Tolkien Gleanings #357

Tolkien Gleanings #357

* Joseph Loconte draws “Lessons About ‘the Will to Power’ from Middle-earth”. Freely available online.

* For Remembrance Day, John Garth offered an article on Tolkien’s friend “Robert Quilter Gilson on the eve of war, 1914” ($ paywall).

* The 2026 C.S. Lewis conference will visit Amiens, France, to discuss “War, Fellowship, and Survival in the Lives and Works of C.S. Lewis and Kindred Spirits”. The dates are 11th-13th June 2026.

* Marquette has a page for public showings of the Tolkien manuscripts, 2026. I can’t give you dates, since Marquette University completely blocks anyone using a VPN. Which presumably includes their own students, using laptops + VPNs in their campus cafes? Durh. But I assume from the search-result snippet that the dates are indeed there.

* New in English, in the latest issue of Italian journal Ricognizioni, “Quenya is Practically a Main Character: Elvish-English Multilingualism in Tolkien-inspired Fan-Fictions”. Freely available online. The same issue also has an article on “Plant Names in Constructed Worlds”, which may interest some.

* The Tolkienist surveys some of the many recent Kickstarter offers. Judging by this, it appears to be becoming increasingly easy to obtain a licence to sell expensive branded ‘Tolkien tat’ on crowdfunding sites.

* Some of the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy actors are going on an 11-city U.S. stage tour, January to September 2026, billed as ‘An Evening With the Hobbits: In Celebration of 25 Years’. Will there be hobbit songs sung, one wonders?

* New on Archive.org, an audiophile’s painstaking The Hobbit (1977) VHS Hi-Fi Audio Capture. This is the Rankin Bass cartoon release.

* And finally, as the usual November rains pour down here in Britain, a timely and beautifully illustrated post. Miriam Ellis on “The Glory of Goldberry’s Washing Day”.

Tolkien Gleanings #356

Tolkien Gleanings #356

* From Germany and mostly in German, the $ paywall book Eine Kleine Geschichte der Orks: Der monstrose feind im wandel der zeit (2024) (‘A Little History of the Orcs: the monstrous enemy through the ages’). Eleven chapters including, in English, Thomas Honegger’s “From Old English orcneas to George MacDonald’s Goblins with Soft Feet: Sources of Inspiration and Models for Tolkien’s Orcs from English Literature”. A key example of the “Old English” of the title is found in Beowulf (c. 710 A.D), which talks of… “eotenas ond ylfe ond orcneas” (‘thence awoke all evil offspring, ettins and elf and orcs, also giants’).

* In Portuguese, the book J.R.R. Tolkien: construtor de mundos. Personagens, lugares e adaptacoes. Vol 1. (2023). This is officially freely available online. Chapter titles in English translation…

   – Tolkien and the ring myth.
   – Sauron and his many names.
   – Beorn.
   – Boromir, an imperfect hero.
   – Aragorn and Anduril: The representation of the hero and the medieval sword.
   – Orcs and evil.
   – Dwarves and Elves: Between stones and Norse gods.
   – Through Rivers and Forests: Norse mythological geography.
   – The Mountains and Kingdoms Beneath Them.
   – Adaptations: recreating Tolkien for the cinema.

* A student paper from Marquette University, “Faramir’s Quality: how Faramir is influenced by and embodies the theme of hope in The Lord of the Rings” (2025). Freely available online.

* A new open Reddit attempt to track down all Silmarillion references and allusions in LoTR. Offhand I don’t recall any other attempt to do this. I’ve checked the Reader’s Companion book (i.e. the annotated LoTR) just now, but that only has the general index, offering about 30 page numbers under the heading of Silmarillion (book).

* The Angmar Archives podcast has a long interview with the maker of the new artbook Doomed To Die: An A-Z of Death in Tolkien. Freely available on YouTube.

* New to me, Tolkien’s hobbit poem “Oliphaunt” was issued as a standalone children’s picturebook in 1989, of the “stiff boards, for small kids who might tear normal paper” type of picturebook.

* And finally, talking of near-mythical animals… news of rare big-screen outings for the extended Director’s Cut of the LoTR movies. The “special one-night-only event will feature the remastered extended edition” of Fellowship, then Two Towers and Return of the King. All in early 2026.

