Tolkien Gleanings #20

Tolkien Gleanings #20

* 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.

Tolkien Gleanings #19

Tolkien Gleanings #19

* The first issue of my Tolkien Gleanings PDF omnibus edition can now also be had as a download on Gumroad. A few silly typos have been corrected.

* “Tolkien’s Animals” will be the theme of a future special-issue of the Journal of Tolkien Research. There’s still time to send something in. The deadline is 23rd January 2023 via kris.swank@signumu.org — for draft papers on Tolkien and your choice of…

a wide range of animals, and not necessarily connected with medieval conceptions. PLEASE use “Tolkien’s Animals” as your email’s subject-line.

* New to me, a Norman Stone movie featuring a relatively brief portrayal of Tolkien. Who knew? The Most Reluctant Convert slipped out in November 2021 to a piffling box-office take, before landing on the main streaming services in June 2022. Though it is now hitting some “Best of 2022” lists, and also some of the Christian streaming services. It’s from the maker of the fine Shadowlands (1985) movie about C.S. Lewis. The new film portrays Lewis’s journey…

from vigorous debunker of Christianity to become, as he said, ‘the most reluctant convert in all England’.

I found it very well filmed and polished, but for a non-Christian Lewis might as well be speaking in Swahili for half the movie. This is the problem I’ve always had with Lewis, half the time I just can’t fathom what the heck he’s talking about or why he’s finding it all so important. For someone supposedly trained to think clearly, he has a most convoluted way of putting things. Still… for those who can instantly grasp each religious turmoil as he goes through it, and parse the specialist language and doubts that each turmoil seems to entail, I daresay Reluctant Convert will be found to be a fine and intelligent movie. Many Christian reviewers like it a lot. Non-Christians may come away feeling rather baffled.

* The French magazine Livr’ Arbitres has what might be a Tolkien special-issue(?) for December 2022.

* Also in France (Google Translate not permitted on the source Web link, ‘French only’), news of two 2023 exhibitions dedicated to Tolkien. One exhibition title translates as “In the Footsteps of Tolkien and the Medieval Imagination” and is described as “major”. While another will “focus on other modern or digital artistic evocations of Tolkien’s work. Like digital art, comics, animation, videogames.” Doubtless more will be heard about these in due course.

Tolkien Gleanings #18

Tolkien Gleanings #18

* New in the journal Critereon, “Genre in Translations of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Identifies differences between the Tolkien and Simon Armitage translations of Gawain.

* The second edition of the book Journey Back Again: Reasons to Revisit Middle-earth (2022). Each chapter explores a reason why people re-read The Lord of the Rings. According to the editor’s home-page the book was launched with an event in the late summer of 2022. This second edition (seemingly not expanded or revised) was announced for “November 2022”, and is now on Amazon UK as a £9 Kindle ebook. Which means Kindle owners can yet the first 10% free as a sample.

Judging by the one review, the book doesn’t appear to have a chapter on the pleasure of discovering small interconnections, un-noticed in many previous readings. For me the LoTR deepens like a coastal shelf, when partly read with an eye to such things. For instance in the Fellowship Aragorn left “the hill of Cerin Amroth and came there never again as living man.” Why the emphasis on “living”? Does this imply his body was later transferred to Lorien from Gondor, after death? No, it seems not. But in the Fourth Age his beloved Arwen was buried on Cerin Amroth. One can then glimpse a later tradition, between these small cracks in the text. A tradition among the increasingly “rustic” remnant of the elves who remained in Lorien, that Aragorn’s spirit was sometimes to be seen (or felt) at the grave of Arwen.

* A new essay at the online Catholic magazine Fellowship & Fairydust gives an overview of “Tolkien the Religious Man”. Appears to be a useful introduction on the topic, and probably helpful — along with other materials — for non-religious people seeking to correctly grasp the outlines of Tolkien’s belief. The author also introduces a few new possibilities for influence, including pre-1914 influence of Cardinal Newman’s lectures on “Tolkien’s opinion on the matter of pagans’ knowledge of God”.

