2016-01-02

December 2015

First of all:
Happy New Year!

Now, with that out of the way, it is appropriate to highlight the Tolkien Birthday Toast on the evening of January 3rd (21:00 – or 9 PM – local time). For more information on the Birthday Toast, please refer to the Tolkien Society web-site.

Christmas this year marked the end (hopefully) of a very busy period for me, but fortunately I seem to have been able to catch up at least with my transactions over the holiday period (and still have completed other tasks), making me once again on time with this post. No promises can or will, of course, be made as for next month

All the usual disclaimers apply about newness, completeness and relevance (or any other implication of responsibility)

These transactions are posted on my blog, Parma-kenta

(Enquiry into the books) and on the Tolkien Society web-site.

This month it has suited my purposes to sort the contents under the following

headlines:
1: News
2: Events
3: Essays and Scholarship
4: Commentary
5: Reviews and Book News
6: Tolkienian Artwork
7: Other Stuff
8: Rewarding Discussions
9: In Print or By Subscription
10: Web Sites
11: The Blog Roll
12: Sources



Jenny’s 2015 Summary of Art
by Jenny Dolfen

News

David Oberhelman, Mythopoeic Society, Tuesday, 1 December 2015, ‘Mythopoeic Awards 2016: Call for Nominations’

Well … what it says, really Members of the Mythopoeic Society may now, and until Febrary 14, nominate books for the 2016 Mythopoeic Awards.

Khareem Shaheen, The Guardian, Wednesday, 2 December 2015, ‘Turkish court asks ‘Gollum experts’ if Erdoğan comparison is insult’

This month’s most ludicrous headline …. Since it is a matter of New Line film imagery, Jackson has got mixed up in the affair, which seems to put it down to the film-character Sméagol. Since this character, judging by Jackson’s comments, is fundamentally different from Tolkien’s character of the same name (which is really the case for all – or nearly all – the characters that appear in both stories), I have little to add to this.

See also Khareem Shaheen, The Guardian, Thursday, 3 December 2015, ‘Erdoğan’s ‘Gollum insult’ a mistake, says Lord of the Rings director’

And ‘Stubby the Rocket’, TOR.com, Thursday, 3 December 2015, ‘Turkish Court to Decide Whether Comparing the Turkish President to Gollum is an Insult’
Sarene Leeds, Wall Street Journal, Wednesday, 9 December 2015, ‘Stephen Colbert Uses Tolkien Expertise to Weigh In on Turkish Insult Case’

The main problem here is that Colbert is once more wrong about Sméagol (see David Bratman’s excellent commentary last month).

Parker & Hart, GoComics, Sunday, 6 December 2015, ‘The Wizard of Id’

Well … if it’s for hot yoga, it is of course a different matter.

Jane Ciabattari, Monday, 7 December 2015, ‘The 100 greatest British novels’

The list has been compiled by polling 82 foreign book critics on the best novels by British authors. What makes it relevant here is that The Lord of the Rings comes in 26. Curiously only 4 of the books preceding LotR on the list have been published after LotR. The only other Inklings-work to make the list is Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia as no. 97, which I, frankly, find somewhat surprising (that this would make the list at all).

See also David Bratman, Wednesday, 9 December 2015, ‘ah, the crafty Tolkien Society is at it again’

A response to the news above …

And also Marcel Aubron-Bülles, Thursday, 10 December 2015, ‘Why “The Lord of the Rings” coming in at no. 26 with the latest BBC Culture poll is a good thing’

Daniel Helen, The Tolkien Society, Tuesday, 8 December 2015, ‘Mythgard Institute online courses announced for Spring 2016’

Tolkien-related courses taught by Douglas A. Anderson and Andrew Higgins. And remember that Tolkien Society members get a 15% discount when auditing classes! So join the Tolkien Society today!

