The Peoples of Middle-earth

The Peoples of Middle-earth

By J R R Tolkien

Pages

482

Rating

4.18

Year

1996

Science Fiction FantasyEpic FantasyFantasyHigh FantasyFictionReference

Description

When J.R.R. Tolkien laid aside The Silmarillion in 1937, the extension of the original 'mythology' into the later Ages of the world had scarcely begun. It was in the Appendices to The Lord of the Rings that a comprehensive historical structure and chronology of the Second and Third Ages emerged, embracing all the diverse strands that came together in the War of the Ring. The difficulty he found in providing these Appendices, which led to the delay in the publication of The Return of the King, is well known, but in The Peoples of Middle-earth Christopher Tolkien shows that early forms of these works already existed years before, in essays and records differing greatly from the published forms. He traces the evolution of the calendars, the Hobbit genealogies, the Westron language or Common Speech (from which many words and names are recorded that were afterwards lost), and the chronological structure of the later Ages.

Other writings by J.R.R. Tolkien are included in this final volume of The History of Middle-earth, chiefly deriving from his last years, when new insights and constructions still freely arose as he pondered the history he had created. This book concludes with two soon-abandoned stories, both unique in the setting of time and place: The New Shadow, set in Gondor in the Fourth Age, and the tale of Tal-Elmar, in which the coming of the dreaded Númenórean ships is seen through the eyes of men of Middle-earth in the Dark Years.

The Peoples of Middle-earth by J R R Tolkien - Bookist