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Group Read September 2021-January 2022 (No Spoilers)
By Michael · 21 posts · 118 views
By Michael · 21 posts · 118 views
last updated Jan 31, 2022 11:38AM
Group Read January-March 2015: The Silmarillion
By deleted member · 5 posts · 127 views
By deleted member · 5 posts · 127 views
last updated Apr 18, 2023 01:00PM
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Other topics mentioning this book
Tolkien Group Read June-August 2012: The Hobbit
By Michael · 51 posts · 123 views
By Michael · 51 posts · 123 views
last updated Sep 17, 2012 02:19PM
Tolkien's "The Hobbit" as Mythology?
By Alicia · 15 posts · 224 views
By Alicia · 15 posts · 224 views
last updated Jun 01, 2016 11:02AM
What Members Thought

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
'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

Looking for a review of The Hobbit? This isn't that. Unless you count it as expressing my deep love for it, of course. Enjoy.
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” (try it!) (spoilers...)
Bilbo is respectable in Bag End Under Hill
Till “Gandalf tea Wednesday” and a rune scratched on the door.
Fili Kili Ori Óin, Dori Nori Bombur Glóin
Bifur, Dwalin, Bofur, Balin – are there any more?!
Yes: Thorin especially; Gandalf makes f ...more
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” (try it!) (spoilers...)
Bilbo is respectable in Bag End Under Hill
Till “Gandalf tea Wednesday” and a rune scratched on the door.
Fili Kili Ori Óin, Dori Nori Bombur Glóin
Bifur, Dwalin, Bofur, Balin – are there any more?!
Yes: Thorin especially; Gandalf makes f ...more

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

The interesting thing about The Hobbit is how close it came to never seeing the light of day. J.R.R. Tolkien's classic children's fantasy book only exists because he was bored while grading his students' papers and accidentally created the mythical creatures known as Hobbits.
But I think The Hobbit in particular came into being because Tolkien loved the old fairy tales and myths and couldn't find any contemporary books like the old ones he enjoyed reading. The Hobbit is such a fun book to read th ...more
But I think The Hobbit in particular came into being because Tolkien loved the old fairy tales and myths and couldn't find any contemporary books like the old ones he enjoyed reading. The Hobbit is such a fun book to read th ...more

(Reread) My rereading was motivated by
a. The last part of PJ's movie adaptation. In which man-child Richard Armitage broke my heart.
b. My reading Nicholson Baker's "The Way the World Works." In which he, like I did, could not believe that the King under the Mountain could not recover from his wound. Basically, Thorin broke our hearts.
c. The finding of a formerly unknown JRR Tolkien's recording. Also, after knowing that he *hates* industrialization. Also, knowing that the professor is first and f ...more
a. The last part of PJ's movie adaptation. In which man-child Richard Armitage broke my heart.
b. My reading Nicholson Baker's "The Way the World Works." In which he, like I did, could not believe that the King under the Mountain could not recover from his wound. Basically, Thorin broke our hearts.
c. The finding of a formerly unknown JRR Tolkien's recording. Also, after knowing that he *hates* industrialization. Also, knowing that the professor is first and f ...more


May 30, 2008
Terence
rated it
liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
speculative-fiction,
tolkieniana

Sep 12, 2008
Aldean
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
possessions,
tolkien


Aug 12, 2009
Erin J Kahn
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
favorites,
read-more-than-once