Never too Late to Read Classics discussion

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The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
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2018 February: Fantasy Read ~ The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
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I have never seen the movies, because I felt I wanted to read the books first, as it was meant to be. My husband has seen the movies but not read the books. When I showed him the Harry Potter movies, he called Dumbledore my generation’s Gandalf. (He is 10 yrs older than me.) having read some of the first chapter last night, I understand his comparison now past simply the appearance of the two characters.

But the book is fine. Keep in mind it was originally written as a children's book, so its tone is a bit lighter and less serious than The Lord of the Rings.
I too have read The Hobbit many times. I saw the first Hobbit movie and that was enough for me. The book is much lighter than the movie, and much more charming.

And wouldn't you just like to live in the peaceful Shire?
In Chapter 3 "A Short Rest", I absolutely love the description of Elrond, specifically "as kind as summer" That is a beautiful use of personification to me. As I am reading 4 books simultaneously right now, I have not yet devoted as much time to this one as I would like. So far, I find the story mesmerizing and see myself reading it much more often.



You know, Trisha, I am not particularly a fantasy book reader either. But this is just so well written. And timeless too. Keep on reading.

I love how the book is written as if Tolkien (or simply, the narrator) is talking to the reader. It makes the story feel like a buddy is reading with me.

Sydney wrote: "What a book for all time, this is! Have read it and the trilogy 5-6 times, read the series to my children, and am about to begin reading the series to my grandchildren (we are finishing The Chronic..."
Good for you, Grandma! Every child deserves to hear this book, and every adult should read it again.
Good for you, Grandma! Every child deserves to hear this book, and every adult should read it again.
I finished the book 2 days ago. I could’ve finished it probably last weekend, but I wanted to stretch it out. This is one book I did not want to end.


I fall asleep with books on my face.
For my part, I only came to know that it was a children's classic after I finished the read. Had I known that before my read I would have liked it better.
This is the first step of the adventure that would span to the Lord of the Rings series. And the Hobbit tells the story of Bilbo's adventure with a group of dwarfs led by Thorin to reclaim the Lonely Mountain and their treasure in it from a dragon.
The proper order of read then should be from Hobbit to the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. But I have read this in reverse order and felt that Hobbit lacked the richness of Lord of the Rings.
Now I know why Hobbit is written the way it is. It is after all a children classic which is written in a simple fun way to entertain them, And the narration is like a grandfather reading a bedtime story to his grandchildren.
This is the first step of the adventure that would span to the Lord of the Rings series. And the Hobbit tells the story of Bilbo's adventure with a group of dwarfs led by Thorin to reclaim the Lonely Mountain and their treasure in it from a dragon.
The proper order of read then should be from Hobbit to the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. But I have read this in reverse order and felt that Hobbit lacked the richness of Lord of the Rings.
Now I know why Hobbit is written the way it is. It is after all a children classic which is written in a simple fun way to entertain them, And the narration is like a grandfather reading a bedtime story to his grandchildren.
Trisha wrote: "I’ve never read this & am not sure that I want to, as I don’t usually enjoy fantasy books. But I’m starting it now & look forward to joining the discussions here."
I'm not a fantasy fan either, Trisha. But then, when it is a one written by Tolkien, it is hard to resist.
I'm not a fantasy fan either, Trisha. But then, when it is a one written by Tolkien, it is hard to resist.
Manybooks wrote: "I love Tolkien's world, myth and language building. Liked the Hobbit, but loved Lord of the Rings and the Silmarillion. But feel almost in awe of attempting reviews."
I have read Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, but not the Silmarillion. I do have the book with me and want to read it at some point.
If I'm to read all in the series in order, where does Silmarillion fit? Would you be able to help, Manybooks?
I have read Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, but not the Silmarillion. I do have the book with me and want to read it at some point.
If I'm to read all in the series in order, where does Silmarillion fit? Would you be able to help, Manybooks?

I have read..."
The Silmarillion happens before either the Hobbit or LOTR. And it is very different, almost biblical. It is not for everyone but I love it, but one needs to approach it like reading mythology or the Bible (and there are huge lists of names).
Manybooks wrote: "Piyangie wrote: "Manybooks wrote: "I love Tolkien's world, myth and language building. Liked the Hobbit, but loved Lord of the Rings and the Silmarillion. But feel almost in awe of attempting revie..."
Thank you for you information and advise. Appreciate it very much. I'm currently reading The Iliad by Homer. I hope that it will be a starting point for me to practice on reading such difficult books.
Thank you for you information and advise. Appreciate it very much. I'm currently reading The Iliad by Homer. I hope that it will be a starting point for me to practice on reading such difficult books.

The main point for me about appreciating the Silmarillion is to take one's time and not to assume one is reading either a novel or even a typical epic but rather a text like the Bible and other religious, mythological documents (and to realise that Tolkien was actually trying to create the latter, a true mythology).

My daughter pointed out to me that the battle near the end of the third Hobbit movie, which lasted a long time, was covered by two pages in the book.
I think that the movie producers forgot that the Hobbit is a children's book.
I think that the movie producers forgot that the Hobbit is a children's book.
With the book stretched into 3 movies, and the movies as good as the book? I can see much of the action taking a lot of movie time, but 3 movies seems like a lot for a typical novel length book. I can’t help but wonder if the movies have a lot of filler or scenes stretched out for no real reason except money.

I think that the movie producers forgot that th..."
One reason I have not seen the movies!

A pure cash grab.
Wow. Good to know. For those that have read the book and watched the movies, are the movies even worth the time? Or is this case the epitome of “the book was better”?

That’s definitely something to take into consideration. I have someone who is a huge Tolkien fan. I’ll have. To ask him what he thinks.
I myself really enjoyed the movies, but I had not read the trilogy first. I almost always enjoy the books over the movie.
The only movie I found as enjoyable as the book, with reading the book first is The Firm by John Grisham, hard to tell them apart.
The only movie I found as enjoyable as the book, with reading the book first is The Firm by John Grisham, hard to tell them apart.
I loved the Lord of the Rings movies, although the books were better. But I loved the Hobbit movies better than the book.
I watched the first of the Hobbit movies and that was enough.
I watched all of The Lord of the Rings movies and enjoyed them.
I have read the books numerous times.
I watched all of The Lord of the Rings movies and enjoyed them.
I have read the books numerous times.

I reread the Hobbit not that long ago, and I wasn't planning on rereading LOTR any time soon, but that remark of yours, Manybooks, has got me curious. I just may move those books up on my list. 😉

I should reread LOTR as well.
I am a Tolkien fan and I just watched the first and the second movies. I will not watch the third one. Although I did not like The Hobbit as much I like the other Legendarium books the movies don't worth my time. The book could be adapted in just one movie, but money rules so they stretched it.
I like the The Lord of the Rings movies.
I like the The Lord of the Rings movies.
Rafael, I agree about the Hobbit movies. It was mostly about money. As a Tolkien fan, I was disappointed that the Hobbit was stretched out over three movies.
Gandalf tricks Bilbo into hosting a party for Thorin and his band of dwarves, who sing of reclaiming the Lonely Mountain and its vast treasure from the dragon Smaug. When the music ends, Gandalf unveils a map showing a secret door into the Mountain and proposes that the dumbfounded Bilbo serve as the expedition's "burglar". The dwarves ridicule the idea, but Bilbo, indignant, joins despite himself.