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C00002 00002 [This story is an excellent example of media distortion. I doubt that the
C00010 00003 [This article, from the Wall Street Journal, needs no comments. -- MRC]
C00020 00004 [Royalty, yet!]
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Cā;
[This story is an excellent example of media distortion. I doubt that the
author article read either "The Silmarillion" or "The Lord of the Rings".
The inaccuracies in this article are frightening, especially considering
its wide publication. I am hoping that a better article will be released
soon.
What the critics do not consider is that "The Silmarillion" is not a
popular novel, as LotR is, nor was it intended to be. Instead, it is an
attempt of an accurate rendering of the legends of the First and Second
Ages of Middle Earth, including the history of the Valar, the Elves, and
Men, and where the origins of Dwarves, Ents, and Orcs are also for the
first time recounted. It recounts matters that were ancient history even
at the time of the Third Age of Middle Earth, when the events popularized
in "The Hobbit" and LotR occured; yet everything that happened in the end
of the Third Age had its origins in the First Age.
In my opinion, because of this "The Silmarillion" is a much better book
than LotR, and again its worse criticism must be that it is too short.
Despite some points where clearly the book could have been better, the
genius of its author shows through. "The Silmarillion", because it was
never finished, achieves its greatness.
What comfort there is from the article arises mostly in that the critics
clearly have no understanding of Tolkien; phrases such as "allegory" (or
"trilogy", although that doesn't occur here) indicate their ignorance. It
is to the book's credit that such people criticise it.
In any case, for better or worse, here it is. When I could not restrain
myself, I have added comments. -- MRC]
By ED BLANCHE
Associated Press Writer
LONDON (AP) - J. R. R. Tolkien's posthumous epic ''The Silmarillion'' was
published today, and the critics agreed that it's not up to ''The Lord of
the Rings.'' But the publishers are sure it will be a best seller.
''We have a first edition print of 800,000 in Britain and the United
States,'' said a spokesman for Allen and Unwin, the British publishers.
Tolkien, a professor of English at Oxford University for 34 years, started
''The Silmarillion'' in 1916 but left it a jumbled mass of much-rewritten
manuscript when he died in 1973 at the age of 81. It was assembled and
edited by his son Christopher, a lecturer in English at Oxford and his
father's literary executor.
[MRC - The covering of Tolkien's personal history is too brief, but would
be excusable for a short article had the next three paragraphs not been
included.]
The book, planned as Tolkien's final work, is a descriptive pre-history of
the mythical, allegorical world of Middle Earth that Tolkien created in
''The Lord of the Rings'' and populated with the Hobbits, a race of little
people given to overeating and family trees.
[MRC - What truth there is in this paragraph is deeply submerged under the
misconceptions.]
''The Lord of the Rings'' is a collection of adventure tales describing
the heroic quest of a Hobbit named Frodo to destroy a fatal ring - the
source of evil - and his encounters with monsters, natural dangers and the
power of evil.
[MRC - It is clear that the author merely read a review or synopsis of
LotR.]
''The Silmarillion,'' which the publishers call a ''prequel'' to ''The
Rings,'' opens in the land of Numenor, a star-shaped island from which the
characters journey to Middle Earth before the days of the Hobbit.
[MRC - Totally false. The author obviously did not read "The
Silmarillion"; otherwise he would not talk about Nu'menor, which was not
founded until the Second Age, in the context of the creation.]
It explains the creation of Middle Earth, covers its First and Second Ages
and makes clearer the past often referred to in ''The Rings.'' But it only
refers to the Hobbits once.
[MRC - True, and the whole of the article could be improved with this
paragraph remaining out of the previous four.]
''Is it as good as 'The Lord of the Rings'?'' critic John Ezard asked in
his review in The Guardian. ''No, not by a long chalk. Yet . . . the
stories, even in their undeveloped promise, come close to the best in
European legend.''
Ezard also said the new book was Tolkien's ''Genesis, Exodus, Paradise
Lost and Drowning of Atlantis rolled into one.''
''I found it heavy going,'' Terence Ryle reported in the Daily Express.
''The style is so consciously that of the King James version of the Bible
that it grates in a way 'The Rings' never did.''
Christopher Tolkien is working on the rest of his father's papers and has
said he expects to publish a number of poems and short stories from them.
But he said ''The Silmarillion'' is probably the last major Tolkien work.
[This article, from the Wall Street Journal, needs no comments. -- MRC]
A SUPERB ADDITION TO TOLKIEN'S MYTHOLOGICAL REALM
By EDMUND FULLER
Few books have been as eagerly awaited by a large audience as "The
Silmarillion," by J.R.R. Tolkien. It was rumored as a tantalizing,
legendary work during Prof. Tolkien's lifetime. After his death, in
September 1973, his devotees were fearful they might never see it. Now
here it is, thanks to the dedicated editing of his son, Christopher, to
whom the task was bequeathed. It is worth the long wait.
It is the background and prior history of those vastly popular works "The
Hobbit" and the trilogy "The Lord of the Rings." They set forth
portentous events in what Prof. Tolkien called the Third Age of Middle
Earth. "The Silmarillon" and other units of the volume encompass the
Creation and the First and Second Ages, completing the fabric of his
extraordinary personal mythology.
I first heard of "The Silmarillion" from Prog. Tolkien himself, in two
long conversations with him at his home near Oxford, in 1962, when I was
submitting for his comment one of the first critical appreciations of his
work. He wrote "The Silmarillion" long before "The Hobbit" and the
trilogy. The true link between those later, but first-published books and
"The Silmarillion" was an emergent awareness in his own consciousness, and
it resulted in some modifications of all of them.
