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Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Book Review, The Lord of the Rings: Volume 1- Chapter 2 by J.R.R. Tolkien

Book Review, The Lord of the Rings: Volume 1- Chapter 2 by J.R.R. Tolkien

There’s a fine line between naturalists and fashionists.  A naturalist will speak for what’s existing out of the necessary things for life such as trees and flowers while a fashionist will speak for what’s required out of unnecessary options for shits and giggles like ribbons and easily broken materials.  So, Tolkien is really a mixed bag for himself since he acts as a naturalist and a fashionist through hobbit-storytelling.  Vision comes with his humor for corruptions in the Shire with exception of the treasure buried in his pocket (among other things) and we wonder if he’s silly enough to be our uncle.  Hobbits don’t always seem to get along much.  A situation with Bilbo’s treasure leaks information over the radar on adventure into the celebrated wilderness near Hobbiton as far as mortality along Middle-Earth seems likely an object in the small, tiny author’s handwritten work.  What I’m not sure about is whether Frodo participated with writing up the evil language of Mordor or if Bilbo put his mind to it in ink.  Either way, looks can be deceiving when I’m looking at a script.  Our main enemy appears beautiful to those who seek the given filth to his rage for world-domination and, thoroughly speaking here, I can only give count to Bilbo and Frodo since they don’t wish to fight and, even though they get into hobbit-fashion, are more… decent.  Not too flashy, not too dull.  Obstacles do get in the way for hobbits lingering towards the stars among the heavens into conduct for the elves although matters turn the wheel on focus under Bilbo’s confusion for evil: he’s leaning on it, he’s shoving it, he’s matching it from bits, and in the end he’s fallen into a volcano’s trap.  Let me ask readers something.  Do you believe in the story?  You see, a subject taken in vain does not guarantee complete lack of faith for the picture into the whole spell within Tolkien’s marked words flowing through pages like butter and icing, if that’s possible.  Country-talk only appears gleeful at the surface; in reality, hunting and nature become conflicted elements with shopping and get-outs across the countrysides over the hills of doom and despair as well as boom and repair.  Chapter 2 fits very nicely with Chapter 1.  It continues the story with vivid imagery and some unfortunate stories about Mordor and “the misty mountains cold”.    



https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/fellowship/section3/

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