Technomancer wrote:But that was my point, I'd never had any trouble with it or the others, when I was little (i.e. eight years old or less).
Same here, I could read them perfectly fine, I loved all the books.
Technomancer wrote:But that was my point, I'd never had any trouble with it or the others, when I was little (i.e. eight years old or less).
Technomancer wrote:But that was my point, I'd never had any trouble with it or the others, when I was little (i.e. eight years old or less).
Radical Dreamer wrote:I didn't read The Hobbit until I was in 8th grade, and I still loved it. I didn't find it too silly or too wordy. I actually found it much easier to read than The Lord of the Rings, which I read in full first. The Hobbit was actually a refreshingly light read, and I enjoyed it a lot.
USSRGirl wrote:Beorn also annoyed me because his race is never again mentioned in LOTR unless you count maybe Ratghast (sp?)?
USSRGirl wrote:Seeing as sparring against fans of any niche is pretty much useless, I'll just say that my main problem other than the wordyness was that the Hobbit had seemingly no point, message, or theme at all.
uc pseudonym wrote:Sorry, but after reading this I saw all the Advent Children fandom in your sig and I'm still recovering.
uc pseudonym wrote:Sorry, but after reading this I saw all the Advent Children fandom in your sig and I'm still recovering.
uc pseudonym wrote:Sorry, but after reading this I saw all the Advent Children fandom in your sig and I'm still recovering.
USSRGirl wrote:He was like the Jar Jar of LOTR.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:Uh... what?
For the record, I never really got into The Hobbit or the LOTR Trilogy in general. Not a major fan of them.
USSRGirl wrote:-___O And thus seals any chance at a logical rebuttal.
USSRGirl wrote:"GAAAH! Heathen! How dare you crit such a divine work of animated mastery?! I shall tear out the eyes and ears of all who read this thread so they are not corrupted by your apostasy!"
USSRGirl wrote:Point one: That was actually another thing that bugged me. If good ol' Tom is so uncorruptable - why not give him the freakin' ring?! Except that according to Gandalf he'd misplace it. O.o]
This is suggested at the Council of Elrond. The response is that Sauron would conquer the rest of Middle Earth and then Bombadil would fall. As far as his identity, some of the supplementary materials make a pretty good case that he is indeed a Maiar that has "gone native." That would be consistent with the world generally presented by Tolkien.mitsuki lover wrote:As far as Tom Bombadil goes,if he hadn't shown up when he did the
hobbits would have been toast.Remember at that point they were traveling without any protection.
USSRGirl wrote:... my how the Valar have deteriorated in mental sanity ...
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