Tolkien Gleanings #355

Tolkien Gleanings #355

* The German/English journal Hither Shore 21, a themed issue on ‘Tolkien and his Editors’, is now available on Amazon. This “2024” issue is there dated as being published 4th November 2025. Here are the contents…

* First Things magazine has a new article on “The Inkling Who Fought Abortion”… “Owen Barfield, the philosopher, novelist, and a key influence on both C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, was one of the fifteen founders of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children.” The first such pressure group. The first third of the article is freely available online, and is then $ paywalled.

* Christianity Today reviews the stage play Lewis & Tolkien. Also has a partial interview with the makers, possibly drawn from the Q&A. Freely available online. The play’s theme of determined friendship is one that…

“feels especially relevant now. Two men reconciling over an unhurried, in-person conversation, nestled in a snug pub, defies everything about modern society’s bitter ideological divisions and disembodied digital distractions. Not a single iPhone in sight. No email notifications. No Slack messages interrupting the conversation. Prolonged eye contact, full attention, and a radical willingness to stay in the same room even when wounded by the other.”

* New in the latest issue of the rolling Journal of Tolkien Research “A Detestable Nation of Orcs: echoes of Eurasian nomads in early fantasy and the literary ecosystem behind them”. This seeks models for orcs in various groups of historical primary-world Eurasian nomads, such as the Huns and Mongols.

* The link on Lindefirion‘s site to the “Expanded Middle-earth poster map” is now “404”, but on DeviantArt Mairon666 has a new makeover of it, as “Northern Middle-Earth (3rd Age)”. With a free and un-watermarked 4.5Mb download. Though sadly this is still not big enough to read the smallest place-labels.

* Robert Plant talks at length about how the mystique of Wales and magic of Tolkien influenced his 1970s rock band Led Zeppelin. There’s a five-minute clip from the interview on YouTube, but the full interview doesn’t appear to be online — unless perhaps you subscribe to streaming services for U.S. TV channels.

* Free League has announced their forthcoming Hobbit Tales, a $46 role-playing game add-on book for the core One Ring game. The value of such books for non-gamers is in the sumptious production values and artwork, their maps and detailed descriptions of places and terrains, and their attention to everyday items and trading.

Though the only information in that regard is that the book will have “detailed descriptions of the four farthings” of the Shire. Gamer buyers should know that this new book is a one-volume collection for five “silly misadventures” of hobbits that were… “previously published in the starter set for The One Ring Second Edition and in the Shire Adventures compendium for The Lord of the Rings Roleplaying”. Thus avid tabletop gamers may already have it, since the current core game One Ring is now “the official tabletop roleplaying game” — and many will likely have the starter set in its second edition.

The Hobbit Tales promo is interesting in its own right, in that the makers claim a ‘TM’ trademark on the word “Hobbit”. Either that or they’ve acknowledging someone else’s trademark, which is perhaps why they use “hobbit” on the cover with no distinctively-obvious capital “H”? On the promo page it’s definitely capital “H”. Anyway, be aware that someone is trying to claim a trademark on a word which was in use prior to Tolkien.

* And finally and seasonally, Miriam Ellis savours the hobbit mushroom habit. Ellis makes the perceptive comment that… “I expect hobbits had a fund of stories and songs about their passionate love for this near-magical food.” And probably short sayings and little everyday rhymes too, I’d add. To help children learn and recall the differences between edible mushrooms and dangerous toadstools. “If ‘t has a frill, you’ll be ill”, “If ’tis red, you’ll be dead”, that sort of thing.

Tolkien Gleanings #354

Tolkien Gleanings #354

* New at Word on Fire, Holly Ordway looks into “Tolkien’s Newman Connections”. Freely available online.

* Alas, not me blog has a substantial new post “From a Gift in Death to the Gift of Death: Turin and the Doom of Men”.

* Upcoming Courses at Signum University for spring and summer 2026. Online courses, for which the sign-up deadline is 7th December 2025. Includes…

   – Tolkien in Context
   – Beowulf through Tolkien (if enough sign up for it)
   – Tolkien & Medievalism
   – Tolkien & Science

* I spotted a book I seem to have overlooked, though perhaps it appeared just before my Gleanings started in 2023. It’s David Bratman’s Gifted Amateurs and Other Essays on Tolkien, the Inklings, and Fantasy Literature (2023), published by Mythopoeic Press. I was alerted to it by encountering a used copy for sale. The book’s page at the Mythopoeic Press usefully gives the contents-list, and I see there’s now a budget-priced Kindle ebook edition. Potential buyers might usefully note that “The Condensed Silmarillion” section is apparently a parody, not a handy summary.