There are a couple of question marks on the above essay. It’s stated “the Oratory priests were all learned men”, yet Father Francis was definitely not a learned intellectual nor remembered as such. “Educated” might have been the better choice of word here. In Birmingham Father Francis is said to have been “paying a portion of his tuition fees with his own money when he was under no obligation to do so”, but so far as I am aware a kind uncle was initially paying the full school fees. The reference given in the essay is to Letters — and is thus almost certainly to the letter stating “Fr. Francis obtained permission for me to retain my scholarship at K[ing] E[dward’s] S[chool] and continue there”, which is not the same thing as paying fees. This statement by Tolkien may refer to his winning a foundation scholarship in 1902 (during which year he briefly attended the nearby St. Philip’s School). His foundation scholarship meant that “no fees will have to be paid for his education” to continue at King Edward’s (Chronology). The alternative explanation would be that Tolkien was referring to an extension granted for the extra year he spent at King Edward’s, at the end of his time there, while was trying for a place at Oxford. The matter is important in relation to the pressure Father Francis could have placed on the young Tolkien not to see Edith. Obviously, if he was even partly paying the boy’s school fees, then his leverage would have been much greater than otherwise. But the date of the forbidding was in the late Autumn of 1909, so the fees would not have been a factor either way.

* A new Journal of Tolkien Research review of the new Tolkien fix-up book The Fall of Numenor (2022). As well as problems of narrative arrangement, apparently it lacks something in terms of the expected scholarly apparatus.

* And finally, a special website at blackberry.signumuniversity.org lists a wealth of Short Courses at Signum University for January and also February 2023. Eight hours each, complete them in a month. Several on Tolkien or thereabouts. Who knew?

Tolkien Gleanings #17

Tolkien Gleanings #17

* Tolkien Gleanings is now available as a handy 96-page PDF magazine, free on Archive.org and also on Gumroad. All my previous blog Gleanings and MegaTolks are here neatly collected and presented, back to 2019. Plus additional scholarly articles, a review and an interview. Easily searchable, and the Web links have also been checked for obvious breakage.

Drop me a comment on this blog, if you have something to contribute to the next PDF issue. Such as a scholarly review of a little-reviewed book. Unlike the academic journals, I’m not averse to reviews of self-published scholarly books. No poetry or fiction please, unless you’re Pauline Stainer or Alan Garner. Each issue will collect my Tolkien Gleanings blog posts into a bundle, and add some additional texts and pictures of interest. Expect perhaps two issues per year, produced when I feel the urge.

* ““The Ring in Your Voice Tells It”: Voice and the Essential Self in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Legendarium” (2021). A free preview of a Masters dissertation, though it has a lengthy abstract.

* “Theology and Fairy-Stories: A Theological Reading of Tolkien’s Shorter Works”, seemingly newly in open-access at a university repository. This was a chapter in the book Tolkien’s Shorter Works (2008). From the same author as the above, and again seemingly new in open-access, is his “Freedom and Providence as Anti-Modern Elements”. This examines… “the depiction of freedom and providence in Tolkien’s fictional works”.

* The Times newspaper ($ paywall) has a Priscilla Tolkien obituary.

* News of the forthcoming book The History of the Hobbit by John D. Rateliff. Being… “a re-issue of the revised 2011 edition”. Pre-ordering now and due to ship on 16th March 2023. The book… “presents the complete unpublished text of the original manuscript of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit, accompanied by John Rateliff’s lively and informative account of how the book came to be written and published.” Also has the revised “rewrite” version of The Hobbit, supposed to make it more adult like The Lord of the Rings. Thankfully that was never finished. The 2023 book appears to only have a new cover, to make it uniform with other such volumes? Harper Collins also lists a “Deluxe edition” in slipcase, shipping on the same date.

* And finally, Shropshire Tourist Board on The Wrekin… “It has been suggested that it may have been the inspiration for J R R Tolkien’s Middle Earth in The Lord of the Rings”. What kind of tourist actually believes such airy marketing piffle? The ones who ‘spend big’ at the Gift Shoppe, I guess.