Curtis, Signum University, Saturday, 12 December 2015, ‘Registration open for Spring 2016 courses’

What it says, really. Courses include ‘The Inklings and Science Fiction’ taught by Douglas A. Anderson, ‘Language Invention Through Tolkien: Exploring a Shared “Secret Vice”’ taught by Andrew Higgins, ‘Modern Fantasy II’ taught by Corey Olsen, and ‘Elementary Latin I’ taught by Philip Walsh.

Curtis, Mythgard Institute, Friday, 18 December 2015, ‘The Shaping of Middle-earth & Dracula chosen for Mythgard Academy’

The next series of the free-access Mythgard Academy discussions will focus on The Shaping of Middle-earth and Dracula.

Eduardo Faúnez, Entomology Today, Wednesday, 23 December 2015, ‘New giant Stink Bug Named after J. R. R. Tolkien’s Ancalagon the Black’

On the naming of a Tessaratomid bug from New Guinea, Tamolia ancalagon, after Ancalagon the Black, and the reasons for this naming.

Events

Info on upcoming events (as of 1 January)
3 January 2016, International, ‘Tolkien Birthday Toast 2016’, The Tolkien Society – save the date!!

8-10 January 2016, Madingley Hall, Cambridge, ‘Tolkien’s amazing world: understanding Middle-earth and how it came to be’, University of Cambridge, Institute of Continuing Education

Daniel Helen, The Tolkien Society, Monday, 9 November 2015, ‘Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education running Tolkien course this January’

9 January 2016, Budapest, Hungary, ‘Tolkien Day 2016’, Hungarian Tolkien Society

24 January 2016, Willowmead Hall, Montana, ‘Tolkien Birthday Toast’, The Council of Westmarch

5 March 2016, Pembroke College, Cambridge, UK, ‘Minas Tirith Smial Annual Dinner’, Minas Tirith, the Cambridge Tolkien Society

21 – 25 March 2016, Seattle, WA, USA, ‘PCA/ACA National Conference, PCA/ACA’

24 March 2016, Oslo, Norway, ‘ArtheCon 2016’, Arthedain

25 March 2016, Worldwide, ‘Tolkien Reading Day, The Tolkien Society’ – the 2016 theme is “Life, Death, and Immortality”.

8–9 April 2016, University of Vermont, USA, ‘Tolkien in Vermont 2016’, Tolkien Club of University of Vermont

Anna Smol, Monday, 19 October 2015, ‘CFP: Tolkien in Vermont 2016’

28 May 2016, East Yorkshire, ‘Tolkien Tour: East Yorkshire’, The Tolkien Society

17 – 19 June 2016, Leiden | Den Haag, ‘Lustrum 2016: Unlocking Tolkien, Unquendor – The Dutch Tolkien Society’

3 July 2016, Hilton Hotel, Leeds, ‘The Tolkien Society Seminar 2016’, The Tolkien Society

This year’s theme will be ‘Life, Death, and Immortality’ in the life and works of J.R.R. Tolkien.

18-20 July 2016, University of Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany, ‘International Conference on Medievalism – 2016: Tradition or Myth’, International Society for the Study of Medievalism &ndash: I am not sure if there will be anything specifically Tolkienian at this conference, but looking at the theme of the 2016 conference, I would very much expect that Tolkien will be mentioned … more than once.

September? 2016, Oxford, ‘Oxonmoot 2016’, The Tolkien Society — an Oxonmoot will be held …

Essays and Scholarship

Robin Anne Reid, Saturday, 14 November 2015, ‘The question of Tolkien Criticism’

I don’t know how I managed to overlook Robin Reid’s response when I discussed Schürer’s article in last month’s transactions, but here it is. I agree with Reid on most counts, but I also feel that, even with the impressive lists of MLA search results, she appears very defensive, attacking the weaknesses in Schürer’s critique, rather than addressing the strong points.

When listing what she agrees with in Schürer’s critique, Reid mentions that the aim should be to “make well-developed, well-written, comprehensive, and compelling arguments”, but she does not mention his other criterion, to “[enhance] our understanding of his work,” which I would read as enhancing our understanding and/or appreciation of Tolkien and/or his work. Also, I do not refute that fan activities constitute a valuable area of academic study, but Tolkien scholarship it is, in my firm opinion, not!