* Forthcoming from Ava Maria Press, the book Into the Heart of Middle-earth: Exploring Faith and Fellowship in J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. From the author of the Tea with Tolkien blog. Due 20th February 2026.

* Currently being auctioned at Heritage Auctions, “Treebeard” by the Brothers Hildebrandt (1975).

* New on YouTube from the University of Oxford ‘Tolkien talks’, a recording of “Other Minds and Hands”: A conversation with Philippa Boyens. Boyens was one of three screenplay writers for the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy.

* An excellent new Anglotopia podcast on Craftland: A Journey Through Britain’s Disappearing Crafts with author James Fox. One if the best podcasts I’ve heard for a while. It also made me think more about many craft elements in Middle-earth, from Sam’s rope-making to Aragorn’s supple and yet weather-resistant leather boots, and from humble hobbit wood-craft to seemingly-magical elf-craft. Freely available on YouTube. I wonder if a hypothetical Crafts of Middle-earth book might help a little with the survival of some critically endangered traditional British crafts, such as bell-making and bow-making for archery?

* And finally, a new AI-powered Tolkien’s Neo-Archaic English Translator. Free, and allowing the user to… “Translate from Normal Language into Tolkien’s Neo-Archaic English”. More interesting is that it translates the other way too, which means that William Morris now becomes somewhat more readable. It didn’t catch Morris’s “perchance” though, in this section I picked at random from his The Well at the World’s End

Tolkien Gleanings #353

Tolkien Gleanings #353

* In the Market podcast interviews the author of The War for Middle-earth: J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis Confront the Gathering Storm, 1933–1945. 45 minutes, .MP3 download under the “… More” button. The book’s forthcoming 18th November release-date is holding, after having slipped so many times before.

* Wayne G. Hammond has a new blog post on Wonder and Imagination, in which he reviews recent books which collect works by Clyde S. Kilby.

* A new Masters degree dissertation, From Deep Heaven with Love: C.S. Lewis’s Early Preoccupation with Love in the Ransom Trilogy (2025). Freely available online.

* A new issue of the Italian Tolkien journal Endore No. 27, undated but internal evidence suggests early 2025. Freely available online, in Italian. Includes, among many other items, a review of Tolkien’s Faith: A Spiritual Biography.

* The Digital Tolkien Project has launched the HoMe Base website, which is set to become the… “hub of the Digital Tolkien Project’s work on The History of Middle-earth [HoMe] series”.

* Dr Lynn Forest-Hill blogs that she is set to write a substantial scholarly article about… “Tolkien’s poem The Sea Bell and its relationship to The Silmarillion”.

* New to me, Bibliography – The Andrew Lang Site. An extensive scholarly bibliography, freely available online. Notes plenty of items related to Lang and Tolkien, including…

Green, Roger Lancelyn. “Andrew Lang and the Fairy Tale.” The Review of English Studies 20.79 (Jul. 1944): [pages] 227–31. (Roger Lancelyn Green’s 1944 B.Litt thesis on Andrew Lang (revised extensively into the 1946 biography above) was written under D. Nicoll Smith and J.R.R. Tolkien’s supervision. Tolkien did not pass the thesis initially in 1943 but sent it back to Green for revisions because he ‘wanted to know more about the Fairies!’ [Scull & Hammond II.352])

* And finally, Lorenzo Daniele’s Lord of the Rings illustrations, a large set of stained-glass window style depictions of the entire narrative. Freely available online. Including a scene only briefly mentioned in the book, of Gimli and Legolas visiting the Glittering Caves together…

“Then Legolas repaid his promise to Gimli and went with him to the Glittering Caves; and when they returned he was silent, and would say only that Gimli alone could find fit words to speak of them.”

