Im upto the part where there just about to enter Mirkwood, Gandalph has turned back, but im sure we'll see him again, its quite captivating.
I read LOTR a few year back, so interesting to read about things here that are going to happen. Its very connected to the LOTR.
I have feeling theres going to be a huge battle near the end.
I like the part when Gandalf signal to the Dwarves to come in 2 by 2,
as he is telling beorn his story, and the story on how Golf was invented.
This gong to make a great movie. I do
i havent read the book in years but it IS amazing so are LOTR
which version do you have? because tolkein worte two. the orginal one, where gollum was actually kinda nice n then after lotr he realised that gollum needed to be portrayed as more evil and so rewrote his part in the hobbit to make him seem more evil. i think i read the "evil" version, and i expect you are too cuz only the really old copies have the oroginal story.
I used to hate books until I was 12 and my little brother got me The Hobbit for Christmas, and after I read it I was hooked into fantasy books and now because of that book, years later I am adapting works from Robert Jordan, George R.R. Martin, Orson Scott Card, Raymond E. Feist Tad Williams, and the list goes on and on. All because of the Hobbit 🙂
Originally posted by Pirate_Girly
I havent got through all of the book yet, but so far its great. I get all of the dwarves mixed up *stupid me* cause its like dwalin,balin,oin,gloin, etc.. and i keep getting them all mixed up cause they are all alike...
Damn Tolkien and his Eddaic-named Dwarves! 😛
[Technically speaking, the Dwarves names were derived from an Old Norse poem, and should be spelt: Þórin(n); Eikinskjaldi; Dvalin(n), etc. It may also be prudent of me to mention that the name Gandalf came from the Old Norse name Gandálfr, and that he was originally envisioned as the leader of the Dwarves.]
Addendum
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again, is to be thought of as Bilbo's Memoir. Later, Frodo compiled his story into the same book, and entitled it The Lord of the Rings. Together, (and with some other materials added later), this collection was bound together and called the Red Book of Westmarch, because it came under the possession of one of Samwise's daughters, (who married Peregrin's son), and lived in the West Farthing. Samwise was the person who finished writing the last few chapters of the book. After many happy years, he ventured into the West as had Frodo and the others years before, the last of the Ring-bearers.