Reid asserts that she “simply [does] not agree that the academics who publish scholarship are not *generally* meeting these criteria”. However, if I add the criterion of the purpose of the criticism (not merely to make well-developed arguments showing how clever the critics are themselves), I have to disagree with Reid. A lot of Tolkien scholarship certainly does meet these criteria, but too much of it does, in my opinion, not.

We see a lot of comparative criticism and source criticism, some of which also makes “well-developed, well-written, comprehensive, and compelling arguments”, but a lot of which seems unconcerned with telling us anything relevant about Tolkien or how to read or appreciate his works.

Simon J. Cook, Thursday, 10 December 2015, ‘Tolkien’s English Mythology (revisited)’
Simon J. Cook, Tolkien Studies 12, Monday, 28 December 2015, ‘The Peace of Frodo: On the Origin of an English Mythology’

Simon J. Cook is truly excellent when explaining the academic intellectual climate and the prevalent theories at the turn of the twentieth century; clear lucid and to the point. In his paper for Tolkien Studies, he particularly discusses the theories expressed by Hector Munro Chadwick in his 1907 The Origin of the English Nation.

Cook’s source analysis unfortunately suffers from the same flaw as most other source criticism that I have seen: it fails to discuss how any particular source interacted with other sources in Tolkien’s fertile mind, but instead presents it as a simplistic one-source, A leads to B kind of causation. This to the point where the absence of an element of the source is interpreted as ‘an implicit rejection of a key element of Chadwick’s interpretation of Northern traditions’; an argument that can only be sustained in an over-simplistic model of how sources influence literature.

However, Cook also proposes one way in which Tolkien’s books can be interpreted as asterisk-myths and -legends leading to a mythological understanding of English and Nordic myths that, to a very large extent, resembles Chadwick’s. This works excellently regardless of the extent to which one agrees with Cook’s proposal that this was actually intended by Tolkien.

Medievalist.net, Sunday, 20 December 2015, ‘The First Book Reviewer’

I’ll admit that including this article in my transactions is slightly tongue-in-cheek, but on the other hand, reviews are a large part of what this is about, and getting to know a bit about the history of reviews is a very interesting fun fact thing to do.

Curtis, Mythgard Institute, Tuesday, 22 December 2015, ‘Father Christmas Letters Mythgard Academy discussion now available’

For those of us who couldn’t watch it in real-time, the Mythgard Academy discussions of Tolkien’s Letters from Father Christmas is now available on YouTube.

Wayne G. Hammond & Christina Scull, Friday, 25 December 2015, ‘Tolkien Notes 13’

This time we get an insight into the kind of textual puzzles that face these two distinguished Tolkien scholars with respect to the textual history and intention of The Lord of the Rings. The specific question discussed here is the line break an indentation of the second half of the Tale of Years entry for Third Age 2951. Was that actually to have been an entry for TA 2952? Or …? Also Hammond and Scull discuss the Baynes / Tolkien Middle-earth map (see the last couple of months), where they refer to the French Tolkiendil site, which offers some discussion and commentary to go along with the high-resolution transcribed map posted last month at the Tolkien Society. Finally a reference to The Art of the Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien leads on to good wishes.

As Little Might be Thought

by Jenny Dolfen

Commentary

David Bratman, Thursday, 3 December 2015, ‘factual mistakes about The Lord of the Rings fostered by Jackson’s movies’

Spurred by recent additions (see under News above) to the list of factual mistakes about The Lord of the Rings that are fostered by Jackson’s films, Bratman here lists three very common misconceptions – to which I dare say we could add more, even without listing ‘general falsities of spirit’ (too numerous to list, anyway) or those that people generally do realise are changes from the book.

And let me just explain that I think that Jackson was perfectly in his right to make any of these changes! This is creative license, it is what any adapting artist must do – make it their own work.  What bothers me is that people seem to conflate the two stories (Tolkien’s and Jackson’s) despite the wide gulf that exists between them. It is the misconception that they are the same story that gives rise to the mistakes, Bratman lists here.

