Tolkien Gleanings #369

Tolkien Gleanings #369

* The Tolkien Society appears to have set the dates for its big gathering in 2027. The TolkienGuide’s Events page has ‘Tolkien 2027’ as set for 18th – 22nd August 2027 at the Hilton Birmingham Metropole, the hotel for the UK’s National Exhibition Centre (NEC). The NEC is far out in the countryside between Birmingham and Coventry, conveniently adjacent to Birmingham International Airport and also well-served by inter-city trains.

* A new article has been added to the new rolling edition of Journal of Tolkien Research, “Belliphonic Tolkien: Listening to the Wars in Middle-earth”. Freely available online. The article focuses on the described soundscape of war and battle in Middle-earth, and draws on a recent cluster of wider research on ‘belliphonics’. Freely available online.

“Tolkien’s immersion in classical, Anglo-Saxon, and Norse literature, combined with his experience of World War I, enabled him to create richly layered battle sounds in which horns, cries, silence, and environmental acoustics carry narrative and psychological weight.”

* Zackery Arbela’s blog muses on Tolkien and Nostalgia and Robert E. Howard and Nostalgia. R.E. Howard’s…

“heroes do not embark on great adventures to save the world, there are no humble hobbits or noble rangers in [his] Hyborian Age. Conan and Kull are men out for themselves. [This was likely a natural outgrowth of the author growing up in Texas towns] at a time when the Frontier had only just closed, in] cowtowns and boomtowns steeped in tales of gunfights, outlaws and Indian raids. The Texas oil boom of the early 20th century was at its height [and Howard was in the thick of it in his early manhood], bringing with it a massive increase in crime, vice and bare-knuckle violence. Indeed, it is this fatalistic view of human existence that differentiates Howard’s nostalgia from Tolkien’s. The Lord of the Rings saw the restoration of an older, civilized order to its rightful place, leaving the darkness behind to live in the light. But to Howard such an order was unnatural and could not last. Civilizations were doomed to fail; no matter how high they climbed”.

A starting comparison for a basic understanding, but he might want to delve into the complexity of Tolkien’s position on ‘the long defeat’ and the place of hopeful struggle and restoration within it. Howard’s position is also equally complex (e.g. see the two volumes of his 1930s letters to H.P. Lovecraft, where the barbarism vs. civilisation position is argued out with subtlety and at great length). Had the authors not had such complex and well thought-out positions on such things, it’s arguable that their works would have had far less long-term impact.

* The new academic book The Exceptional North: Past and Present Perspectives on Nordicness (2025) has a chapter on “Danish Literature in British Nineteenth-Century Periodicals”.

* The latest edition of the open-access journal Ethnologia Fennica (December 2025) has a review in English of the Finnish-language book Pyhat Puut (2025), as “Sacred Trees of the Finns in the Past and Today”.

* And finally, Tolkien and cats. An obscure little topic, but one I’m casually interested in. Perhaps it will eventually amount to a small counter to the “Tolkien hated…” brigade. He knew cats as a boy, since he and his brother would play with them in the corridors at the Birmingham Oratory. But he also knew cats later in his family life. Since his children evidently had a white kitten for Christmas, as his Father Christmas letters show…

Tolkien Gleanings #368

Tolkien Gleanings #368

* The 3rd edition of Dragon de Brume’s A Bibliography of Tolkien studies in French and English (Winter 2025) is now freely available online. This edition tops 4,500 references. It’s open access, under permissive licenses.

* New in Spanish, Un Cuento de Arboles (October 2025), on forests in Tolkien. At a guess, possibly a (partial?) translation of the same editor’s Representations of Nature in Middle-earth (2015)?

* From Italy, the society journal Minas Tirith: Rivista della Societa Tolkieniana Italiana, Vol. 28. March 2025 edition, seemingly published September 2025 according to Amazon. Includes articles in Italian such as “On the origin of the name ‘hobbit'”, among others.

* The February 2026 edition of National Review magazine reviews The War for Middle-earth: J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis Confront the Gathering Storm, 1933–1945 ($ paywall, but should become free in time).

