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.