Thomas J. West III, Thursday, 3 December 2015, ‘Reading “The Lord of the Rings:” “Prologue”’

Follow this read-through of The Lord of the Rings by going through this month’s posts. Make sure to read also the post on ‘The Shadow of the Past’, and ‘At the Sign of the Prancing Pony’ and ‘Strider’

Dominic Sandbrook, BBC, Thursday, 17 December 2015, ‘Did Tolkien write “juvenile trash”?’

Let me hurry to say that Sandbrook answers the titular question with a firm rejection: “all the evidence shows that if one book, more than any other, captured the Western imagination after the mid-1950s, that book was The Lord of the Rings.” The piece is an interesting perspective; though it doesn’t provide anything new on Tolkien himself, that is, for piece of this length, easily made up for by the comparisons to other authors and the wider societal trends.

Joel W. Hawbaker, Sci-Fi & Fantasy Network, Sunday, 20 December 2015, ‘The Catholic And The Convert – Part 2’

This is a part of a multi-part series on J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis. The approach is largely religious, though it generally doesn’t give the impression that the religious angle is the only relevant perspective on the authors. Hawbaker has some interesting comments on how the two authors deal with the concept of the larger story. Unfortunately he doesn’t include Tolkien’s use, in published letters, of the word Author to refer to God. While the juxtaposing of Tolkien and Lewis is interesting, the discussion of Tolkien’s view on the nature of evil is not particularly deep and contains some factual errors (e.g. about Smégol), and I would recommend reading a combination of Shippey (The Road to Middle-earth and Author of the Century) and Jonathan McIntosh (the 54-part blog series on Tolkien’s metaphysics of evil) if you wish to understand this aspect better. In addition to part 2, part 1 and part 3 have also been published in December.

Lynn Forest-Hill, Soutfarthing Mathom, Tuesday, 22 December 2015, ‘December’s meeting’

A small divergence to last month’s informal café moot (I wonder if Ian would agree to share those pictures in an upcoming post …), and a step back to ‘The White Rider’ before moving on to ‘The King of the Golden Hall’ explains why the reading group didn’t reach ‘Helm’s Deep’. As always, the summary of the discussions is interesting.

Thomas J. West III, Saturday, 26 December 2015, ‘Can a Queer Feminist Enjoy Tolkien?’

West here discusses his own enjoyment of Tolkien, and of The Lord of the Rings in particular, in the light of being, in his own words, a ‘queer feminist’. I particularly like his discussion of Éowyn as “Tolkien’s most masterful female creation”, but also his distinction between Tolkien’s intention and his own response (to the relationship between Sam and Frodo – and I surely am 100% certain that Tolkien intended nothing sexual, whatsover, with that relationship).

Reviews and Book News

Jeffrey R. Hawboldt, Wednesday, 2 December 2015, ‘“The Story of Kullervo” Deluxe Edition’

News of the October 2016 publication of a deluxe HarperCollins edition of Tolkien’s The Story of Kullervo.

Jeffrey R. Hawboldt, Friday, 4 December 2015, ‘Tolkien Christmas’

Recommendations for a Tolkienian Christmas. Besides the ‘big three’, The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion, the post lists Unfinished Tales, The Children of Húrin, The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún, The Fall of Arthur, and Beowulf – a Translation and Commentaryalong with notes (much of which seems quoting from the books’ descriptions – possibly from HarperCollins). A good choice of books, and great to see some of the non-Middle-earth books get some attention on lists like this.

Christina Scull, Monday, 7 December 2015, ‘Tolkien Biographies Continued, Part One’

Expanding on their entry (seven pages) on biographies in the Reader’s Guide volume of their J.R.R. Tolkien Companion and Guide, Christina Scull gives a very brief survey of a number of biographical books, including a few works that offer new research on Tolkien’s life (adding titles to the ever-growing list …), before moving on to a more detailed review of two biographies, J.R.R. Tolkien: The Making of a Legend by Colin Duriez and Tolkien by Raymond Edwards. This review certainly puts the latter on my wish-list.

