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JRR Tolkien Denied Nobel Due To Low Quality Prose

Morty writes "In 1961, C.S. Lewis nominated JRR Tolkien for the Nobel Prize in Literature. Tolkien did not receive the prize. 50 years later, the archives for that year have been made available, so now we know why. Tolkien's prose was viewed as low quality."

5 of 505 comments (clear)

  1. The secret to reading LOTR... by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...is to skip over all the songs. Read that once on a blog somewhere, and I'd say it's good advice. I've read the series two or three times, and just pretending the damn songs weren't even there would have enhanced the experience.

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    Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
  2. Nobel prize for literature is irrelevant by voss · · Score: 4, Informative

    List of writers rejected by nobel committee
    Leo Tolstoy, Henrik Ibsen, Émile Zola, Mark Twain, Graham Greene, Vladimir Nabokov, Salman Rushdie,
    and last but not least Karel Capek.

    Who is Karel Capek?

    The author that coined the term Robot(Rossum Universal Robots) , his 1936 work "The war with the newts" was rejected for being too offensive to the German (nazi) government.

  3. Re:Tolkien's prose by idontgno · · Score: 5, Informative

    Right idea, but wrong mythos.

    Anglo-Saxon literature and its Scandanavian cousins, plus the ancient lore of his own childhood neighborhood are the roots of Tolkien's legendarium. Undoubtedly, the epics of the various Mediterranean cultures were there too, since they were completely unavoidable to anyone studying Oxford "Greats". But the epic-ness of the Silmarillion and the Ring are pretty much Saxon and Brythonic in character.

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  4. Re:I believe Nobel prize is of low quality.... by icebraining · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's Saramago, you ignorant troll. And yes, people read him - in fact, it's obligatory reading for all students in my country.

  5. Re:Agreed by Opyros · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've found that his prose improves quite a bit when read out loud. A number of people have observed that it seems to be optimized for speaking rather than silent reading. My advice to anyone who can't get through the prose is to try an audiobook; if you still don't like it, then Tolkien is probably not for you.