Showing posts with label LOTR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LOTR. Show all posts

Friday, October 5, 2018

The Children of Hurin – Book Review


The events of The Children of Hurin by J. R. R. Tolkien or as I would prefer to call it The Series of Unfortunate Events that Befell the Children of Hurin, take place probably thousands of years before The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.

There are elves, dwarves, and Men, a wingless dragon, and lots of sadness and destruction.

The main idea behind the story is that Hurin curses Morgoth in his face, so the latter curses Hurin and his family, making Hurin watch his children unknowingly destroy themselves.

"I am the Elder King: Melkor, first and mightiest of all the Valar, who was before the world and made it. The shadow of my purpose lies upon Arda, and all that is in it bends slowly and surely to my will. But upon all whom you love my thought shall weigh as a cloud of Doom, and it shall bring them down into darkness and despair. Wherever they go, evil shall arise. Whenever they speak, their words shall bring ill counsel. Whatsoever they do shall turn against them. They shall die without hope, cursing both life and death."

The Children of Hurin opens with an info dump of the people in the book and who married who, including several names we never actually meet. There is a genealogy tree at the end of the book, which honestly should have been at the beginning because I had to go back to it several times while reading. The info dump wasn't necessary but just got me confused.

Hurin had three children: Turin, who is the main focus of the story, his sister Urwen, and his other sister Nienor who appears towards the end and is dragged into the curse laid upon father by Morgoth.

"The doom lies in yourself, not in your name."

What my book looks like after reading
The language is really tough to get around. True, I've been reading modern and contemporary fiction but this was a tough read. Reading this book, one sees how the elements of fiction have changed over time. There is no showing versus a lot of telling. The description is simpler and there aren't many alternatives to "said".

There is minor character development for Turin. Sometimes he's likeable and sometimes he isn't. But it is easy to sympathise and connect with him. In terms of imagery, there aren't many, but there were several sections of rich descriptions.  

One of the things that The Children of Hurin has gotten me excited about is rereading The Silmarilion, where there is a powerful tale of Beren and Luthien. People in the story make many analogies between Turin and Beren. I also have The Book of Lost Tales part 2, which I plan to finally start.

"This man is not Beren. Even if he be both as fair and as brave. A doom lies on him; a dark doom."

It is interesting to learn that The Children of Hurin was originally written as a poem – a very long one "running over 2,000 lines", according to the notes section after the novel.

Overall rating: 3 stars

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Geeky Guide to Magical Rings


Everyone loves a little bling, and superheroes are no different. www.custommade.com has created an infographic entitled “Geeky Guide to Magical Rings” detailing some of the most famous rings we’ve seen in literature, along with the characters that wear them.

One of the more famous rings is the Green Lantern Power Ring. In The Green Lantern comic, the Green Lantern’s Power Ring gives the wearer the ability to control the physical world, and was worn by Alan Scott. His original ring was magically powered, however, subsequent rings were created by the Guardians of the Universe.

We take a to The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, where we see Thomas’s wedding ring get magical powers once  he’s transported to “The Land”.

The One Ring debuted in The Hobbit, and was created by Sauron the Dark Lord. The Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit follow up, is the tale of the quest to destroy the ring in order to keep Sauron from finishing his evil plans.

Another ring famous in the Harry Potter series is the resurrection stone, which is able to summon the deceased.

The Wood Between the Worlds Rings were created from magical dust found in Atlantis, and appeared in The Chronicles of Narnia: The Magician’s Nephew. Each ring takes you to a special place.

The Phantom Rings, from The Phantom, also appear in this infographic, with both the good mark and the bad mark being expanded upon.

Feel free to like, share, and comment on this infographic from www.custommade.com entitled “Geeky Guide to Magical Rings”.




Click to Enlarge Image





CustomMade A Geeky Guide to Magical Rings Infographic





A Geeky Guide to Magical Rings Infographic by CustomMade

Sunday, March 17, 2013

They Ride


Once ancient greedy kings,
Now servants on dragons' wings
To do and destroy,
Middle Earth is the Dark Lord's toy!

So, armies and an alliance are made
To overthrow a king,
His armies and his wraiths,
To eradicate evil for good!

Together they ride
From far and wide,
Side by side,
To their doom or glory!

From Rivendell and Lothlorien,
from beneath the mountains,
from the Shire
and from lands of Men.

Together they all ride,
from far and wide,
side by side,
To their doom or glory!

They ride!

With bows and arrows,
with swords, and staffs,
with axes and daggers,
and with rock and stone.

Alongside one other, they fight,
So let this be a remembered night.
When all races together stood,
For evil to stop and for the continuity of good!

Together they all ride,
from far and wide,
side by side,
whether to their doom or to glory!

Let this be a remembered night.
When all races together stood,
for evil to stop and for the continuity of good!



Thursday, December 20, 2012

The Dwarf Prince by Nada Adel Sobhi - Poem

  
A mighty warrior with a painful past
Through shadows he treads, and across plains vast
Bearing the burden of a burnt down home
But in this dilemma, he stands not alone.

Years have passed but the fire in him has not died,
He has summoned allies of old to his side.
With a key and a song, his journey begins,
Alongside a Hobbit, a Wizard and thirteen of his kin.

Neither the pain nor the fury will subside,
For regaining his homeland is part of his pride.
Anger, revenge and victory, he seeks
As he passes through dungeons deep and across highest peaks.

For too long he has roamed and waited
The storm in his heart can no longer be abated.
He travels by day and by darkest night.
And for his companions, he will always stand and fight.

The tale of Thorin Oakenshield, the Dwarf Prince will be told,
Who sought not precious gems and glittering gold,
Nor treasures hidden in caverns old,
But for Home, he has travelled through 'the Misty Mountains cold'.



Written Thursday 20-12-2012, at 3:00 am

Note: 'the Misty Mountains cold' in this order and punctuation is taken from the Dwarves' Song in The Hobbit, chapter 1.