The wording is a verbatim filch from the Amberley book 50 Gems of Shropshire (2018), including the mangling of Middle-earth as “Middle Earth”. In this 2018 book the claim is given in passing and is un-referenced. The only likely source I can find, in print, is William Cash’s book Restoration Heart: A Memoir in which he recalls his “Uncle Jonathan” from his childhood, his Uncle being a local amateur archaeologist and hill-walker in the mid/late 1980s… “Jonathan explained that Tolkien used to walk up the Wrekin and used the famous defensive hill as a model for the shire in The Hobbit.” So it sounds like that claim could have seeded a small cloud of local oral confabulation.

Tolkien Gleanings #16

Tolkien Gleanings #16

* New on Archive.org to borrow, Roger C. Schlobin’s collection Phantasmagoria: Collected Essays on the Nature of Fantasy. This includes the essay “The Monsters are Talismans and Transgressions: Tolkien and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”, which discusses how Tolkien might have subtly woven certain tones and shades from Gawain into The Lord of the Rings. Such as having a mostly “absentee villain”. The author briefly examines Boromir as a flawed character, but curiously overlooks Sir Gawain as the obvious template for Boromir’s lone and questing journey to find the mysterious Rivendell. Though I’ll admit that this quest is easy to overlook, deeply interwoven as it is across a dozen or more points in LoTR.

* Tea with Tolkien has a useful new Concise Outline of the Waldman Letter (Letter 131). This being a very long letter/pitch by Tolkien to an editor, written and sent in 1951. The Tolkien Gateway also has an existing summary online, but that is more verbose and slab-like.

* Douglas A. Anderson’s new scholarly Tom Shippey on Tolkien: A Checklist through 2022. Free as a .PDF file, though regrettably only for those with an Academia.edu account.

* New this week at The European Conservative, the article “When Middle Earth Came to Vienna”… “The renewed obsession with the minutiae of Tolkien’s work gives me an excuse to revisit […] the inspiration for Tolkien’s Battle of the Pelennor Fields.”

* A talk on “The Pagan Tolkien” is set for 16th February 2023, snow-gods permitting… “Professor Ronald Hutton shares insights on the pagan influences evident in the work of J.R.R. Tolkien”. A heavyweight speaker, though at a small Shire-like village-hall on the edge of Gloucester, England. Booking now.

Tolkien Gleanings #15

Tolkien Gleanings #15

* John Ahern has a short but stimulating new article musing on “The Forest and the Descendants of Saruman”

It is easy to sentimentalize Tolkien’s trees. […] But there is another side to the story. […] Saruman may use the forests of Fangorn to fuel his machines, but for much longer than that Sauron used Mirkwood to gather his strength. On the whole, there are four forests in The Lord of the Rings and only one is unambiguously good.

* News of a talk at the 2023 Oxford Literary Festival, “The Great Tales Never End: in Memory of Christopher Tolkien”

“The Bodleian’s Tolkien archivist Catherine McIlwaine, writer John Garth and academic Stuart Lee discuss the role of J.R.R. Tolkien’s son, Christopher, in promoting the works of his father and furthering understanding about them.”

* Worcester’s The Magic of Middle-earth exhibition closed in the late summer, but was then quietly trucked up to Lichfield in Staffordshire. Who knew? Not many, unless perhaps you were on Instagram or perusing the local newspaper. The Lichfield publicity seems to have not gone much further than that. I find the exhibition closed on 11th December 2022.

* A new interview, “For The Love of Tolkien and Lewis”. This has news of a forthcoming screen documentary…

“Joseph Loconte, PhD., is an author, Senior Fellow in Christianity and Culture at The King’s College, and the Director of the B. Kenneth Simon Center for American Studies at the Heritage Foundation. […] His most recent project is a documentary on Lewis and Tolkien, with an emphasis on the way that war shaped their friendship and writings. Tri-State Voice writer Blake Whitmer recently sat down to interview him about his work.”

* And finally, I see that in Spring 2022 Malvern claimed Tolkien with a rather poorly proof-read leaflet (e.g. “C.s lewis”) containing a mapped walking route along the top of the Malverns…

An article in Mallorn in 1998, “A Fiftieth Anniversary Walk (or There and Back Again, an academics day out)” discussed and re-traced the walk in question…

“the [walk in the] Malvern Hills in 1947 was the last they [Tolkien and Lewis] went on together.”

