a wonderful prize which, of course inspired me to re-read the novel.

The Hobbit is a tale that I will always hold near and dear to my heart. My father first read it to me when I was around five years old and I have had a love of fantasy in my heart from that point forward. The time that we spent together journeying with Bilbo and...more
Tracey
**spoilers**

I can't review The Hobbit: it's part of me, so I can't be objective.

Instead, kick on the karaoke machine.

He Didn’t Mean To Adventure
- The story of The Hobbit, singable to the tune of Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire”

Bilbo is respectable in Bag End Under Hill
Till “Gandalf tea Wednesday” and a rune scratched on his door.
Fili Kili Ori Óin, Dori Nori Bombur Glóin
Bifur, Dwalin, Bofur, Balin - are there any more?!
Yes: Thorin especially; Gandalf makes fourteen
An Unexpected Party,...more
Bryon Medina
Dec 21, 2007 Bryon Medina rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Anyone who can comprehend it.
This book took me on a great adventure, one that took me through a great range of emotions, and I have to say, it must be the cutest adventure I've ever been on. How can you not adore Bilbo and his hobbit friends with thier furry feet and quaint past-times?
Of course, by the same Tolkien (pun intended), how can you not be afraid for Bilbo as he faces trolls, gobblins, men, and numerous other dangers? I for one don't know how you couldn't, not with J.R.R.'s gift for character development. I quic...more
Mariel
Oct 25, 2010 Mariel rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: over the hills and far away
Recommended to Mariel by: my mother
I wrote a book report on The Hobbit when I was fourteen. My teacher made fun of me, slipping in not-so-sly jokes for the rest of the year. Jerk face! The Hobbit is awesome, I tells you!

I have more than enough fond memories of this book (and some not so fond ones, involving other snobby male teachers besides the above mentioned one). I could make new fond memories if I were to pick it up and reread today, I have no doubt. That makes it an always favorite and not just a nostalgia favorite.

My mom...more
Palice Pottle
Feb 20, 2013 Palice Pottle marked it as apologies-did-not-get-to-finish  ·  review of another edition
Ah, here we go.

I need to read half of this before Tuesday. I have a feeling I won't...

When there's so much reading to do in a short amount of time, I'm just like nooooo! Get it away! Get it away! I don't wanna read -- you can't make meee!

But I'll do it anyway. Except you know those the tiny, tiny things that you can overlook when you choose to read a book? Yeah? Well, those tiny, tiny things start to become REALLY annoying to me when I'm forced to read a book.

So let's hope I enjoy this. I hea...more
Jon
Apr 10, 2013 Jon added it  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Jon by: Fantasy Book Club Nov 2009 Selection
5 stars

Due to the acquisition of GoodReads by Amazon on March 28, 2013 and my existing and continuing boycott of all things Amazon, the review I wrote after reading this book now resides, safe and secure, at my blog. You can read it by following this link: http://bit.ly/YmKq2R
Kat
The Hobbit is what really sparked my love of reading. I first came across this book at school, in the English departments private book-room, many years ago. For whatever reason on that fateful day, the door to that special room was open just a crack, the first time and only time i ever saw it like that, and it only took me a second to slip inside and shut the door silently behind myself. I only intended to have a quick look around, and enjoy the feeling of having a room full of great literature...more
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The Hobbit (Middle-earth Universe)
The Hobbit (Paperback)
The Hobbit or There and Back Again (Paperback)
The Hobbit  (Hardcover)
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again (Paperback)

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John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, CBE, was an English writer, poet, philologist, and university professor, best known as the author of the high fantasy classic works The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings .

Tolkien was Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford from 1925 to 1945, and Merton Professor of English language and literature from 1945 to 1959. He was a close friend of C.S. Lewis.

Ch...more
More about J.R.R. Tolkien...
The Fellowship of the Ring (The Lord of the Rings, #1) The Two Towers (The Lord of the Rings, #2) The Return of the King (The Lord of the Rings, #3) The Lord of the Rings (The Lord of the Rings, #1-3) The Hobbit

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