Tolkien Gleanings #352

Tolkien Gleanings #352

* In France, an unusual multi-sensory Halloween event at Doullens Castle on the Somme. On 31st October and 1st November, an interactive performative event…

“combining investigation, history and imagination […] delve into the fascinating world of J.R.R. Tolkien, through a sensory and narrative investigation that revisits the torments of the famous author while he was fighting in the trenches of the First World War. Participants will ’embody’ fragments of memory, helping to guiding Tolkien himself through his trench nightmares and encounters with shards of legend. Each session lasts 1.5 hours and can accommodate up to 150 participants.”

* Signum University’s regional SoCal Moot has a date and a theme. 7th February 2026 in California, to hear papers on the theme of ‘Lux in Tenebris: The Dialectic of Light and Darkness in Tolkien’s Legendarium’. Submissions are now open.

* Another ‘religious biography’ of Tolkien, Inside a Very Great Story: The Life & Wonder of J.R.R. Tolkien. This is a forthcoming book, currently under contract for the Eerdmans Library of Religious Biography series. Apparently it will also seek to answer a follow-on question… “What did J.R.R. Tolkien mean for religion?”. Which may be interesting if it means a section which outlines the cultural history of the religious reactions to his works, both for and against (recall the fevered U.S. evangelical moral panic about fantasy in the 1970s and 80s, for instance).

* The latest Thomistic Institute podcast is titled Catholic Culture with Tolkien. Freely available online (.MP3 download is under the “More…” button) and offering in full a recording of…

“a lecture given on 18th January 2024, at the University of Washington. Prof. Patrick Callahan explores the living tradition of Catholic culture, using Tolkien’s life and imagination to demonstrate how the Mass, community, and cultivation of virtue form a unified Christian identity resilient amidst modern challenges.”

Be warned there’s a huge discursive introduction, inadvisable for a short 45 minute lecture, which goes all around the houses trying to define ‘culture’. Eventually the speaker gets to the meat of discussing Tolkien at 33 minutes.

* A new Italian screen documentary, Uma Odisseia: Em Busca de Tolkien (‘An Odyssey: In Search of Tolkien’). The makers are said to have completed filming in 20 places, for what appears to be a feature-length documentary that… “delves into the origins and inspirations of the universe created by J.R.R. Tolkien”. They recently screened an excerpt at the Imagineland festival in Italy, and discussed the film afterwards.

* ‘Ve have wayz of making you Tolk!’ “New travel guide takes Tolkien fans to German destinations”

“The travel guide spans an impressive arc from the island of Sylt in the north to the majestic Watzmann in the Bavarian Alps. Between Rugen and the Palatinate, the author discovers places that bear a striking resemblance to the iconic locations from Tolkien’s epic.”

The book Deutschland fur ‘Herr der Ringe’ Fans (‘Germany for fans of The Lord of the Rings’) offers 192 magazine-style pages, from an experienced German travel-guide writer and publisher. Set for publication on 7th November 2025, in German only. It strikes me that the British Isles might offer a similar book, and without having to tread on the toes of Garth’s The Worlds of… book.

* And finally, in Tolkien’s home city the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery’s Pre-Raphaelite paintings are once again on public show, the Museum having been closed for five years. I’m uncertain if the whole collection is now on show again, or just a curated selection, because I read that the full re-opening of BMAG is still set for 2031 (and that’s if the bankrupt City Council can find the funding). The Anglo-Saxon ‘Staffordshire Hoard’ gallery has also re-opened to the public this week.


Picture: The Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery circa 1911, with the pre-Raphaelites seen on public display. “The Star of Bethlehem” by Burne-Jones, is a centerpiece painting. Tolkien at that time in his final year at school, a few hundred yards away down New Street. Newly colourised.

Tolkien Gleanings #351

Tolkien Gleanings #351

* The new journal Fantasy Art and Studies 18 (Summer 2025) takes as its theme ‘Non-violence en Fantasy / Non-Violence in Fantasy’. Inside one can find the French-language Tolkien article “Corps epargnes, esprits traumatises: de la violence necessaire a la non-violence chez Tolkien” (‘Bodies Spared, Minds Traumatized: From necessary violence to non-violence in Tolkien’). The journal can be read online for free in your Web browser as a flipbook (pages cannot be bookmarked as Web links, but see page 100). The flipbook format makes auto-translation rather difficult, but not impossible with capture tools suitable for fine text + accents such as ABBYY Screenshot Reader and then Google Translate.