* Tolkien scholar Michael D.C. Drout on “Why Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings Endures” ($ paywall). He also offers some technical comments on the deep structures and surface patinas of The Lord of the Rings. The book…

“seems battered by time and change […] Its chapters group in a complex hierarchy with three large groupings and several outliers, a pattern of clustering not typical for a modern novel. It is closer in form to multiauthor composite texts from the Middle Ages. Not only do the clusters not match the point-of-view characters; they don’t seem to be related to volume, book, setting, type of action or pacing. […] Subtle variations in Tolkien’s writing style across its 62 chapters generate the impression that The Lord of the Rings is a compilation of other texts. This pattern is largely invisible even to careful readers, but new methods of computer-assisted analysis throw it into sharp relief.”

* The latest edition of Law & Liberty reviews Tolkien and the Mystery of Literary Creation (2025). Freely available online.

* The Culturist on “How to Live Through a Great Decline” with Tolkien. ($ partial paywall).

* Word on Fire on the “O Antiphons, Advent, and Tolkien”. Freely available online.

* Out now and available to sample on Spotify, Joy Shannon’s “Tolkien-inspired” new album In the Forest Singing Sorrowless (2025). A positive review suggests Celtic ‘dark folk’, paired with Tolkien’s poetry.

* The latest issue of the open-access journal The Incredible Nineteenth Century: Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Fairy Tale reviews the book Nordic Sagas as Children’s Literature: Victorian and Edwardian Retellings in Words and Pictures (2022). Freely available online.

* And finally, please consider becoming one of my regular Patreon patrons. I don’t like asking, you don’t like reading appeals. But Gleanings is not yet produced by an untiring AI autobot. It’s just me rattling away on a 20 year-old workstation, working many hours per week to bring you each hand-crafted edition of the Gleanings. Your Patreon support is welcomed.

Tolkien Gleanings #367

Tolkien Gleanings #367

* David Bratman has announced his retirement as co-editor of the journal Tolkien Studies. The new co-editor is Kristine Larsen, who many will know via her excellent articles on aspects of astronomy in Tolkien’s work. Tolkien Studies No. 22 is set for release in the spring of 2026.

* A new Journal of Tolkien Research issue has begun, with reviews of Tolkien among the Theologians (2025) and The High Hallow: Tolkien’s Liturgical Imagination (2025). Also, arriving at the last minute in the previous issue, you may have missed Kristine Larsen’s article “Tracing the Caves of Cheddar Gorge Throughout Tolkien’s Legendarium (and Beyond)”. Freely available online.

* Miriam Ellis muses on “The Three Remarkable Daughters of the Old Took”. One might add that Tolkien was the son of one of the ‘three remarkable daughters’ of John Suffield.

* The latest Oxford Centre for Fantasy podcast considers the audiobook biographies currently available for Tolkien, Lewis, and the Inklings.

* Matej Cadil takes his readers on an unusually-mapped journey from Bree to the Lonely Mountain.

* The short book Tolkien and the Kalevala (2024) is set for release as a paperback edition at the end of January 2026.

* The contents-list and cover for the new Icons of the Fantastic exhibition catalogue.

* Scheduled for January/February/March 2026 at at the Marion E. Wade Center, three talks on ‘Otherworldly Wisdom on Rights and Wrongs, with the third being “The Ring of Righteousness: Justice in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth”. The talks will be recorded and freely available on YouTube.

* Grognadria reconsiders the much-debated 1985 article “The Influence of J.R.R. Tolkien on the D&D and AD&D Games”. Why did Gygax constantly disavow Tolkien’s influence? I suspect part of the answer may be: ‘The Tolkien Estate would have sued him, while the other fellows he mentioned as influences were either dead or were fannish enough that they wouldn’t have sued’.

* The Los Angeles Review of Books reviews The Bovadium Fragments at length. Freely available online, at least when using a U.S. node in a VPN…

“much of this is rather funny — who else has ever referred to gasoline as a “costly essence”? But that humor masks a genuine seriousness. Indeed, it was for that reason Kilby deemed the work “unpublishable”: he believed that “a reader’s eye would focus on its playfulness rather than its serious implications.” For example, in one passage, Tolkien writes that “on the days formerly set aside for prayers and rites in the temples many would now wheel their Motores out upon a platform before their houses and there tend them and worship them, prostrate upon the ground.” It’s an amusing way of describing the Sunday car wash, but it also reveals a change in culture that would have aggrieved Tolkien, a devout Catholic: the search for spiritual salvation replaced by the worship of material possessions.”