Garth (Tolkien’s Worlds) is less sure, and offers that it was “perhaps” their last walk together. But they were definitely there. The new leaflet also makes an un-referenced claim that the Malvern Hills inspired the…

“Ered Nimrais mountain range, known colloquially as the White Mountains” and that “In a rare admission, Tolkien acknowledged that these White Mountains were, indeed, based on The Malvern Hills.”

This seems unlikely, given the greatly differing elevation and reach. Again one consults Garth (Tolkien’s Worlds) to find that the source was a recollection of a verbal conversation. On this Garth suggests a mis-remembering… “perhaps based on a mis-hearing”. This seems quite likely to me. Tolkien spoke rapidly and also mumbled, and it was difficult to catch everything he said even if you were right next to him. But a mis-hearing of what? Well, The Weather Hills would be a far more apt comparison. That comparison has already been made in Mallorn in 1992 in the article “The Geology of the Northern Kingdom”. This also offers some clear geological parallels. Weathertop is at the southern end of the Weather Hills, and thus the Hereford Beacon and its hill-fort remains would have partly inspired Weathertop. Again, quite a plausible surmise. We also know that they could be seen from Tolkien’s brother’s farm in Evesham, across the (relatively flat) Worcestershire countryside.

Tolkien Gleanings #14

Tolkien Gleanings #14

* Newly available via Amazon in dead-tree and e-book formats, the book Tolkien Dogmatics: Theology through Mythology with the Maker of Middle-earth (November 2022). Weighing in at 432 pages, it is billed as…

“a comprehensive manual of Tolkien’s theological thought. […] Austin M. Freeman [who teaches Apologetics at university level] inspects Tolkien’s entire corpus — The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings and beyond — as a window into his theology”.

There’s no mention of use of the Letters here, which is slightly worrying. Though the book has an encouraging recommendation from Tolkien scholar Thomas Honegger…

Tolkien Dogmatics is likely to become a standard text for interested laypeople and literary critics as well as professional theologians when discussing the theology of the maker of Middle-earth.”

The book is a self-described “manual”. In that regard I noted a short buyer-review, stating that… “the theology is nicely organised”. Another source admired the wealth of footnotes. But it’s probably not the A-Z cross-referenced encyclopedia that a non-theologian Tolkien scholar might hope for. I see the author is also editor of the recent Theology and H.P. Lovecraft, in which he had a chapter comparing the world-building approaches of Lovecraft and Tolkien.

If you can’t afford Tolkien Dogmatics yet, apparently the publisher Lexham Press is sending out review copies. As yet, Google Books knows nothing about it while Amazon’s “Look Inside” only offers the front cover.

There’s a podcast interview with the author, scheduled for 21st December 2022.

* The next volume of the Journal of Tolkien Research is now underway, the first two items having been posted. One is an article which takes a rather over-complicated dive into “The Enigma of Goldberry”, the River-woman’s daughter who becomes the beloved of Tom Bombadil. The author usefully suggests that Bombadil’s reluctance to stray too far from Goldberry may be because he must be always on hand and attentive, to prevent her being drawn back to the river and to her former life as a nixie. The author also notes a connection of water-lilies with nix… (“[of] water-lilies both yellow and white, Grimm [1883] remarks that in modern German they are called ‘nixblumen‘ which translates as ‘nixie-flowers'”). This is not a late confabulation arising from 1870s scholarly interest in nix, as I can find the word in a 1740 German dictionary.

* The Journal of Tolkien Research also now has Kristine Larsen’s 2019 conference paper ““I am Primarily a Scientific Philologist”: J.R.R. Tolkien and the Science/Technology Divide”.

* A very long new article in First Things offers an in-depth review of the recent essay “A Prophecy of Evil: Tolkien, Lewis, and Technocratic Nihilism”. I had previously noticed the essay in question, but had backed off within microseconds — because the pictures were so cringingly naff and because it was evidently mostly about C.S. Lewis. But apparently it is worth a read.

* And finally, new to me is the stage play Lewis & Tolkien, of Wardrobes and Rings, which my searches suggest first appeared under spotlights circa 2018. The play is said to be a “mature and insightful” two-hander which portrays the close friendship of Tolkien and C.S. Lewis. It was brought to my attention by a listing for a March 2023 performance in America, and at a guess it may have further U.S. dates in 2023. The play…

“is set in Oxford’s Eagle and Child pub, where British authors C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien meet for what turns out to be their final conversation.”