Wayne G. Hammond, Thursday, 10 December 2015, ‘Tolkien Biographies Continued, Part Two’

Continuing from Christina Scull’s post (q.v.), Hammond discusses two recent Tolkien-related biographies: The Fellowship: The Literary Lives of the Inklings by Philip and Carol Zaleski, and J.R.R. Tolkien: Codemaker, Spy-master, Hero by ‘Elansea’. For the full review (including any positive sides), read Hammond’s post – here let it suffice to say that Hammond’s reviews convinced me that my decision not to pursue either book was entirely correct.

Thomas J. West III, Tuesday, 22 December 2015, ‘Book Review: “The Fellowship: The Literary Lives of the Inklings: J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Owen Barfield, Charles Williams” (Philip Zaleski and Carol Zaleski)’

West’s review of the Zaleski book is considerably more positive than Wayne Hammond’s, but it doesn’t suffice for me to go near the book.

Daniel Helen, The Tolkien Society, Wednesday, 23 December 2015, ‘Tolkien Studies volume 12 published’

That is, it is now available from Project Muse, and some subscribers seem to have got their physical copies already. I do hope that mine will arrive earlier than last year, when it came on 18 March

See also Jason Fisher, Tuesday, 29 December 2015, ‘Tolkien Studies Volume 12’

in which Fisher comments on the new issue.

Thomas J. West III, Monday, 28 December 2015, ‘Book Review: Splintered Light: Logos and Language in Tolkien’s World’

I know well that I am terribly predictable in some ways, but I will not forego a chance to list and praise a review of Verlyn Flieger’s Splintered Light: Logos and Language in Tolkien’s World that calls it “a stellar example of sound literary scholarship” I couldn’t agree more with that assessment.

Anna Smol, Tuesday, 29 December 2015, ‘Life, Death, and Immortality in two authors’

A review of a non-Tolkienian book, Fifteen Dogs by André Alexis, that nonetheless manages to place itself in a dialogue with Tolkien’s treatment of life, death and immortality – which is incidentally the theme for the upcoming Tolkien Reading Day in March.

Douglas A. Anderson, Thursday, 31 December 2015, ‘End of the Year Chatter’

In which Anderson looks back at the book reviews posted lately …-ish at the Journal of Tolkien Reaseach

Tolkienian Artwork

Joe Gilronan, Tuesday, 15 December 2015, ‘Concerning Hobbits’

Another of Gilronan’s utterly charming Shire pictures!

Peter Xavier Price, Wednesday, 16 December 2015, ‘Húrin in Captivity’

Húrin chained to the chair on the slops of Thangorodrim.

Peter Xavier Price, Thursday, 17 December 2015, ‘Mirrormere’

“Deep are the waters of Kheled-zaram” …

Tomás Hijo, Saturday, 19 December 2015, ‘Gollum (watercolour)’

Tomás Hijo, Sunday, 20 December 2015, ‘Barrow wight’

Jenny Dolfen, Tuesday, 22 December 2015, ‘As little might be thought’

Here Jenny Dolfen is back in the First Age at the strange love that grew between Maglor and the twins of Eärendil and Elwing, Elros and Elrond.

Peter Xavier Price, Thursday, 24 December 2015, ‘He Knew Her For Erendis’

Illustration of a passage from ‘Aldarion and Erendis’ in Unfinished Tales.

Tomás Hijo, Thursday, 24 December 2015, ‘Riddles in the Dark’

Tomás Hijo has created a video showing him colouring in his ‘Riddles in the Dark’ picture.

Tsvetelina Krumova, Friday, 25 December 2015, ‘Merry Christmas! The Art of Elmenel: “Parma Eldaliéva I”, Contents’

Enjoy these stunning pictures of the beautiful, hand-calligraphed Parma Eldaliéva!

