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By Kerri , the sane one · 24 posts · 172 views
By Kerri , the sane one · 24 posts · 172 views
last updated May 25, 2012 10:37AM
What Members Thought

Full disclosure: I am a life-long Tolkien geek. Mock me, and I'll cuss you out in Elvish. And then I'll breathe a bit of fire at you.
This is the prequel to The Lord of the Rings. I actually read LOTR first when I was 9 years old (back when dinosaurs walked the earth...) and it was rough going, so I highly recommend reading The Hobbit first. It explains a lot of things that are important to the trilogy. Also, unlike LOTR, this is a children's book. It's not just for children, by any means, but it ...more
This is the prequel to The Lord of the Rings. I actually read LOTR first when I was 9 years old (back when dinosaurs walked the earth...) and it was rough going, so I highly recommend reading The Hobbit first. It explains a lot of things that are important to the trilogy. Also, unlike LOTR, this is a children's book. It's not just for children, by any means, but it ...more

There's no need to restate what's been said by a multitude of other Tolkien lovers, so here are my favorite things:
1) Tolkien's conversational style made me giggle in places. When he says things like, "You will remember this..." or "There's no need to tell you this..." to the reader I love it. He's the only writer who can take such liberties and remain in my good graces. With anyone else that would be annoying.
2) The characterization of Bilbo Baggins is genius. I related to him so strongly! He w ...more
1) Tolkien's conversational style made me giggle in places. When he says things like, "You will remember this..." or "There's no need to tell you this..." to the reader I love it. He's the only writer who can take such liberties and remain in my good graces. With anyone else that would be annoying.
2) The characterization of Bilbo Baggins is genius. I related to him so strongly! He w ...more

The Hobbit was a big part of my childhood, but here is the weird part.
I never read the novel.
I read the graphic novel adaptation a few times but what mostly fueled my knowledge of the plot was the 1977 animated film. I also decided I needed to read the novel as part of my “classics Bucket list” and also before I saw the second installment of the Peter Jackson movies. (So I won’t be those types of people who watch the movies but never make an attempt at the novels) However the animated film is p ...more
I never read the novel.
I read the graphic novel adaptation a few times but what mostly fueled my knowledge of the plot was the 1977 animated film. I also decided I needed to read the novel as part of my “classics Bucket list” and also before I saw the second installment of the Peter Jackson movies. (So I won’t be those types of people who watch the movies but never make an attempt at the novels) However the animated film is p ...more

Love the illustrations on this one. The artwork is so whimsical. I also like the fact that aside from the most popular scenes, little illustrations of details from the scenes (the boat on the river in Mirkwood, the clock on Bilbo's mantelpiece, Gandalf's mark on Bilbo's door) appear here and there, livening up pages with big chunks of text.
...more

May 07, 2009
Rapacious Reader Rudy S.
marked it as to-read


Oct 20, 2009
Kitty Marie
marked it as to-read

May 07, 2010
Stephanie
rated it
really liked it
Shelves:
read-2010,
1001-books-to-read-before-you-die-r


Jun 24, 2013
Mariana Jaramillo
marked it as to-read

Oct 10, 2013
Susan Smith
added it

Nov 02, 2013
Stacie
rated it
liked it
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review of another edition
Shelves:
classics,
audio-books,
young-adult,
adventure,
fantasy,
fiction,
300-books-in-2014,
250-books-in-2014

Sep 09, 2020
Danielle
marked it as to-read