Celebrim
Legend
Oh yeah, I'm well aware that I'm in the minority. The annoying thing is, it's a genre that I love and I would have expected to love reading them, especially since they are raved about so much. Then I try reading them, get part way in, then quit because I don't find them entertaining.
My wife spent four months pushing her way through 'Fellowship of the Rings'. She claimed that she thought she'd never make it through the Mines of Moria. But then she read the next two volumes in about four days, unable to put them down, racing to the finish.
Interestingly, when I was 10 I wouldn't have been able to imagine that complaint. I thought the Mines of Moria were some of the most exciting reading I'd ever encountered. Tense. Dangerous. With a glorious epic confrontation on the Bridge of Khazad-Dum. She shrugged. At age 10, I found the Dead Marshes a bit of a slog - nothing but three characters having a conversation in a seemingly endless bog. She, as an adult, tore through them.
Now, I think I understand a bit. When I was a kid, I found the part with just Frodo, Sam, and Gollum boring. Now I find it the deepest and most satisfying part of the book. At age 10, I only cared really about the big set piece battles. Now I know that he spends far more time anticipating battles than he actually does writing about them. Battles bore Tolkien. He avoids writing about them if he can, deliberately with a wink and a nod at the reader, as if to say, "I see you there. There is more to life than violence."
Profound and endlessly entertaining. I've read The Lord of the Rings like 18 times, and each time I've found things that I had missed in prior readings - misunderstandings I had of the character and what they were really saying, and what the writer had really meant by the scene.
But to each their own I suppose. Just know that if you make a habit of making disparaging remarks about the Good Professor, I'll have to put you on ignore.
