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View Full Version : I'm trying to read 'The Book of Lost Tales 1


Popqueen62
07-16-2003, 08:54 PM
It's really difficult to read because of Christopher Tolkien's add ins (how he has pages dedicated to his father's thinking, and how the story became true) I get very bored easily at this part of it. Anyone have any idea how I can get through this book and actually enjoy it?

baragund
07-16-2003, 10:55 PM
You might try just reading straight through the story without refering back to the notes. Most of them pretty minute changes Tolkien made to his manuscript, and I found they don't add a whole lot to the stories.

Nóm
07-17-2003, 09:48 AM
Since most of the commentary in BoLT is CT comparing that with the Published Sil, and the later versions his father wrote... remarks about what stayed, and what was abandoned and how one thing stayed but was changed due to coming about some other way or happening with another character, and in most cases you probably will have noticed these on your own, I would say you can skip the commentary except in cases where the chapter contained something that makes you wonder what CT has to say about it.

The notes are more tidious and mostly point out changes Tolkien made to the manuscripts... usually name changes, and unless you care about such things you can just avoid them.

I'd say, simply put: If it doesn't interest you, don't read it.

What I would not recommend anyone skip over though, is the narrative intro to the tales.... that writing with Eriol, Rumil and Lindo is some truly great stuff.

And later on if you look at the books in a different way and the commentary and notes become of importance to you, you can always read them then.

Well , I obviously agree with baragund... but figured two opinions would be stronger than one.

Elendil3119
07-17-2003, 08:43 PM
I personally enjoyed both the notes and commentary in BoLT1, but I think it was mostly because I'd read the Sil a few times by then. It was fun to compare the earlier version to the published one. :) But I concur with baragund and Nóm: if the notes and commentary don't interest you, don't bother.

Popqueen62
07-17-2003, 10:04 PM
I've read the sil twice so the stories make sense, and so did the commentary it was just so boring and annoying.

legandir
07-21-2003, 11:21 PM
I can appreciate those feelings.
I enjoy Tolkien mostly for his storytelling, the analysis by Chris. that contains acronymns and evidences of timeframe can be very overwrought

At first I read the stories contained in the first couple books of the HOME series but now I am rereading them with a focus on the progression of the stories and how they fit together.

Basically it comes down to whether or not you want to read for the technical aspect or the story-telling aspect.

Continue to read because the writings are very good, but you dont have to read the commenataries as well...

Niniel
07-31-2003, 09:03 PM
You can just ignore the commentaries; if you read the stories by themselves they will make sense too, and they are really beautiful.

Eledhwen
12-21-2007, 11:54 PM
I think it is opinions like yours that have encouraged The Tolkien Estate to publish The Children of Hurin as a single, uninterrupted story.

This book was a publishing success; and so I think we can expect more of the same.

In the meantime, skip the notes unless there's something you really don't get.

Have you ever read the book Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke? Weird! A fantasy novel written in archaic style, that deliberately adds footnotes, some quite detailed, to give the fictional story such historical credence that you have to remind yourself it's just a story.