Peter Xavier Price, Sunday, 27 December 2015, ‘Hithlum’

Hithlum – Hisilómë – the Land of Mist ….

Concerning Hobbits

by Joe Gilronan

Other Stuff

Maria, Middle-earth News, Tuesday, 1 December 2015, ‘Middle-earth News Advent Calendar: Day 1’

Middle-earth News have been running an advent calendar, starting out in the classic Christmas filking tradition with Smaug the dragon’s coming to town.

David Bratman, Tuesday, 8 December 2015, ‘Tuesday was …’

With some further pertinent comments relating to his post at the Tolkien Society website last month about Stephen Colbert.

Harry Lee Poe, Christianity Today, Thursday, 10 December 2015, ‘C.S. Lewis Was a Secret Government Agent’

I think it is fair to accuse the headline of overselling the message here. The article is about a recording C.S. Lewis made in, probably, 1941 on ‘The Norse Spirit in English Literature’. This was meant to be broadcast in Iceland during the war, and the claim here is that it was at the instigation of the military intelligence. The author of this piece has purchased a record with the first and third parts, missing the other record with the second and fourth parts of Lewis’ message.

Dana Lynn Abeln, Moviepilot, Monday, 21 December 2015, ‘Fan Tats: The Lord of the Rings’

Dana shows, and is interviewed about, her tattoo of the Ring verse.

Maria, Middle-earth News, Monday, 21 December 2015, ‘Ecuadorian Trees That Walk Like Ents’

… well, perhaps not quite like Ents, but still, this is a fun little piece of botany

See also Karl Gruber, BBC, Wednesday, 16 December 2015, ‘The mysterious trees that walk’

The original BBC article.

Maria, Middle-earth News, Wednesday, 23 December 2015, ‘Advent Calendar: Day 23’

On December 23rd, we came to the Letters from Father Christmas, including a picture of one part of the 1925 letter.

Gerry Canavan, Salon, Thursday, 24 December 2015, ‘From “A New Hope” to no hope at all: “Star Wars,” Tolkien and the sinister and depressing reality of expanded universes’

The main thrust of this piece is about Star Wars, and particularly about the newest instalment, The Force Awakens. The comparison to Tolkien’s legendarium, however, is interesting, even if it only works to a certain level. The analysis extends one or two levels deeper than just reading LotR (to where you come to understand Galadriel’s words about fighting the long defeat), but at a yet deeper level, you discover the hints of a final hope.

At that level every little victory against the darkness, every eucatastrophe, small or large, is a promise of a final victory. It is addressed, but only in a rather circumlocutory fashion, in the published Silmarillion both in the gift to Men (“[…]and of their operation everything should be, in form and deed, completed, and the world fulfilled unto the last and smallest.”) and in Eru’s admonition to Melkor that all his secret and evil thoughts were “but a part of the whole and tributary to its glory.”

See also the ‘comments to this piece at Canavan’s own blog. E.g. the linked comment by David Bratman’

Rewarding Discussions

LotR Plaza: ‘www.lotrplaza.com/showthread.php?78495-Recognition-and-Estrangement-in-Tolkien’

A highly interesting thread resulting from a statement by China Miéville on the literary powers of recognition and estrangement.

LotR Plaza: ‘Power of the one ring’

A mostly story-internal (or ‘Ardalogical’) thread about the One Ring and its powers – and its lack of other powers (or abilities or qualities).

LotR Plaza: ‘Miar: spirit and body’

Another story-internal thread about the self-arrayal of the Ainur in bodies, and how this varies.

In Print or By Subscription

Tolkien Calendar 2016, Tove Jansson, HarperCollins

I love Jansson’s illustrations! The illustrations for the current Tolkien calendar were made for a Swedish edition of The Hobbit by Tove Jansson of ‘Muumin’ fame. Her Hobbit illustrations are at one time have some clear parallels to some aspects of the Muumin universe, but at the same time they are fundamentally different. I am particularly fond of her black and white drawings, which I find far more effective than the two colour illustrations that are included (Jansson is not the only Tolkien illustrator for whom I have found that I prefer their B/W drawings and sketches). Having enjoyed Fairburn’s illustrations over the past year, I now look forward to enjoying this year’s Christmas gift from my dear daughter.