Tolkien Gleanings #13

Tolkien Gleanings #13

* “Addenda: One Middle English Manuscript and Four Editions of Medieval Works Known to J.R.R. Tolkien and What They Reveal” (2021). This offers several new additions to the recent ‘Tolkien read this’ book Tolkien’s Library: An Annotated Checklist (which is to have a new edition on early 2023). The free PDF for the article can be had via searching Google Scholar for the title placed “in quote marks”. Last time I looked, academia.edu only allows public downloads in that way (for non-members).

* The author of The Annotated Hobbit has a new post on “The Hobyahs: A Reconsideration”. “Hobyahs” became known via printed books as a Scotch household bogey creature, akin to the common Midlands / Northern English ‘Hob’ and ‘Lob’ — but made rather more scary to children due to their vivid picture-book illustrations. As the article explains, Tolkien was interested in the word’s resemblance to his own word and he publically asked about its dissemination… although that interest came after The Hobbit.

* “Un souvenir brumeux de Dante dans The Lord of the Rings de Tolkien” (2021). In French with English abstract. Sees a possible influence of Dante’s Commedia on the Dead Marshes chapter in The Lord of the Rings

“Dante could have been a model for Tolkien. Despite the specificity of each text, the marsh appears as a space with a paradoxical nature, between life and death, between water, earth and fire. A space dominated by the indistinct and the deceptive, in which the presence of a guide is indispensable”.

Regrettably they appear to refuse and “404” all links, except to the home page or if found by internal search. You’ll have to search for “Tolkien”.

* The Imaginative Conservative has a new ‘short but informative’ post on “The Inklings and the Outbreak of World War II”. The Inklings…

“worried that England would be next on the invasion list, and they began to enumerate the innumerable times they had publicly condemned the Nazis.”

* “One Graph to Rule them All: Using NLP and Graph Neural Networks to analyse Tolkien’s Legendarium” is an open-access paper for a December 2022 conference. The researchers use new computational methods to… “study character networks extracted from a text corpus of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Legendarium.” An early version is available on Arxiv. Note that NLP = ‘Natural Language Processing’ computer-science, not the pseudoscience of ‘Neuro-linguistic Programming’.

* And finally, new to me is Introducing the Medieval Dragon (2020) by Tolkien scholar Thomas Honegger. A University of Wales book of 144 pages. The contents are…

   Preface.
   The Dragon and Medieval Religion.
   The Medieval Dragon and Folklore.
   The Dragon and Medieval Literature.
   Outlook and Conclusion.
   Endnotes.
   Further reading.

Tolkien Gleanings #12

Tolkien Gleanings #12

* Open-access in the Italian journal Mantichora, ““Like Flowers Beneath The Ancient Song”: Language And Myth In Owen Barfield and J.R.R. Tolkien” (2021). The journal wrongly states the article is in Italian. It’s actually in English.

“at the basis of language there is first and foremost an ancient pleasure — purely expressive and performative — of articulating sounds [that are] pleasantly conformed to the objects they designate (“phonetic fitness”) [… with these being often originally] strongly linked to the natural environment.”

* Open-access in LURe: Literary Undergraduate Research, “Christopher: The Editors and the Critics” (2022). A deft appreciation of Christopher Tolkien, by a talented undergraduate.

* A new library blog-post from Special Collections at Washington University, “The Medieval Mind of Tolkien”, which offers a peep at a few of their treasured books.

* The Dominican publication Dominicana offers a new meditation on “Christmas in Middle-Earth”

“His stories about Middle-earth […] also reveal the marvel of the Incarnation in ways that are explicit, surprising, overlooked, and ‘peculiar’ — to use the author’s own word.”

* An extract from an old conference paper, now newly posted online as a blog post by Dimitra Fimi, as “Goblins in Dickens’s Pickwick Papers and Tolkien’s The Hobbit.