* In Italian in the journal Studi sulla Formazione, the article “Il tema della mostruosite in J.R.R. Tolkien” (2025) (‘The theme of monstrosity in J.R.R. Tolkien: Reflections on the ethics and pedagogy of fantastic narrative’). Freely available in open-access and also under Creative Commons Attribution.

* In English, in the French Reviews in Science, Religion & Theology (2025), “Eschatological Expectations and Ecology in J.R.R. Tolkien”. The article is also posted on Academia.edu, but only freely available without Academia.edu membership via searching for the title on Google Scholar. Scholar has a special arrangement with Academia.edu for open downloads via their search-results.

* This week in The Imaginative Conservative, “Reliving the Life of Chesterton”. In which a Chesterton biographer (2015) reviews the new I Also Had My Hour: An Alternative Autobiography of G.K. Chesterton (2025), a book which is… “the labour of love of Dale Ahlquist, that Chestertonian extraordinaire, who has made it his life’s work”. Usefully the reviewer also notes, in passing, something of possible relevance to Tolkien’s thinking on fairy tales…

“I had forgotten what Chesterton had written about fairy stories; I’d forgotten “The Ethics of Elfland”.”

The essay “The Ethics of Elfland” was widely available in Tolkien’s youth, in Chesterton’s book Orthodoxy (1908). Although admittedly 1908 was long before Chesterton became a Catholic in 1922. The book was however continually reprinted, including after the conversion. On the possible influence of the Orthodoxy essay on Tolkien, Hammond & Scull (Reader’s Guide) have…

“… apart from references in his published letters, it is clear from his lecture “On Fairy-Stories” that Tolkien was closely familiar with Chesterton’s writings. He quotes Chesterton or mentions him approvingly several times in the lecture, and seems to have drawn at least from Chesterton’s ‘Ethics of Elfland’ in Orthodoxy [among a few other titles by Chesterton]”

Incidentally, I find that Chesterton also reviewed at length Lang’s The Violet Fairy Book (1901) under the same title of “The Ethics of Elfland”, in The Speaker magazine for October 1901.

* On YouTube this week, a new flip-through video of the large-format Dover artbook edition of Arthur Rackham’s Color Illustrations for Wagner’s Ring (1979).

I looked up the publication details, found in the front of the book, and as I had thought they were published at a formative time for Tolkien. As such the dates and title may interest some Tolkien researchers…

The color illustrations, here reproduced in their entirety, and the black-and-white vignettes and tailpieces, here reproduced in a selection, appeared in two volumes, both published by William Heinemann, London, and Doubleday, Page & Co., New York: Siegfried & the Twilight of the Gods (1911) and The Rhinegold & the Valkyrie (1912).”

Both books are now public-domain and free on Archive.org as reasonably good scans. They’re linked above. The scans are slightly light in their contrast, presumably so as not to crush the blacks.

* And finally, a bit more art that might have been encountered in magazines and books during Tolkien’s Edwardian boyhood. Chicago has a substantial art exhibition titled Strange Realities: The Symbolist Imagination. The show is on now at the venerable Art Institute of Chicago, and runs until 5th January 2026.

Tolkien Gleanings #350

Tolkien Gleanings #350

* Now open, the Tolkien Fanfiction Survey 2025. No deadline, it seems. But the survey details were posted six days ago. A survey for readers as well as writers. It happens every five years, and this one seem especially relevant as now we have advanced creative-writing AIs in the mix of tools.

* The editor of the new book Tolkien’s Medievalism in Ruins: The Function of Relics and Ruins in Middle-earth is featured in a press article issued by his university. Freely available online.

* Vincent Ferre has a new conference paper in French on Fabula, “Peuples fictionnels et dynamique de la creation chez J.R.R. Tolkien: peuples, langues et geographie imaginaires” (‘The Dynamics of Creation in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Fiction: Peoples, Languages, and Imaginary Geography’). Freely available online.

* A 2025 paper, “Comparing Tolkien’s Thieves To Beowulf and the Old English Context”. Freely available online.

* The journal Different Visions: New Perspectives on Mediaeval Art seeks essays on ‘recalcitrant’ works, for a future issue. Potential contributors are encouraged to think about…

“objects and images that they find confounding, have struggled to write about, have abandoned the study of, or have found resistant to art historical methodologies”

It strikes me that one might write about how Tolkien has influenced how students approach certain medieval imagery, and how this complicates teaching and student reading/writing.

