SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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Should I start reading the LOTR series?
message 51:
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Jim
(new)
Jun 27, 2014 08:11AM

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There was a link someone posted earlier where she gave an interview and she said she didn't like fantasy books and didn't finish reading it.

I think it's a real shame that people these days come to Tolkien after reading a lot of other fantasy first. It is far better to start there. And once you've started there you realize that a great number of other fantasy books need not have been written in the first place.





Yes, you should read Lord of the Rings, but not because it's the most important work in the fantasy genre (though it is).
You shouldn't avoid the..."


I can only agree with that one. :)
Especially since I don't know why people often don't like 'slow' books. You can't travel from The Shire to Mount Doom in under a week. Okay, jokes aside.
Books with a slow pace can actually be really great and I guess you can rarely find that in books published in the recent years since the market for books changed a lot.
Some books which are considered 'slow' actually dwell on some things too long. LotR on the other hand gives you lots of plot which makes things seem slow and long but that doesn't mean that the 'slow' parts are boring. It just means there are things happening that are not action-y.

Just saw this one. A JK Rowling interview from 2012:
Any literary genre you simply can’t be bothered with?
“Can’t be bothered with” isn’t a phrase I’d use, because my reading tastes are pretty catholic. I don’t read “chick lit,” fantasy or science fiction but I’ll give any book a chance if it’s lying there and I’ve got half an hour to kill.
I was a bit curious to see if her views had changed at all from 2005 (see my earlier post, # 50 on this thread) to the present. Apparently not.
Rather an odd statement coming from a Hugo winner, but such is life. Though my understanding is that she's actually never even bothered acknowledging her win.

Reading The Silmarillion also helped there, to catch all the allusions, but do not -- repeat, DO NOT -- read that one first. It is much farther from LOTR and The Hobbit than they are from each other.

Just saw this one. A JK Rowling interview from 2012:
Any literary genre you simply can’t be bothered with?
“Can’t..."
I find that incredible. How can she not read the genre she writes in?

I first read it in one intensive weekend in my early teens. I can not imagine having to wait to get the next volume; it would have been agony.
Ursula K. LeGuin reports having been on the library steps the next morning after having checked out Fellowship and started to read the evening before.
So, just in case you're like us -- have them all at hand.

harry and frodo both carried a supernatural wound from the enemy.
for starters

That is entirely too common in fiction in general to be a reference by itself.



Well, yeah. Dark frightening creature is hardly a link so astoundingly unique as to point to connection.

The dangerousness of willows is a trope traced back for centuries.
Elm do grieve.
Oak do hate.
Willow do walk.
If yew travels late.




Of course, I'm biased right now. I just wasted a day reading The Hunger Games. :(

Very. I loved The Hobbit and despite several tries cannot get into LotR.


Yes.
It's the mortar that almost every fantasy story has been in part built with since its release. It's like studying latin to learn the romance languages that came from it.
You start to see a lot of similarities...

I only really started reading them because that was what everyone was telling me I had to do; saying they were the ultimate fantasy books and as a true fan of fantasy I just HAD to have read them.
Why, why trudge through a book you think is dull? The literary importance of a book doesn't really matter if you're reading for fun - you should read the book if you want to, not because you think you have to.


Chris, which book did you read first?

Books mentioned in this topic
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again (other topics)The Silmarillion (other topics)