* Open access, “Palimpsestos Liricos em Tolkien” (2022). The full title translates as: ‘Lyrical Palimpsests in Tolkien: on the poetic interpolations and vestiges of Nordic and Anglo-Saxon literary traditions in the works of J.R.R. Tolkien’. A Masters dissertation for the University of Sao Paulo, in Portuguese. In the English abstract, the author sees a…

“derivative relationship with Beowulf in Old English and the Elder Edda in Old Norse [and detects] traces left by such a process and its connection with the Germanic poetic tradition [and] compositional procedures from that tradition. [Something which, for Tolkien, may have] begun in an effort of translation”.

Someone in a podcast — possibly Tom Shippey — recently recalled how translation of several pages of text was given as an exercise by the better British schools, in Tolkien’s day. It was a swift dash-it-off individual daily exercise. Tolkien, of course, went a step further. At least for Greek. To help him learn to translate Greek, he invented his own purified ‘Pure Greek’.

* And finally, news of a new richly illustrated translation of “The Wanderer”….

“Cole decided to write her own translation of ‘The Wanderer’, one that would pay homage to Tolkien by using his language and themes […] she also illustrated her text with beautiful watercolor paintings.”.

Tolkien Gleanings #11

Tolkien Gleanings #11

* Many intelligent reading youngsters graduate themselves from The Hobbit straight into The Lord of the Rings, often at the early age of 11-13. I recall one lad I knew who read it avidly in the bike-sheds at school, when aged barely 11. I think I read it a few years later than red-haired Nigel, and can recall some of my first responses (such as being rather annoyed that Tolkien was suddenly introducing a new character, Dernhelm, more than half-way through). But more generally what does one think, at such an age, of the challenging larger work? There’s now a public PhD thesis on the topic, ‘Small Hands Do Them Because They Must’: examining the reception of The Lord of the Rings among young readers (2020, Glasgow University).

* The Melborne Catholic this week, on “How Tolkien nearly lost his faith — and what drew him back”… “Out of wickedness and sloth I almost ceased to practise my religion […] I regret those days bitterly” (Tolkien).

* The Tolkien Experience podcast has a new interview with Brian Sibley, whose “newest project The Fall of Numenor is a book that pulls together Tolkien’s writings” on the topic, and makes a coherent book from them.

* The Adherent Apologetics podcast has a new interview, “Holly Ordway: The Christian World of J.R.R. Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings”.

* Scholars and Storytellers has a new blog post titled “Reconstructionary Tales”, on Tolkien and Guy Davenport. Who, as it turns out, was once one of Tolkien’s university students. I can add that Davenport also rather amusingly pranked the first wave of eager LoTR language-delvers. He claimed that all the names that Tolkien gave to various hobbits could actually be found in his local telephone book for Lexington, Kentucky (later shown to be untrue, sadly). More seriously he also detected the influence of a “von Essenbach” in The Lord of the Rings. Definitely not a household name in the Anglosphere, but von Essenbach (1170 – c. 1220) was a poet of the mystical Arthurian epic Parzival in medieval German. On which one Richard Wagner later based his 1882 opera, and the rest is history.

* The Parma Rumillion blog has a new post on “Tolkien and Stonyhurst College” in Lancashire. Tolkien made a delightful pen-sketch of the “New Lodge at Stonyhurst College”, which is shown in the post and which I had not seen before. But the blog post finds that… “the school and the area’s connection to Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings is wildly exaggerated”. There are questions about… “the Tolkien Trail promoted by [local tourist-board] Visit Lancashire and local businesses, although the leaflet does have a picture of New Lodge. The trail is a bit of a wild goose chase quite frankly, not using the public right-of-way to get a good view of the school and visiting places without meaningful Tolkien connections.” But Parma Rumillion kindly offers readers an alternative route, with maps. And a warning about a strange local Jobsworth who drives a little white van.

* And finally, as we head toward Christmas, a short meditation on “The Importance of Being Jolly”…. “J.R.R. Tolkien’s hobbits provide an example from fiction; their response to the goods of everyday life, such as food, drink, and tobacco, is one of gratitude and exultation.”

