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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Juvenile, but not in a good way,
By
This review is from: J.r.r. Tolkien: The Man Who Created The Lord Of The Rings (Scholastic Biography) (Mass Market Paperback)
Already in hardcover and recently released in softcover, this is a juvenile biography of Tolkien: it's intended for children, and written down for children. The cozy, smarmy tone and false sense of intimacy (leading Coren into many errors, though not as many as Michael White's =Life and Work of J.R.R. Tolkien=) make this book painful reading. Like all other juvenile biographies of Tolkien, or of C.S. Lewis (another subject Coren has essayed), this is entirely outclassed by adult offerings. Any child capable of appreciating =LotR= enough to desire a biography of the author can handle Humphrey Carpenter's classic book, and should.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good intro,
This review is from: J.r.r. Tolkien: The Man Who Created The Lord Of The Rings (Scholastic Biography) (Mass Market Paperback)
"Who was J.R.R. Tolkien?" With the release of the astounding movie trilogy, a lot of people are suddenly flocking into the "Lord of the Rings" fandom, people who previously would have paid no attention to a classic fantasy or its author. If you don't know much about Tolkien, then this book is a good introduction to his life.After an introduction where Coren talks about the popularity of the book (and how much critics hate that it IS popular), Coren introduces us to Tolkien in his youth. John Ronald Reuel Tolkien was born in a turmoil-filled time, was orphaned as a boy, fought in World War I, and married and had four children. And, of course, he produced books -- the fantasy classic "The Hobbit" and the darker, more epic "Lord of the Rings," "Roverandum," a few other little tales, and the Bible-like "Silmarillion." Coren does a good job with the book. Not a great job, but a good job. His tone is usually pretty conversational, but occasionally he gets a little too heated or gushy or cutesy. This book doesn't contain any new interpretations or information; it's pretty basic, he tells us what Tolkien did, where, and sometimes why. There are plenty of crisp black and white photographs of Tolkien, his buddy C.S. "Jack" Lewis, Tolkien's homes, his guardian Father Morgan, book covers, parts of Oxford such as Merton College, and even a few wide shots of all of Oxford. Normally this book would earn four stars, but there are some basic errors in describing people and events in "Lord of the Rings." This is pardonable in the author -- everyone makes booboos -- but an editor should have caught those little items; that's what editors are for. It gives the book a rather rushed feel. If you already know about J.R.R. Tolkien, his life and his works, then you won't get anything new from this book. But if you're a new fan, or never learned much about Tolkien himself, then this can be considered a good introduction to the basics.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Ok,
By "the_anchor_point_craigs" (Anchor Point, AK United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: J.r.r. Tolkien: The Man Who Created The Lord Of The Rings (Scholastic Biography) (Mass Market Paperback)
I found this book very interesting until I got to the synopsis of the Lord of the Rings. I found four mistakes! 1 - Mike says that Legolas, Gimli, AND Aragorn are in a boat 2gether going down the Anduin and Frodo and Sam are alone. Wrong. Aragorn is with the 2 hobbits. 2 - It mentions that Frodo is wounded in battle and captured by Orcs. Wrong again, he was wounded by a spider. 3 - The guy totally skips over when Aragorn is crowned! That is half of the point of ROTK! 4 - Lotho Simple? Where did he get that? It's Lotho Sackville-Baggins! I am quite irritated with this book! I now have no idea if half the facts are even true! Tiis is an easy read, but Mike sure didn't read LOTR! And, I KNOW some of the other facts aren't true... I wouldn't recommend this book to someone who hasn't read LOTR at all, because the synopsis is totally wrong. I really wanted to learn something about JRRT, but I learned something else - Mike doesn't know what he's talking about.
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