* A long and detailed November 2022 guest-post on John Garth’s website goes “In search of T.W. Earp”, a fellow-student during Tolkien’s undergraduate years at Oxford. Earp was also a guardian of the records, minutes and traditions of the various college societies during the disruptive war years. Includes portraits and pictures that I had not seen before.
* “Community Greening in The Lord of the Rings: Samwise Gamgee and the Power of Local Care”. A revised December 2022 essay version of a presentation given at the Texas Literature and Language Symposium 2021…
In the character of Samwise Gamgee, Tolkien champions a “love of the land” which Patrick Curry describes as “a fierce attachment to highly specific and local places and things”. Sam is a gardener — an excellent gardener with great knowledge and skill. He is also a curator of local ecological knowledge — he knows the landscape of the Shire, and he knows how the flora and fauna of the Shire are distributed.
* British Fairies has another post in a long series. This New Year’s Day post notes some of the uses that writers have made of lore of ‘long-barrow sleepers’ in the British landscape. A tradition which readers will recall informed the events on the Barrow Downs in The Lord of the Rings.
* In South Carolina, USA, a 2023 Regional Convivium (great word) on the theme of “The Inklings and the Great Conversation: Friendship through Literature”. On 24th-25th February 2023…
we explore ways that literature brings old friends together, helps us make new friends and continues the long friendship of minds from ancient times into the present and for the future.
* News of the annual Inklings Symposium 2023 in Germany. Papers can be in either German or English, and the deadline is 31st January 2023, for…
the annual symposium of the Inklings Society for Literature and Aesthetics [from] 29th April to 1st May at Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, [with] the theme ‘Defying Death: Immortality and Rebirth in the Fantastic’.
* News of a conference panel on the theme of “the functions of relics and ruins in Middle-earth”. Part of a conference to be held at Niagara Falls on the U.S./Canada border, from 23rd-26th March 2023.
* A forthcoming book has been mentioned, to be titled Cities and Strongholds of Middle-earth: Essays on the Habitations of Tolkien’s Legendarium.









