Revisiting the J. R. R. Tolkien’s legendarium

Writing about something that’s extremely popular can be difficult. Mostly due to the constant nagging feeling of – can I even say/write anything that’s worth writing that hasn’t been discussed to death by now? Well, The Middle-Earth books by J. R. R. Tolkien aren’t just “extremely popular” – they’re a natural part of culture, part of how people perceive any fantasy world (at least in the “Western World”), something that remains as inspirational and rich as it used to be when the books just got published.

Now, they weren’t as much of a revelation for me as they were for lots of people. Yet, even when I originally read The Hobbit as a kid, in some abridged version with illustrations for each page, I felt as if this work existed from before the beginning of time and will exist forever since. Weaving together western and northern world mythologies, using his linguistics skills and immense imagination John Ronald Reuel Tolkien has created something that has been imitated numerous times since. Yet often never reaching the same density and believability of the world of Middle-Earth Tolkien created.

So, a short while ago I decided to finally revisit the 3 main works set in the Middle-Earth: The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion. And here’s what I thought of them now.

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