* And finally, a Lord of the Rings Marathon Screening of the ‘extended cut’ movies, at Magdalen College, Oxford. In 4k, all on 7th February 2026, and with sustaining meals fit for hobbitses to eat. Booking now.

Tolkien Gleanings #366

Tolkien Gleanings #366

* Now available, the table-of-contents for the new book Tolkien’s Glee: A Reading of the Songs in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (2025).

* The Wall Street Journal reviews The Tower and the Ruin by Michael Drout ($ paywall).

* Mythmoot XIII, set for 25th-28th June 2026 in Virginia, USA. The theme is to be ‘unexpected company’ in fantasy and science-fiction, and the main guest of honour is Michael D.C. Drout. The call for papers closes on 28th February 2026.

* Signum University online short-courses for February 2026. Including among others “Adaptations of Middle-earth: From Deitch and Bakshi to Jackson” and “Exploring Tolkien’s Letter to Milton Waldman”.

* In the new Anthology of Computers and the Humanities, Volume 3 (2025), “Happily Ever After: Comparing Sentiment Arcs in Emotionally-Inflected Fanfiction Genres Across Fandoms”. Freely available online. The authors find that…

“each fandom has its own emotional ‘bandwidth’, with stories in The Lord of the Rings fandom consistently displaying the most positive sentiments”

* From the same field is a new paper from Italy, “Quantifying Emotional Tone in Tolkien’s The Hobbit: Dialogue Sentiment Analysis with RegEx, NRC-VAD, and Python” (2025). Freely available online. The study finds that…

“… the results show that the dialogue maintains a generally positive (high valence) and calm (low arousal) tone, with a gradually increasing sense of agency (dominance) as the story progresses. These patterns reflect the novel’s emotional rhythm: moments of danger and excitement are regularly balanced by humor, camaraderie, and relief. Visualizations — including emotional trajectory graphs and word clouds — highlight how Tolkien’s language cycles between tension and comfort.”

* The I Might Believe in Faeries podcast has “The Medieval Mind of C. S. Lewis”, talking with…

“medieval scholar and author, Jason Baxter. Dr. Baxter is the Director of the Center for Beauty and Culture at Benedictine College and the author of many books, including a new translation of Dante and ‘The Medieval Mind of C.S. Lewis’.”

* Talking of the medieval, the ‘chained library’ of Google Books is set to discard its trusty interface. Your curated “Bookshelves” will go into the skip with it, if you’re not quick.

* And finally, Tolkien’s desk (the ‘Merton desk’) has sold at auction for £330,200.

Tolkien Gleanings #365

Tolkien Gleanings #365

* Members of the Tolkien Society can now download the new Winter 2025 edition of the annual journal Mallorn as a PDF. The lead article offers some historical context for Tolkien’s reactions to well-known folklorists of his time (Frazer, Lang) and their theories.

* Tolkien Studies Volume 21 (2024) is now available, apparently published in November 2025. Currently available on Project Muse ($ paywall) in digital form, but not yet on Amazon UK in paper. Includes, among other items, “The Wanderer’s Return: New Findings on Tolkien in Oxford 1918–19”, and “The Year’s Work in Tolkien Studies 2021”. Though note that this year the latter does not have the usual sections ‘General Criticism: The Lord of the Rings and Tolkien’s Work as a Whole’ and ‘General Criticism: Other Works’.

* The Year’s Work in English Studies (Oxford University Press, 2025) notes Tolkien’s The Battle of Maldon, together with The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth (2023). A short review is found in the section “Chapter II. Old English: 4. Other Secular Heroic Poems”…

“Tolkien’s translation of The Battle of Maldon, like Shippey’s translation of Beowulf (reviewed above), is lucid, exact, and accessible. His notes contain a good deal of linguistic and literary appreciation of the poem, and they show that Tolkien was both a thorough philologist and sensitive literary critic. In his essay on versification, Tolkien characterizes The Battle of Maldon as a poem composed in the popular (as opposed to the classical) style. This means that the metrical idiosyncrasies of Maldon are not to be understood as defective deviations from the Beowulfian norm (as they have all too often been seen), but as distinctive features of an alternative of mode of composition that was seldom recorded in writing. [The book] is useful from a pedagogical point of view and could easily be used in the classroom.”