* The poster for the Tolkien exhibition in Trieste, Italy, on now.

* And finally, the latest Brookston Beer Bulletin on Tolkien and beer.

Tolkien Gleanings #349

Tolkien Gleanings #349

* 70 years ago today, 20th October 1955, one might stroll down to the local bookshop to buy a pristine hardback of the just-published The Return of the King, and thus be able to finish reading The Lord of the Rings. At the same time one might have picked up copies of The Chrysalids by John Wyndham (UK: September 1955) and The Magician’s Nephew (UK: May 1955). Other classics of that year were then only available in the USA (Bradbury’s The October Country, and the first hardcover collection of R.E. Howard’s Conan), in Paris (Lolita), or were still awaited (Larkin’s first mature collection of poetry, dated October but not in bookshops until November).

* Dimitra Fimi’s blog has a new post considering “the conception of hobbits as children”.

* The latest edition of the podcast Tangible: Theology Learned and Lived is on “Tolkien’s Way”, with guests Dr. Charles Arand and Dr. Kent Burreson.

* A new book from a Bible scholar on Lewis, Between Interpretation and Imagination: C.S. Lewis and the Bible. Due on 4th November 2025, according to Amazon UK. I also noted another forthcoming book, A Reader’s Guide to C.S. Lewis, due on 18th November 2025.

* I was amused to see that Tolkien’s friend Lewis has also become a fictional detective, via the ‘C.S. Lewis Investigates’ series of murder-mystery novels. The first of which appeared, seemingly to much acclaim from the critics of such things, back in April as The Mystery at Rake Hall. Although Tolkien-as-character has beaten Lewis to it by six months, being the protagonist of the novel Tolkien and The Dangerous Truth (2024).

* Some pleasing work on DeviantArt this week: ‘J.R.R. Tolkien’ by Numediteur, ‘Gollum’ by MooratSmith, ‘Fangorn Forest’ by LeopoldR (although the forest perhaps more suited to Sam, Frodo and Gollum skirting the wood as they approach the road to Cirith Ungol), and ‘Echoes of Gondolin in the Trenches’ by Xukarriere.

* And finally, the tireless British Fairies blog on “Early Accounts of British Faeries”.

Tolkien Gleanings #348

Tolkien Gleanings #348

* New in the latest rolling issue of the Journal of Tolkien Research, Kristine Larsen has “J.R.R. Tolkien and Peter Medawar”. Freely available online. In May 1941…

“… a military plane crashed near Tolkien’s home. This article ties together his family’s experience, the impact it had on the Oxford community, and a Nobel Prize, whose winner Tolkien later shared air raid warden duty with.”

* The forthcoming Winter 2025 edition of the British Fantasy Society’s BFS Journal is to be a “War in Fantasy” special issue. The deadline for accepted articles is 31st October, so I’d imagine that the journal might be released nearer to Christmas?

* The substantial exhibition Icons of the Fantastic: Illustrations of Imaginative Literature from the Korshak Collection runs until 9th December 2025 in Delaware, USA. Accompanied by a 200-image catalogue. Includes original… “rare masterpieces that defined the visual language of beloved classics such as […] Lord of the Rings”.

* The latest Summer 2025 issue of Gramarye is now available in print from the University of Chichester. Among other articles in the journal, “Nymphs and their Ways: Mr Tumnus’s Bookshelf”…

“The article explores the significance of the books on Mr. Tumnus’s shelf in C.S. Lewis’s ‘The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe’, highlighting how they contribute to the worldbuilding of Narnia. The titles, such as ‘Nymphs and Their Ways’ and ‘Men, Monks and Gamekeepers: A Study in Popular Legend’…”

The issue also reviews, among others, The Exeter Companion to Fairies, Nereids, Trolls and Other Social Supernatural Beings.

* The latest Spiked! magazine considers the claims for “C.S. Lewis: a hard-right icon?”. Freely available online.

* Now officially free on Archive.org, the new biography I Dream With Open Eyes: The Life of David Lindsay (2025). Also available for purchase in hardback.

“Lewis’s friend J.R.R. Tolkien (1892-1973) also read [Lindsay’s] Arcturus [novel] “with avidity”, but its most evident impact on his fiction is in an unfinished work titled “Leaves from The Notion Club Papers”, and takes the form of a criticism of Lindsay’s novel.”