Tolkien Gleanings #10

Tolkien Gleanings #10

* I was sorry to hear of the passing of Professor J. S. Ryan, one of the few scholarly writers on Tolkien who had also studied under Professor Tolkien. I still have his books Tolkien’s View and In the Nameless Wood on my shelves, and a number of their otherwise-scarce essays proved useful in writing my own recent book. Douglas A. Anderson has assembled a biography of Ryan, and he has a Web link to a fuller obituary.

* Newly online in open-access in 2021, the final published version of “Middle America meets Middle-earth: American discussion and readership of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of The Rings, 1965-1969″ (2005). The first half being an very in-depth history of the copyright problems with the book in America. Then we eventually get to a section on the first brief ‘craze’ for Tolkien among the more discerning elements of American’s youth, and the response to it…

[even when critics actually looked at the book] “… criticisms very frequently have had less to do with The Lord of the Rings itself than with their aversion to the type of book they think it to be, and equally to the type of reader attracted to such books.”

* The venerable U.S. magazine The National Review this week reviews the new Tolkien book The Fall of Numenor. Mostly gushy praise + a long potted summary, but it’s useful to have such a summary.

* Forthcoming, a “revised and expanded edition” of The Silmarillion Primer. Amazon knows nothing about a first edition. But a little digging reveals it actually first appeared as a publisher’s bi-weekly blog-post series, at Tor.com back in 2017-18.

* And finally, ominous news re: Tolkien Estate’s licensing deals for 2023. “LEGO BrickHeadz, The Lord of the Rings versions” are coming soon to toy stores. This hideous-looking line of plastic tat, specifically designed to look squat and monstrous, even has a pair that defiles “Aragorn & Arwen”. Ugh. I’ll spare you the pictures.

Regrettably I also see that the Tolkien Society is seeming to endorse such orc-work, through allowing Lego items into their “Best Artwork” annual category.

Tolkien Gleanings #9

Tolkien Gleanings #9

* An Exploration of Tolkien’s Changing Visions of Faerie Through His Non-Middle-Earth Poetry (2021). A PhD thesis for the University of Glasgow, UK. The .PDF is online and public. Sees Bombadil as having one possible source in the 17th century Tom O’Bedlam.

“… analyses the themes, language, and folklore of Tolkien’s non-Middle-earth poetry, arguing that it is possible to see three sometimes overlapping phases […] an initial phase when he explored who and what the fairies were; a second divergent phase where Tolkien at once studied the worlds and poetic styles of the medieval works he taught at Oxford yet also used his Faerie poems to protest the excesses of modern living; and a third phase where he increasingly merged his Christian beliefs with his concept of Faerie”. Concludes by showing how these approaches might have been woven into the late tale “Smith of Wootton Major”.

* Free online, a blog article for a medical humanities site, “Fangorn, the Shire, and Beleriand: Tolkien’s Disabled Landscapes” (2022)…

“… we do not abandon lands after they are changed, or when their value is diminished in our eyes. The Ents reclaim Isen. The Hobbits remain in the Shire [and restore it, even though] neither goes back to the way they were before they were impaired.”

* From Kent State University Press, the book Inkling, Historian, Soldier, and Brother: A Life of Warren Hamilton Lewis (December 2022)…

“examines Warren Lewis’s role as an original member of the Oxford Inklings [and C.S. Lewis’s brother, drawing on] unpublished diaries, his letters, the memoir he wrote about his family, and other primary materials, this biography is an engaging story of a fascinating life, and period of history”.

* Free online, a long scholarly blog post on “The Medieval in Middle-earth: Anglo-Saxon Elephants and Tolkien’s Oliphaunts” (2020).

* And finally, to Tolkien’s cherished town of Warwick in the West Midlands of England. A giant Lord of the Rings style ‘trebuchet’ siege-engine is to be built there. The 22-ton wooden machine will be the world’s biggest, and by 2023 it should be ready for flinging oliphaunt-sized loads around the grounds of Warwick Castle. Seen here is their earlier smaller engine, which is being retired.

Garth states (Worlds, p. 191) that it is “not unlikely” that the young Tolkien brothers took the train from Birmingham to the annual Warwick Pageant in the castle grounds. Though in those days there may not have been reconstructed siege-engines, it seems vaguely-possible that the castle could offer displays of scale models set in battle dioramas.