I recently reread The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings for the first time since Junior High. I must say that The Hobbit was as fun as I remembered. Witty, whimsical, economic, and with a ton of memorable events, characters, and descriptions. To me, Lord of the Rings suffers from being overly serious. I know that's the very reason so many love Tolkien's mythology, because of the seriousness given to it. But Tolkien said his goal was simply to tell a great story, and for me, LotR just got bogged down with a weight of trying to be an epic. Tolkien's descriptive prose, after a while, just bored me. The repetition, the 80 million words used for the same thing (who knew there was THAT many ways to say "valley"?). But in the end it lacked everything that I thought made The Hobbit so great. I guess part of my criticism comes from the fact that I've never been automatically hooked on Tolkien's mythology. If I wanted mythology I'd rather read the original classics which I think are more imaginative and interesting.
The major blow to Tolkien, for me, was going from LotR to War and Peace. My, what a breathe of fresh air! It's funny that W&P is the much longer book with the stigma of being a classic, yet I think I've breezed through it where I slogged through much of LotR. The writing is just so much better. Crisper, clearer, more vivid, and even more evocative in what it chooses to leave out. Tolstoy doesn't need 4 paragraphs of environmental descriptions to set the scene, and ironically I find his environments more vivid in my head than any in Tolkien in all his verbose descriptions.
But, even with all my criticism, I still vote "excellent fantasy" because I feel they are. When the books are good, they're very good. Offering the right blend of aesthetic atmosphere and narrative excitement. But I do think they fall quite short of literary masterpieces. I also think they unfairly overshadow fantasy that I find equally worthwhile even if less scholarly. For fantasy with rich, descriptive prose, for instance, I'll take Susan Cooper's superb but underrated The Dark is Rising Sequence, which I've read entirely 3 times (once in grade school, once in junior high, and once last year).
But I'd love to hear other opinions.


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