* Next year’s Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference 2026 will be devoted to the theme of “Sounds & Silence”.

* And finally, popular flee-the-UK destination Dubai now has a special museum and cafe to make expats feel at home. The Legendarium Fantastic Museum Dubai. The slick website alone is worth a visit.

Tolkien Gleanings #347

Tolkien Gleanings #347

* “American Tolkien Society Collection now available for research”, though only on-site and in person at Bowling Green State University (Ohio, USA). As of October 2025, the collection is…

“now fully processed and available to researchers. The finding aid can be accessed through the University Libraries’ Finding Aids website. Spanning more than 40 years, this remarkable collection documents the evolution of Tolkien fandom from the 1970s through the 2010s. It includes organizational papers, correspondence, written works, artwork, promotional materials, and publications created or collected by the society, including extensive content related to its journal, Minas Tirith Evening-Star.”

* A new Journal of Inklings Studies, Vol. 15, No. 2 (October 2025), now online. Articles include, among others…

    – Revealed: Tolkien’s 1939 Lecture on Fairy-stories (free online).
    – Note on a Personal Acquaintance with Tolkien, by Fr. Geoffrey G. Attard ($ paywall).
    – Several book reviews of relevance, including on Tolkien and the Gothic, and Tolkien and Romanticism.

* From Eastern Europe, a sophisticated undergraduate dissertation in linguistics titled “Word-Formation in Fiction: Compounds in The Lord of the Rings” (2024). In English, and freely available online.

* The Tolkien Guide has a short review of Doomed to Die: An A-Z of Death In Tolkien. Usefully, some of the interior illustrations are shown. Thus potential buyers can see if the style is to their liking. The slim hardcover book is due to ship in a few days.

* The Tolkien & Illustration blog has an Oxonmoot diary 2025, with photographs.

* A Pilgrim In Narnia on “C.S. Lewis and the Art of Blurbology”.

* And finally, Editorial Erase, a new quality publishing house for Spanish-language Christian books for children in middle-childhood. Apparently such things have been lacking until now. In a 2025 Religion & Liberty interview, freely available online, the owners strongly reference Tolkien and Lewis, they appear to be very open to fantasy, and they also hope to publish past out-of-print classics.

Tolkien Gleanings #346

Tolkien Gleanings #346

* Wayne G. Hammond & Christina Scull have a new long blog post on “Legacy and Faith”, which considers the recent Walking Tree book Celebrating Tolkien’s Legacy. And one finds that the second half moves on to consider Tolkien’s Faith: A Spiritual Biography. Freely available online.

* John Garth has a new article on “‘Mounted on the monster’: Tolkien and the motor-car” ($ paywall), following the publication this week of The Bovadium Fragments.

* The pioneering eco-studies book Ents, Elves, and Eriador: The Environmental Vision of J.R.R. Tolkien (University Press of Kentucky, 2006) has a release-date for the first Italian translation as Ent, Elfi ed Eriador. Due on 13th December 2025.

* At the University of Texas School of Civic Leadership, a talk on “The War for Middle-earth” on 19th November 2025. Joseph Loconte gives a talk on his forthcoming book The War for Middle-earth, which Amazon currently pegs to 18th November 2025 in hardcover and ebook.

* In Barcelona from 17th-19th October 2025, an international conference on Faith, Art and Myth

“focuses on the literary, philosophical and spiritual legacy of three giants of Christian literature: G.K. Chesterton, C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Through conferences, round tables and cultural activities, the congress will offer an invaluable opportunity to explore the power of myth, beauty, and transcendence in their works”.

* In the latest Word on Fire, “Light and High Beauty: J.R.R. Tolkien’s Antidote to Despair”. Freely available online.

* Now freely available online, the Keble College PhD thesis “The Oxford School of Children’s Fantasy Literature: Medieval afterlives and the production of culture” (2011).

* New on YouTube, and well-timed for the falling of the leaves in England, Malcom Guite on trees, Tolkien & the meaning of things.

* And finally, Footnote remover, a new free online service to remove all footnotes and in-text superscript numbers from a PDF file. Perhaps useful if, for instance, you wanted to make a text-to-speech audiobook of an annotated text. Or ingest annotated letters or essays into an AI, without the annotations.