Posted by
Hemos
on from the from-way-back-in-the-vaults dept.
AngrySpud writes "For those LotR fans out there, Salon.com has posted an MP3 of J.R.R. Tolkien himself reading from The Two Towers. It can be found here."
These were released -- on this side of the Atlantic, at least -- a few years ago by HarperCollins, who have their own Tolkien imprint. There's a double cassette of the great man, not only reading, but singing all those elven things that I tend to skip over in the book.
If you're interested, wander over to here (which is a frame inside this)
Say to thorin 'carry me'|say to thorin 'go window'|se|e|se|e|get ring|n|d|n|go crack
...and in other news.
by
spellcheckur
·
· Score: 5
Next week on the Micro$oft website, William Gates himself reading from the M$ End User License Agreement...
He tried to get it published several times before the
Hobbit was even written, and nearly gave up in frustration. If he had, we never would have had the Hobbit, nor the
LotR.
The really remarkable thing about the Silmarillion, IMO, is that it was apparently never really finished. Tolkein continued to revise and completely rewrite sections well after the Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings were published. Part of the reason that the Silmarillion is of such uneven tone and polish throughout is that some of the stories hadn't been revised since the 1930's, while others had been rewritten shortly before his death. The Silmarillion as published was really a compilation of stories in different stages of revision, and even from slightly different stages of his conception of the underlying story, edited just enough to ensure coherence, as they existed at the time of Tolkein's death.
This stuff is revealed (in inordinate detail) in the whole History of Middle Earth series, which is basically his son's editing and deciphering of his papers. If you're a hardcore Tolkein fan, or just somebody who's very interested in the creative process, it's fascinating to see how the stories developed over time. What is particularly interesting is the way in which elements that were minor and trivial in the earliest versions gradually became more important, and vice versa. It makes you wonder if such a thing could even be possible today, given the way that people tend to overwrite their old word processing files instead of leaving paper copies of their work at different stages around to be looked over by later scholars.
--
There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.
"'The Lord of the Rings', on which he'd worked for over 14 years, had been refused by publishers and he had almost given up hope of ever seeing it in print."
How close...
IMHO, the world would be a worse place without this book (these books). And I'm sure there are plenty of others out there who will agree with me.
Thanks for this, Hemos. Don't know why I like this, but I really do.
These were released -- on this side of the Atlantic, at least -- a few years ago by HarperCollins, who have their own Tolkien imprint. There's a double cassette of the great man, not only reading, but singing all those elven things that I tend to skip over in the book.
If you're interested, wander over to here (which is a frame inside this)
Say to thorin 'carry me'|say to thorin 'go window'|se|e|se|e|get ring|n|d|n|go crack
Next week on the Micro$oft website, William Gates himself reading from the M$ End User License Agreement...
Cool, he came out of the grave to help promote the new films. Now that is professionalism
Slashdot: Proof that a million monkeys at a million typewriters can create a masterpiece
MP3 without annoying pop-up
Refrag
I have a website. It's about Macs.
The really remarkable thing about the Silmarillion, IMO, is that it was apparently never really finished. Tolkein continued to revise and completely rewrite sections well after the Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings were published. Part of the reason that the Silmarillion is of such uneven tone and polish throughout is that some of the stories hadn't been revised since the 1930's, while others had been rewritten shortly before his death. The Silmarillion as published was really a compilation of stories in different stages of revision, and even from slightly different stages of his conception of the underlying story, edited just enough to ensure coherence, as they existed at the time of Tolkein's death.
This stuff is revealed (in inordinate detail) in the whole History of Middle Earth series, which is basically his son's editing and deciphering of his papers. If you're a hardcore Tolkein fan, or just somebody who's very interested in the creative process, it's fascinating to see how the stories developed over time. What is particularly interesting is the way in which elements that were minor and trivial in the earliest versions gradually became more important, and vice versa. It makes you wonder if such a thing could even be possible today, given the way that people tend to overwrite their old word processing files instead of leaving paper copies of their work at different stages around to be looked over by later scholars.
There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.
How close...
IMHO, the world would be a worse place without this book (these books). And I'm sure there are plenty of others out there who will agree with me.
Thanks for this, Hemos. Don't know why I like this, but I really do.
JJ