The Lord Of The Rings
(J.R.R Tolkien)
One of the things I like most about The Lord of the Rings is that like Swift's Gulliver's Travels it transports the reader to another world. Tolkien, who served in the first world War well understood the horrors that men face when confronted with the inhumaneness of it and of the calculated cruelty that mankind shows each other in times of war. The first World War was also a time when trench warfare was developed and when the mechanization of war began, a fact that shines through in his writing as he describes the machines with which the Orc army assaults Gondor with in Return of the King. Another strong point in the book is that through the Hobbits Tolkien shows that sometimes it is the smallest creature that makes the most profound impact on the tide of a battle or conflict, a point I am sure George 'blood and guts' Patton would definitely agree with. We see this also as a coming of age story for the Hobbits, who leave home and make the journey not only towards the dark land of Mordor but also towards manhood as they face one conflict after another, sometimes external conflicts but sometimes also conflicts that arise within. I do believe this is a book well worth reading however I am forced to ask the question of why Tolkien invented Middle Earth in the first place when he had so much experience to share with the world about his time spent in a real war and in a real world? Nevertheless, The Lord of the Rings is a book that changed the way people looked at fantasy. One person even remarked that it was like a bolt of lightning out of a clear blue sky. Many since have tried to imitate Tolkien in the fantasy genre but as they say you can't hold a candle to an original.
Resumos Relacionados
- The Hobbit, Or There And Back Again
- The Lord Of The Rings:the Fellowship Of The Ring
- The Lord Of The Rings:the Fellowship Of The Ring
- The History Of Middle-earth
- The Children Of Hurin - Book Review
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