Amon Hen 256, The Tolkien Society.

Lots of material about the goings-on of the Tolkien Society in this issue. Please consider supporting our Tolkien to the World project at the Tolkien Society web-site – the current project is to send copies of the proceeding from the 2005 The Ring Goes Ever On conference to relevant libraries. Also featured as some delightful reports from Oxonmoot (in September), and a review of ‘Elansea’s’ J.R.R. Tolkien: Codemaker, Spy-master, Hero by Ted Nasmith, who admits being biased by his friendship with the authors (Lewis and Currie) before giving the book the most (the only, actually) positive review, I have seen yet.

Mallorn 56, The Tolkien Society.

With the newest issue of Mallorn appearing in my mailbox (the physical one) only on the day of New Year’s Eve, I haven’t had time for more than skimming the issue very cursorily. This issues seems to include rather more essays than usual, but of the usual rather wide range of quality. But Mallorn is not a peer-reviewed journal of scholarship, but rather the high-end journal of the Tolkien Society. This means that Mallorn could and should offer untried hands an outlet for their first essays in the craft of literary criticism essay-writing.

Beyond Bree, December 2015, Tolkien Special Interest Group.

Dale Nelson’s article on ‘Days of the Craze’ (at no. 18 in this issue) is as always a good read, and manages to make the rest of the issue seem mere filler.

Web Sites

Peter Xavier Price, Illustrator.
Deviantart page
Facebook page

Peter Xavier Price has been featured as the artist behind the Tolkien Society Christmas card this year, which has generated interest in Price’s excellent Tolkien illustrations.

The Blog Roll

These are blogs you really should be following yourself if you’re interested in

Tolkien …

Contents from these blogs will only be reported here if there is something that

I find particularly interesting, or posts that fit with a monthly theme. However,

you will find below links to monthly archives of posts for months where the blog

has featured interesting posts with at least some Tolkien connection. In some

cases you may find a headline for a post, if I wish to recommend it particularly.

Christina Scull and Wayne G. Hammond, ‘Too Many Books and Never Enough’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Dimitra Fimi, ‘Dr. Dimitra Fimi’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Jason Fisher, ‘Lingwë — Musings of a Fish’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Douglas A. Anderson, ‘Tolkien and Fantasy’
Archive of posts from December 2015

John D. Rateliff — ‘Sacnoth’s Scriptorium’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Jonathan S. McIntosh, ‘The Flame Imperishable’
Archive of posts from December 2015 – McIntosh is currently posting a series on Anselm’s Cur Deus Homo.

Marcel Aubron-Bülles, ‘The Tolkienist’
Archive of posts from December 2015

David Bratman, ‘Kalimac’s Journal’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Jenny Dolfen, ‘Jenny’s Sketchbook’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Anna Smol, ‘A Single Leaf’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Robin Anne Reid, her blog
Archive of posts from December 2015

Various, The Mythopoeic Society
Archive of news

Various (Bradford Eden, ed.)
Journal of Tolkien Research (JTR)
Archive

of contributions for the on-going volume 2, issue 1

Various, The Tolkien Society (TS)
Archive of posts from December 2015

Simon Cook, Ye Machine
Archive of posts from December 2015

Southfarthing Mathom
Archive of posts from December 2015

Michael Martinez, ‘Middle-earth’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Grey Havens Group, ‘The Grey Havens Group’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Bruce Charlton, ‘Tolkien’s The Notion Club Papers’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Various, ‘Middle-earth News’
Archive of posts from December 2015

Sources

New sources in December 2015:
‘Robyn Anne Reid’

Blog of Tolkien scholar Robin Anne Reid

‘Peter Xavier Price’

Artist and Tolkien illustrator.

For older sources, see http://parmarkenta.blogspot.com/p/sources.html

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