For the history of this unique body of work, and comprehension of its
"sub-creator" (his own word; he insisted always that there is only one
Creator), read the first full-scale, authorized biography, "Tolkien," by
Humphrey Carpenter (Houghton Mifflin, 287 pages, $10), which is splendidly
done and invaluable. I recommend also an unusual little book, "Tolkien
and `The Silmarillion,'" by Clyde S. Kilby (Harold Shaw Publishers, Box
567, 340 Gunderson Drive, Wheaton, Ill., 60187, 89 ppages, $3.95). Prof.
Kilby spent the summer of 1966 as a voluntary assistant to Tolkien.
"The Silmarillion" was an accretion, so diffuse a collection of of
elements, with so many variants, that Prof. Tolkien, always a
perfectionist, always tempted to start all over again when he undertook to
revise anything, simply never could focus it into final form. He came to
understand that Christopher would have to do it for him and did what he
could to pave the way.
Christopher Tolkien has carried out that charge superbly. I had expected
an import addition to a body of work but thought its interest might be
secondary or historical. Instead, it is a work of power, eloquence, and
noble vision that would be notable even if "The Hobbit" and "The Lord of
the Rings" had never been. Yet I would still recommend that a person
first approaching Tolkien being with "The Hobbit," for the deceptively
simply, "childlike" (a fine word) flow of its narrative, becoming
increasingly complex in the development of the trilogy, prepares the way
for the high vein of "The Silmarillion."
This volume begins with "Ainulindale: Te Music of the Ainur," a brief
account of the Creation. Equally brief, "Valaquenta" pursues that great
conflict among what would elsewhere be called angels, in which Melkor,
later known as Morgoth, is the equivalent of Milton's Lucifer. Then come
the 24 long chapters of the "Quenta Silmarillion: The History of the
Silmarils." These are three jewels of extraordinary brilliancy and other
properties, made by the Elf Feanor. (Tolkien's Elves are of human scale
but of greater powers.) There is a struggle for their possession, use,
and misuse, among Morgoth, Elves, Dwarves, and Men. "...the inner fire of
the Silmarils Feanor made of the blended light of the Trees of Valinor,"
long perished, which illumined Middle Earth before the Sun and the Moon
were created or men came.
There follow two other short sections which are the bridge to the Third
Age. "Akallabeth" shows the downfall of Numenor, noble realm of the West,
and the growing powr of Sauron, the adversary in the later stories, though
lesser than Morgoth. "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age" completes
the linkage. There are maps, genealogies, notes on pronunciation, an
index of names, and other appendices.
In his brief Foreword, Christopher Tolkien explains the premises of the
work. While the outline of the history of Middle Earth is now complete,
there is a promise of more particulars in "a wealth of unpublished writing
by my father concerning the Three Ages, narrative, linguistic, historical,
and philsophical, and I hope that it will prove possible to puish some of
this at a later date."
Like his friends C.S. Lewis and Charles Williams, like Milton, like
Spenser, like Malory, Tolkien's mythology is a variation on the
fundamental images of the Judeo-Christian tradition of the Creator and the
Creation, of God and the Adversary, of men and their relations with other
creatures, and of the ultimate choices which men must make. Thus they are
great teaching stories wrapped in the fabric of high adventure. They are
not escapist because they confront us, in symbolic tales, with kinds of
commitments which we would like to escape but cannot. Judgement is here
as well as inspiration.
To single out just one unit from this heart-lifting work, the tale of
Beren and Luthien, with the noble dog Huan, soars above all. Mr.
Caprenter tells us that it was the most loved by Tolkien of all his
stories; the names "Beren" and "Luthien" are on the gravestones of Tolkien
and his wife.
Tolkien is not for every taste, but for the millions, in many languages,
who vibrate to him, he is a lasting joy. "The Silmarillion" is the last
structural block of his edifice, among the noblest of its elements.
Beware those hailed as his imitators, who try to conjure up the exotic
with sound and fury but lack the deep underpinnings of J.R.R. Tolkien's
theology, philosophy, scholarship and life commitment.
[Royalty, yet!]
a318 2058 04 Oct 77
AM-Queen-Tolkien,280
COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) - A deluxe edition of J. R. R. Tolkien's trilogy
''Lord of the Rings,'' with illustrations by the Queen of Denmark, has
sold out, the book's publisher said Tuesday.
The 37-year-old queen, Margrethe Alexandrine Thorhildur Ingrid, belongs to
the worldwide following of Tolkien, the late Oxford professor who created
a cult with his tales of medieval myths and legends. He is best known as
the creator of ''The Hobbit.''
The queen, using the pseudonym Ingahild Grathmer, drew 80 black and white
ilustrations for the 1,500 numbered copies of the special edition that
sells for $165, the Forum Publishing House said.
A spokesman insisted that the true identity of the artist was leaked
accidentally but he did not deny that the queen's link to the book helped
boost prepublication sales.
Sources said the queen did the drawings ''just for the fun of it'' before
ascending to the throne in 1972. She mailed them privately to Tolkien,
with whom she corresponded until his death in 1973, they said.
A Forum Publishing House representative came across the drawings in the
archives of London's Folio Society and secured them for the limited
edition, a company spokesman said. The books are to go on sale here
Friday.
Bold and simple, the queen's drawings were praised by professional
illustrators, who said in Danish newspapers they were ''surprisingly well
composed.''
The publishing house spokesman said the queen was paid ''just like any
other illustrator,'' but the fee was being donated to charity. He did not
say how much the fee was.
2358pED 10-04
***************