* From Spain in English, the December 2025 issue of the journal Revista de Filologica has “Wonder and Its Vocabulary in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”. Freely available online.

* New from the University of Potsdam, “Die Funktion der Atlantis: Rezeption in J.R.R. Tolkiens Numenor zwischen Empirie und Phantasie” (2025) (‘The Function of Atlantis: Reception in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Numenor, between empiricism and fantasy’). Being a Masters dissertation, in German. This has an extended English abstract available (only) at the repository record-page, hidden but fully revealed via the “More” button. Freely available online.

* A new academic podcast from a U.S. Catholic college, Christendom Conversations, last week discussed “Tolkien, Truth, and the Art of Story”. Freely available on YouTube.

* Vincent Ferre’s French Dictionnaire Tolkien appears to have had a new single-volume edition in late summer 2024. Also, the latest edition of Mallorn reveals a forthcoming Oxford Handbook of J.R.R. Tolkien.

* Now booking, a 2026 residential summer-school in Oxford with John Garth, Tolkien: The Great War and the Beginnings of Middle-earth. 19th to 25th July 2026, at Brasenose College. Also… “includes a walking tour of Exeter College, offering a chance to explore Tolkien’s undergraduate environment between 1911 and 1915.”

* And finally, new on YouTube is Paolo Nardi discussing “Ungoliant and Cosmic Horror”, ‘cosmic horror’ usually being the term reserved for Lovecraft’s work and thought. In Italian, but YouTube can now auto-dub into English.

Tolkien Gleanings #364

Tolkien Gleanings #364

* New and available now for members of the Tolkien Society, Amon Hen (326, December 2025). Among other items, there’s a lengthy essay surveying ropes and rope-making in the works of Tolkien. I’d imagine that Tolkien had learned a thing or two about rope and rope-knots during his time in the Boy Scouts (see Lembas Extra 2015), the King Edwards Horse cadets, and the British Army.

* New on YouTube, Malcolm Guite discusses “Wardrobes and Rings, my new book about the Inklings”.

* At the Brompton Oratory in London, “a book launch, live podcast & drinks reception, exploring Tolkien’s theology and philosophy”. The book in question is Fr. Michael Halsall’s A Light from the Shadows: The Spiritual Heart of JRR Tolkien, which seems otherwise unknown to Google Search or Amazon. Set for 30th January 2026, and booking now.

* The University of York PhD thesis The Making of Modern Fantasy in the Visual Arts of England, c. 1850-1920 (2021, online 2022). Now freely available online, after what looks like a three-year embargo. “Visual Arts” here means fine-art painting, not the nation’s blossoming popular print and illustration culture.

* Due in early 2026, The Music of Harry Potter and The Lord of the Rings: Sounds of Home in the Fantasy Franchise. A £43 academic book in Routledge’s ‘Ashgate Screen Music’ series.

* Also due in early 2026, Forest Ecology and Fantasy Fiction: Morris, Tolkien, Le Guin, a £90 academic book in Bloomsbury Academic’s ‘Explorations in Science and Literature’ series.

* Bradley N. Birzer has a new article on “My Life With Tolkien”.

* New at the Oxford Tolkien Network YouTube channel, a recording of the talk “Middle-earth in Brazil and Beyond: Tolkien’s Reception in Portuguese”.

* On Substack, Dimitra Fimi compares Lud-in-the-Mist (1926) with The Hobbit (1937). This prompted me to take a quick look for the best audiobook of Lud, which appears be the one narrated by Eleanor Bron and with an introduction by Gaiman.

* And finally, the Oxford Mail local newspaper reports “J.R.R Tolkien auction cancelled”, allegedly due to disquiet about the authenticity of many of the lots. This refers to the Bristol auction, not the Tolkien desk coming up at Sotheby’s.

Tolkien Gleanings #363

Tolkien Gleanings #363

* The British auctioneer Sotheby’s has an August 1957 letter from Tolkien, set for sale by auction on 11th December 2025.

* Now available for pre-order, the University of Chichester’s Centre for Folklore journal Gramarye No. 28 (Winter 2025). Includes the article “Of Technology and Fantasy: Fairy Tales, Fables, and the Transformation of Illustration in the Long Nineteenth Century”, among others, plus several book reviews.

* The December 2025 special issue of the journal Imagination, Cognition, and Personality considers the theme of “fantasy and cognition”. Freely available online in open-access.

