Eledhwen
02-04-2005, 12:39 AM
The Tolkien Audio Collection [AUDIOBOOK]
J.R.R. Tolkien (Narrator), Christopher Tolkien (Narrator)
This is available from Amazon. The above is its UK title. In the US it is marketed as: The J.R.R. Tolkien Audio Collection [ABRIDGED]
Here is a review from the UK site:
Reviewer: A reader from Belfast
Christopher Tolkien's selected readings from the Silmarillion tell the story of Beren and Luthien - surely a legend worthy of 1000 pages itself - and of the Darkening of Valinor.
The trials, tribulations, treachery and heroism of the Feanor clan are laid bare in a rich subtle voice full of pathos and terror as the text demands.
For those who found the Silmarillion daunting these readings are essential. They clear the way for a full understanding of the history and context of the subsequent Lord of the Rings.
The links with the Lord of the Rings are the key to a full appreciation of the Silmarillion. The obvious parallel of Beren and Luthien and Aragorn and Arwen are merely interesting compared to the strands that thread the Trees of Valinor, the Silmarils and the Phial of Galadriel as they stretch to the Third Age.
A memorable passage introduces Galadriel and we get a glimpse of her majesty, ambition and power that was to be further exposed in the Lord of the Rings.
Perhaps the finest legacy of the readings is the image of the earlier ages of Middle Earth that will have listeners scurrying back to the Silmarillion for more.
This is all great stuff and Christopher Tolkien reads surprisingly well. I only wish he was a bit more prolific.
I am ordering my copy the day after my birthday (If I don't own one already by then!).
J.R.R. Tolkien (Narrator), Christopher Tolkien (Narrator)
This is available from Amazon. The above is its UK title. In the US it is marketed as: The J.R.R. Tolkien Audio Collection [ABRIDGED]
Here is a review from the UK site:
Reviewer: A reader from Belfast
Christopher Tolkien's selected readings from the Silmarillion tell the story of Beren and Luthien - surely a legend worthy of 1000 pages itself - and of the Darkening of Valinor.
The trials, tribulations, treachery and heroism of the Feanor clan are laid bare in a rich subtle voice full of pathos and terror as the text demands.
For those who found the Silmarillion daunting these readings are essential. They clear the way for a full understanding of the history and context of the subsequent Lord of the Rings.
The links with the Lord of the Rings are the key to a full appreciation of the Silmarillion. The obvious parallel of Beren and Luthien and Aragorn and Arwen are merely interesting compared to the strands that thread the Trees of Valinor, the Silmarils and the Phial of Galadriel as they stretch to the Third Age.
A memorable passage introduces Galadriel and we get a glimpse of her majesty, ambition and power that was to be further exposed in the Lord of the Rings.
Perhaps the finest legacy of the readings is the image of the earlier ages of Middle Earth that will have listeners scurrying back to the Silmarillion for more.
This is all great stuff and Christopher Tolkien reads surprisingly well. I only wish he was a bit more prolific.
I am ordering my copy the day after my birthday (If I don't own one already by then!).