Wig41
Well-Known Member
I really enjoy "The Hobbit" and the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. The summer before 8th grade we had a required reading list. The only book I enjoyed was The Hobbit and I think I read it in three days … fast for me.
I haven't read the hobbit series in a long time. First time I read the books was in hs and could not put them down. I didn't get sleep for months! Not sure how many times I've read the series or watched the movies.Still reading "Last King", but in the meantime, I re-read "Jurassic Park". That's one that I can rip through in a long afternoon. Same goes for "The Hobbit".
I'm queuing up James Clavell's "Shogun" for after "Last King". "Shogun" is one that I read once a year, in the summer.
My feelings almost exactly. I discovered Tolkien as a freshman in high school. I've reread the entire series over fifty times (when I stopped counting) and used to read it every year. It got to the point that if someone started a paragraph and stopped in the middle, I could pick up where they left off, from memory.I was introduced to Tolkien and "The Hobbit" in 6th grade. My homeroom teacher read us the book, a portion at a time, before our lunch period every day. The first time, I was indignant that someone would read to me. "I'm in the top reading group, I don't need someone to read to me!" But with that first chapter, I was hooked. After she finished reading "The Hobbit", she started "The Fellowship of the Ring", till the end of the school year. I got the books and finished the trilogy on my own. Over the next years in school, I finished "The Lord of the Rings" and the "Silmarillion", as well as others of Tolkien's works. It sparked an interest in Norse and Anglo-Saxon literature, and eventually influenced my choice of languages as a major in college. To this day, I still read "The Hobbit" and the trilogy once a year.
Hate the movies, though, and the changes Jackson made, and the other stuff added to them. I don't believe Tolkien needs any improvement.
Have to agree with you about the movie's, didn't really do the books justice. PanthermanI was introduced to Tolkien and "The Hobbit" in 6th grade. My homeroom teacher read us the book, a portion at a time, before our lunch period every day. The first time, I was indignant that someone would read to me. "I'm in the top reading group, I don't need someone to read to me!" But with that first chapter, I was hooked. After she finished reading "The Hobbit", she started "The Fellowship of the Ring", till the end of the school year. I got the books and finished the trilogy on my own. Over the next years in school, I finished "The Lord of the Rings" and the "Silmarillion", as well as others of Tolkien's works. It sparked an interest in Norse and Anglo-Saxon literature, and eventually influenced my choice of languages as a major in college. To this day, I still read "The Hobbit" and the trilogy once a year.
Hate the movies, though, and the changes Jackson made, and the other stuff added to them. I don't believe Tolkien needs any improvement.
I read this several years ago. One of the hardest reads I've had. It was a tough one to get through but enjoyable."Silmarillion",