* The latest edition of Christianity Today has an excerpt (for subscribers) from the new book The War for Middle-earth, “You Know Them As Fantasy Writers. They Were Soldiers Too”. ($ paywall).

* Just published, the book Muses of a Fire: Essays on Faith, Film and Literature (2025). Fifteen essays including one on Tolkien, and one on “the theology of science-fiction films”.

* Some details of a feature-length Tolkien documentary, broadcast a few days ago on German broadcast TV…

On Friday 28th November 2025, the 2024 cultural documentary Tolkien: Die wahre Geschichte der Ringe (‘Tolkien: The True Story of the Rings’) was shown on German TV. Tolkien experienced both World Wars and served as a soldier on the Somme. The greatest journey of his life took the young Tolkien to Switzerland in 1911. The documentary shows how these experiences shaped Tolkien’s work and his myth. 95 minutes”.

* Now online, the November 2025 newsletter Inklings Quarterly 9. Includes a link to a recording of a lecture on “Form and Meaning in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”, among other items. Freely available online.

* Miriam Ellis blogs on “Meeting Hobbits in the Elder Days and the Mystery of Untranslated Texts”.

* New on Archive.org, An interview with Phil Dragash about the recording of his full-cast + soundscape + music LoTR. His recollections of the somewhat shambolic recording process make his solo recording of one of the great audioworks of our time all the more remarkable. There’s also the full version of his “A Journey in the Dark” recording, with the missing section now found. This section covered the period from wading through the water on the way to the Moria Gate, up to the farewell to Bill the pony and a bit beyond. Also new on Archive.org is Dragash’s successor Bluefax’s Riddles in the Dark (2023 Edition) from The Hobbit. I only had his 2019 edition, so I’m glad to get this. Note that, in order to legally download these free fan-works, one needs to own the retail books, soundtracks and DVD movies.

* A brief update on the Middle-earth Hexcrawl project. This refers to a high-res map of Middle-earth divided into 12-mile hex-agon shapes, produced a few months ago as a base tool for role-playing gamers. The project in question is now filling each “hex” with details of what a role-player might encounter if they travel there.

* And finally, the best Black Friday “deal” was free… the amazing new Z-Image Turbo. I’ve been testing it and making, among other things, this portrait of Gandalf. I’ve released this under Creative Commons Attribution, so feel free to re-use.

Tolkien Gleanings #362

Tolkien Gleanings #362

* Newly published, the book Wardrobes and Rings: Through Lenten Lands with the Inklings. One of the book’s creators is Malcolm Guite, former Chaplain at and now Life Fellow of Girton College, Cambridge. The book is a multi-author Inklings “devotional” which aims to help Christians… “to rediscover Lent through the lens of imagination-infused faith”. Lent is the term used for the 40 days of Christian repentance prior to Easter — usually expressed through fasting, prayer, humility and sacrifice — and apparently meant to be a personal echo of Christ’s ’40 days in the wilderness’.

* The Reading Tolkien podcast talks with Michael Drout about his book The Tower and the Ruin: J.R.R. Tolkien’s Creation, due for release on 2nd December 2025. I see that The Prancing Pony Podcast also has an interview with Drout. For both links the .MP3 downloads are hidden under the “… More” button.

* In French, the new 800-page book Une lecture du Hobbit et du Seigneur des Anneaux de Tolkien. L’arborescence du cercle (November 2025) (‘A reading of Tolkien’s The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings: The Circle and the Tree’).

* The Tolkien Society’s latest book Numenor, The Mighty and Frail: Proceedings of The Tolkien Society Seminar 2023 (November 2025) has now been published. Among others, contents include…

   – Dealing with the Dead: Nuances of ancient Egypt and medieval theology in Numenor.
   – Ecology of Imperialism: Environmental History for Numenor.
   – “By the Waters of Anduin We Lay Down and Wept”: Exilic Theology in the ‘Akallabeth’.

* Newly posted online, the Spanish Tolkien Society this week offers a long interview in Spanish with John Garth, which originally appeared in their journal Estel No. 88 (2018). Back in September I see they also had a long blog post in Spanish celebrating 100 issues of Estel.

