J.R.R. Tolkien discussion
Lord of the Rings
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Two Towers Question
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Dan
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Jul 06, 2013 11:18PM

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If you're finding The Two Tower a slow read, you're likely going to find The Silmarillion a much tougher read. It's a much denser and challenging book to read. It's more mythic in scope than Towers, meaning its heavy with description of character names and places and not always in a hurry to get around to revealing "story". But it is worth it to discover the wonderful legends that form that back story for LotR.
Btw, I found Towers a bit slow the first time I read it. But it gets really good as you get further on, so you really should stick with it.

Going along with what Kevis said, the Silmarillion can be a hard read, only because it covers a huge space of time. Plus, I've learned that J.R.R. Tolkien wasn't the only person to write the story either: I believe his son Christopher did some of the writings as well.

The Silmarillion is quite hard to read at the start, however it soon settles down into a fantastic set of stories, very epic and moving. They also give you all the pre-history to LOTR and the Hobbit, which has been brilliantly thought out, well worth reading just get through the first part.

holy mother of God, yes. then it isn't...."
well put, that is exactly how it is. Stay with it, you won't be sorry.

The author mimicates voices of the actors from the film adaptation (sometimes he even surpasses them in quality) + invents the original new ones for other characters, adds exquisite sound effects and skilfully mixes the film music score! He has just finished the whole trilogy... His skill and technics really grow with each new video! ;-) Enjoy!

Holy crap that sounds amazing! I will definitely be listening to that soon, thanks for letting us know!
As for Two Towers, the first time I read it I remember reading the second half took me ages! One time I was going to reread LOTR and just stopped when I got to the same part and didn't finish it haha However, earlier this year when I read them again I found it went by much faster. For whatever reason it was much more enjoyable, so power through, it's well worth it. Same with the Silmarillion, seems impossible at first, but it's amazing! :)

As for myself, I read LOTR first in translation when I was eleven also.. But when I was fifteen I understood that the main power of Tolkien's work lies in his magics with words and languages, so I'd set my mind on reading it in the original - I'd never read any real English novel before by that time - but the overwhelming atmosphere held me so tight that I'd managed to get through it then, and I don't exaggerate at all, when I say that it was The Professor who had taught me English! Nowadays, I already know the whole LOTR by heart - believe or not! First I had been coming through the journey all over again + reading some especially exciting parts aloud with proper dramatisation, but then I had come upon those audios, and since then I keep listening to it in my bed before falling asleep whenever I have a chance - I really feel as if I were strolling through Middle-Earth with the heros, it's quite 3D!, and Howard's mesmerising score always accompaning it! - since then I have had no need to watch the Jackson's films again! (I love the individual scenes, but their impression is sooo contraint, as is the case with all the film adaptations. ;-))
And, I just wonder, if even the LOTR hasn't the power to keep your mind engaged, to make your eyes follow and recognize the beauty of words, what do you do about the 'classic readings', as Ulysseus, Mrs. Dalloway, etc? Oh, just don't you say you prefer the 'Twilight-style'! :-D
No offence, I know that not everyone finds pleasure in LOTR's pseudo-mythic style, though I just can't withstand when people say it was boring...:-)



Anyhow, I adore Tolkien's own reading from LOTR - he'd recorded only excerpts, and I've got just several, but I can never get tired of listening to it (despite the poor sound's quality). When I heard it for the first time, I exclaimed after a few words: "It's Gandalf!" (in fact, Ian McKellen said he had based the wizard's voice on Tolkien's - though now I would say there are also some traces of Bilbo's nature in Tolkien's way of speaking - especially when interviewed). And after hearing even his Gollum's performance (notably in the sample from 'Of Herbs and Stewed Rabbit'), all was clear - it wasn't Andy who had invented Gollum's voice with all that belongs to it, he had just listened to Tolkien, and then brought it to perfection with his wonderful skill and expanded it on his whole performance! ;-)

Regarding TTT being a drag... What I try to do is slow my mind down and try to put myself in the middle of it, as if I were there. I slow my reading to a conversational tempo. Of the three books, TTT is the one that really gets into the characters' heads. It is invaluable in this regard.

'Gets into characters'head'? Well, you are getting there all the trilogy's long, but if it should be espeacially in TTT, then I agree with you on the ground of Gollum' character! He has so much space just for his psychological development in TTT (because in ROTK there he can't any longer get a space and a chance till Mount Doom to show himself off)... This creature can always make both laugh and cry and shiver there - for example 'The Dead Marshes' (thrilling schizophrenic Slinker&Stinker dilemma), 'Of Herbs and Stewed Rabbit' (funny Sméagol) and 'The Stairs of Cirith Ungol' (tragic Gollum) + 'Shelob's Lair' (spooky Gollum's-on-top case) etc. ;-)


I must definitely hear such an audio! Where can I get it, Denice? Great thanks for the highlight! ;-)