The Book of Lost Tales (The History of Middle-Earth)

Hardcover

Published by HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.

ISBN:
978-0-00-736525-8
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4 stars (15 reviews)

The story begins with a man named Eriol, as he lands on the 'Lonely Island' mythical prehistory England. While traveling he stops at the "Cottage of Lost Play" a house owned by Lindo and Vairë elves. They tell him how they came to be there, and of a place called the 'Cottage of Children', a place where Children that had gotten lost in the woods could stay. Its caretaker left and the cottage was rediscovered by Lindo's father, and he took the children to this island, with him, and now Lindo looks after them.

The next day Eriol walks in the garden and meets the door man, and is told the story of "The Music of the Ainur". A creation myth where the creator sings into being immortal spirits, that with their help sing into being the world. One of these spirits becomes evil, and begins to dislike the two …

15 editions

Donde comenzó todo

No rating

Ya leí El Libro de los Cuentos Perdidos hace tiempo, y disfruté mucho una visión de la Tierra Media parecida pero a la vez muy distinta de la que nos ofrece el Silmarillion: en las primeras versiones de Tolkien, los Valar son mucho más "humanos", Melkor es más gamberro (más Loki, si se quiere), los hechos de Valinor son aún más mitológicos, y aunque algunas de las historias son más naïf, eso mismo las hace muy refrescantes.

Pero en esta segunda lectura, con bastante más poso "tolkieniano", me he dado cuenta más claramente del prodigio que es cómo de estos poemitas y cuentos aislados se acabara construyendo en tan poco tiempo un Legendarium como el que hemos podido disfrutar. Y he encontrado detalles que se me habían pasado por alto sobre cómo incluso en su léxico es posible encontrar indicios de historias aún anteriores a estos Cuentos, probablemente, estas sí, …

Hyvä jos hereillä pysyin

1 star

Kokoelma Tolkienin nuorempana kirjoittamia ja luonnoksiksi jääneitä, toisiinsa linkittyviä tarinoita. Hyvin vanhahtavaa ja pompöösiä kieltä, ja välissä on paljon Christopher Tolkienin kommentaaria ja vaihtoehtoisia versioita, ja tämän oheissälän skippasin ihan suorilta, koska en minä oikein jaksanut olla yhtään ajatuksella mukana tämän lukemisessa.

Review of 'Book of Lost Tales, Part One' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Rating this a 3 primarily so as not to invoke Dave's ire. He's right that the tales are "turgid, tedious, and unconscionably self-indulgent." But then, he also uses "belike" in a nonsensical way.

Where I differ from him is in trying to imagine what the reviews would be in a world that didn't contain Tolkien's other published works. First of all, I shudder to think of such a world. Secondly, we don't live in that world, so what's the point in rating a book from that subjunctive point of view? Such arguments are simply attempts to justify one's own peevishness.

The Book of Lost Tales is a solid 3. No, the tales are not great, and yes sometimes they are downright terrible. But the book does precisely what it's supposed to do: Provide early, unrefined versions of stories that NEVER got to a point where Tolkien himself was comfortable …

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