* The student article “The Great Wizarding Duel: Tolkien’s Possible Influence on Rowling”, in the new 2025 edition of the University of South Carolina’s annual open-access The Oswald Review: An International Journal of Undergraduate Research and Criticism in the Discipline of English.

* Now 99.8% uploaded and for sale, the picture library of the venerable magazine Country Life, from the magazine’s inception through to today. It’s something of a pain to filter and navigate the collection, and the lack of dating of images is very regrettable. Nor can individual images be linked in a blog via a simple URL link. Tagging is sometimes subject to glitches (e.g. searching for illustrator, seeking portraits of illustrators such as Quentin Blake or Ronald Searle, only gets endless illustrations). Overall, the site is far from ideal for the user. But… the determined Tolkienist may unearth a gem, especially among the many old b&w images of Oxford and Oxfordshire. Judging by my tests a high-res image licence for personal use appear to be £75, and one can also get licences for public display or publication. The state of AI colourisation of b&w is such that your chosen image could easily be nicely colourised.

* Full auctioneer details, with good photos, of the alleged Tolkien items due for sale in the forthcoming “Precious Things” auction in Bath. As with all auctions, ‘buyer beware’. Update: Auction now “postponed”.

* And finally, leading auctioneer Christies now has a page for the forthcoming item “J.R.R. Tolkien’s Merton College Desk, Late 19th Century”, and offers seven high-res pictures of the desk.

Country Life picture archive, now nearly all online

A major new image archive of the British Isles, now publicly accessible, the Country Life Magazine Image Archive. Access to the entire picture library from the inception of the venerable weekly magazine onwards, including unpublished items. Nearly complete and due to be 100% complete just before Christmas 2025, according to the magazine three weeks ago.

Sadly the pictures have no ‘date of making’, which is unfortunate for historians and restorationists. Though one can at least assume b&w pictures are older and are pre colour-film. Personal use appears to cost £75 per picture. Biddulph Grange (above) is the most interesting local b&w set from Staffordshire, possibly made in the 1950s at a guess? Surprisingly there are no pictures from places which might have been expected, such as Alderley Edge or Cannock Chase.

When searching for Stoke, note that searching for Stoke-on-Trent does not call pictures of Gladstone Pottery which was a rare venturing of the magazine into the city. Thus there may be Stoke items that need to be called by their exact name, since they haven’t been tagged with Stoke-on-Trent.

Tolkien Gleanings #361

Tolkien Gleanings #361

* Lincolnshire’s rare bookseller Type & Forme has released a new free bookman’s PDF catalogue for “J.R.R. Tolkien, Scholar: A Journey through the World of Middle English”. A good scan of the Middle English Vocabulary featured in the catalogue can be found on Archive.org for free.

* A book I missed noticing, back in April, Lembas Extra 2024: “Evil in Ea” – Proceedings of the Unquendor Tolkien Seminar 2024 (2025). The Unquendor website menus suggest Lembas Extra stopped in 2019. But (thanks to Yandex’s indexing of euro-sites neglected by other engines), search reveals there is a 2024 issue page on the site, and this usefully has purchase details. The Dutch Tolkien shop also appears to have copies still for sale. I can find no contents-list online, but it… “contains articles by Renee Vink and Claudio Testi, among others. With an introduction by Hamish Williams.”

* David Bratman reviews the new Tolkien book, The Bovadium Fragments (2025).

* In the first issue of the new open-access California Baptist University student journal Immersed: A Journal of Faith, Arts, and Letters, “The Lord of the Rings: Intersectionality between Theology and Ecocriticism in Middle-earth”. This… “argues that Tolkien’s mythos offers a model of ecocentric stewardship grounded in reverence and humility.”

* The Acton Institute has a long article on “Lewis and Tolkien’s War Against Grimdark”.

* Flagged as “new” on the Signum University site, they can now offer “mentorship and tutoring tailored to your academic plans”. They also have a new January 2026 page for online short-courses, set to include “The Poetic Corpus of J.R.R. Tolkien: The Later Poems 3 (Volume 3: The Years 1931-1967)”, and they’ve posted dates for Mythmoot XIII 2026.

* And finally, Tumnus’ Bookshelf reviews the children’s 48-page storybook John Ronald’s Dragons: The Story of J.R.R. Tolkien (2017). I’d have been a little more critical: the book has Sarehole as a “town” and Birmingham is left unmentioned, for instance.