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- From: cffitzge@IASTATE.EDU (Charles F Fitzgerald)
- Subject: Re: Questions AFfter First Silmarillion Reading
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.002915@IASTATE.EDU>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Reply-To: cffitzge@IASTATE.EDU (Charles F Fitzgerald)
- Organization: Iowa State University
- References: <C1GyJI.KpI@unix.amherst.edu> <1k4of0INNn84@iskut.ucs.ubc.ca>
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 06:29:15 GMT
- Lines: 33
-
- Drin answers Jeff Liss:
- >>The events in the book really don't get much more than a cursory
- >>treatment, inspiring though it is. Do all those other books (The
- >>Books of Lost Tales, The [Lays] of Beleriand) elaborate on these
- >>selfsame stories?
-
- >The "History of Middle-Earth" series, starting from the Book of Lost
- >Tales, traces the development of JRRT's world through (real) time. So,
- >for example, the Book of Lost Tales gives the original version (1920's)
- >of what eventually became The Silmarillion.
- >The book published as "The Silmarillion" gives the latest version of
- >those stories, so naturally it's pretty much consistent with TLotR.
-
- I would add that, in many cases, the tales in the History of Middle-
- Earth series are much better, in my opinion. They tend to be fleshed
- out more and proceed in a more logical order. They thus tend to "read"
- better for me. This is especially the case with Turin.
-
- There are differences between the Silmarilion and the HOME versions,
- but they are not so drastic in many of the tales that I would tend
- to recommend the versions in the _Unfinished Tales_ over those of
- the _Silmarillion_ in most cases. The main problem in the _Unfinshed
- Tales_ is that many of the tales are, just as the name implies,
- unfinished and so may stop half way through, which can be quite
- maddening. What is there, however, I find to be clearly superior
- to the _Silmarillion_ material.
-
- --
- Charles F. Fitzgerald | '...it's a tale, told by an idiot,
- Iowa State University | full of sound and fury,
- cffitzge@iastate.edu | signifying nothing.'
- | _MacBeth_, by W. Shakespeare.
-
-