Book Review: The Lord Of The Rings J.R.R. Tolkien.

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The Lord of the Rings was first published in 1954. Since then it has been acknowledged as classic trilogy that many people have treasured encapsulating themselves in a realm of magic and heroism. Its sweeping fantasy has touched the hearts of many, both young and old alike. The writer J.R.R. Tolkien divided the trilogy into three books, The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return of the King. It was originally opened through a somewhat prologue of the book The Hobbit that related to the primary character Frodo’s cousin Bilbo Baggins.
From ‘The Hobbit’ Bilbo attains the ring and it is later inherited by young Frodo in the LOTR’s. Sauron, the Dark Lord, has gathered to him all the Rings of Power, the means by which he intends to rule Middle-earth. The ‘One Ring’ is a ring that was forged in the fires of mount doom and it is the one that rules them all. For Saurons plans of domination he needs this ring which is now in the hands of the innocent hobbit from the Shire. Frodo must take on the task of bringing the ring to Mordor in order to destroy it from where it was forged. By doing this he must take on a perilous journey across Middle-Earth to the Cracks of Doom to complete his task and foil the Dark Lord Sauron in his evil purpose.

This adventure becomes a magnificent tale where a fellowship is bonded through a great tale of friendship. The fellowship consists of elves, dwarfs, men and a great wizard Gandalf the grey. The tale of the fellowship becomes a benchmark for fantasy novels to come. Tolkien being the distinguished linguist he is, managed to display his deep appreciation of nature through his imagination of Middle Earth. His ideas of myth and its importance becomes a ground breaking novel, one of which will...

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...orld full of beauty and nature. When focusing on the traditional values, for a small hobbit, things such as a good home cooked meal or the comfort of the Shire in all its beauty are life affirming attributes that are worth fighting for, especially on this life threatening perilous journey.

It is a vision which Tolkien himself described as Marian in inspiration. She is the Queen of Heaven, clothed in the sun and standing on the moon, but she is also the peasant girl from a Galilean backwater who said ‘yes’ to God. The work glories in the paradoxes of the Christian faith: when I am weak I am strong, in dying we are born to eternal life, the first shall be last, in giving we receive, the meek shall inherit the earth. In Tolkien's epic tale it is not power, aggression, pride and self-seeking that win the day, but humility, mercy, self-sacrifice and, ultimately, Love.

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