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Old 03-21-2007, 12:26 PM   #1
Maglor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by the guy who be short
Hmm. I make CT's version 230 pages.

The UT version is 112 pages + 11 pages from the Silm (Between Of Mim and The Return of Turin to Dor-Lomin in UT) plus about 12 pages from the Notes in UT. Which is 135 pages - in paperback.

I don't have HoME and I don't remember how much extra material is in there, but it does look like we'll be getting 100 extra pages from somewhere or other.

My 227 was a rough approximation based on the Table of Contents previously posted (The Tables start on 261 so I took one off from that and subtracted 33, the page on which "The Childhood Of Hurin" begins). But no matter how you slice it, it's 220+ pages worth of the actual narrative, apart from the pages taken for illustrations (which I'd forgotten about--thanks davem).

My version of the Narn has the fluid story as under 100 pages, and about 20 more if you include the notes and appendix. Of course, font makes a difference as well.

In any case, I'm interested to see the stuff that is "new" or expanded, because there has to be some to reach the apparent length we've been given.

Last edited by Maglor; 03-21-2007 at 12:30 PM.
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Old 03-21-2007, 12:46 PM   #2
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"So in conclusion : Many parts of the text are essentially the same as those that appear in other works (and particularly "Unfinished Tales"), other parts will be new except for those readers who have read in detail the History of Middle Earth.
The text as a whole can be said to be "new" as it is a recomposition of published texts and other "pieces" that weren't published previously. A completed puzzle, in a sense."

Maglor:

This is a quote from an interview with Christopher's son Adam linked by Cof7A in post 36 of this thread . So nothing much new to those who have read HoME but newly presented as an entity.. but the article is well worth reading...
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Old 03-21-2007, 03:46 PM   #3
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So, who's going to get the book at 11 'o' clock at night?

According to the Tolkien.co.uk website countdown timer http://www.tolkien.co.uk/ the book will be published in (at time of writing) 26 days 1 hour & 15 minutes - ie at 11pm.

Can we expect a Harry Potter like late night opening at the bookstores, with queuing fans dressed up in their M-e costumes?
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Old 03-21-2007, 03:49 PM   #4
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Proabably best not to go as spellbound Nienor fleeing from the Orc attack ..bit chilly...
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Old 03-21-2007, 03:59 PM   #5
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hmmm...I've noticed that in order to see the timer you need javascript enabled. You can see the timer as a banner on the Tolkien Library website though - always good for updates on Tolkien stuff http://www.tolkienlibrary.com/
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Old 03-21-2007, 04:08 PM   #6
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Tolkien

The World Wide Launch of the Children of Hurin is being held on 17th April at Waterstone's, Piccadilly, London. 10am - 6pm.

Quote:
World Wide Launch
The Children of Hurin
WATERSTONE'S PICCADILLY
Tuesday, 17 April 2007, 10:00AM - 6:00PM
The 30-year wait is over for J.R.R. Tolkien's 'The Children of Hurin'. Join us for a day long extravaganza of readings, competitions & activities, including illustrator Alan Lee signing the novel. Please contact the store for further details.

Further details: 02078512400
Ooooooh!
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Old 03-22-2007, 06:31 PM   #7
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"to publish the version he probably wishes went in the Silmarillion proper."

No, he doesn't. He has always wished to publish it as a standalone book; but the Sil. proper was always viewed (by JRRT and CT both) as a compendium, a rather compressed history, and this is precisely what JRRT produced when he wrote a deliberately abridged version of the later Narn into the Grey Annals.
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Old 04-10-2007, 11:17 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mithalwen

Maglor:

This is a quote from an interview with Christopher's son Adam linked by Cof7A in post 36 of this thread . So nothing much new to those who have read HoME but newly presented as an entity.. but the article is well worth reading...
Wow...sorry it took so long to respond to this. And then the thread closed, but it's back now, so...

I did read the interview mentioned (it was a good one too) and I did see the quote that you posted, that it is essentially a completed puzzle more than a fresh retelling.

But this quote (from the same article)...

"Many parts of the text will be - if not identical - recognizable to the knowledgeable reader, but there are also pieces that have never appeared before." (emphasis mine)

...gave me the impression that there will be *some* new material, even if it is minimal. I agree with what everyone has said already, that it's basically the same story in the most complete sense, but I still think we may be treated to a little new material, those nothing so large as to alter the plot significantly. Just minor touches, I'm guessing.

But we'll find out soon, won't we?
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Old 04-11-2007, 03:46 AM   #9
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Children of Hurin is now Number 3 in the Amazon.co.uk bestseller list! Just behind Harry Potter!

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Old 04-11-2007, 04:40 AM   #10
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Live near Cambridge?

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Old 04-11-2007, 09:05 AM   #11
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Pipe A lengthly monologue

Sorry to hark back to conversation past, but I've noticed that comments on that Sunday Times article have been posted by Michael Drout and Verlyn Flieger. It's a shame that Tom Shippey didn't join them, but you can't have the opinion of every professor in the world on one article.

I think that their comments bear careful reading. The Sunday Times reviewer, as is becoming all too common with that organ, has done just enough research to appear knowledgeable, but not enough to provide an accurate idea of his subject. Less forgivably, he spends half the article commenting on the literary failings of LR without reference to the book he's supposedly reviewing. This is as good an example as you'll get of an apology to the in-crowd for liking something that's out: Appleyard doesn't want to lose his grown-up, serious-reviewer credentials by approving something written by Tolkien, who rather tautologically wrote fairy-tales about Elves. Incidentally, I'm not sure that Hugo Dyson would have published his opinion in quite those terms, and I'm reasonably sure that he wouldn't have been entirely happy to see his words in a Times review. The deleted expletive descends to the coarse prudery so beloved of our dear scarlet press, and so symptomatic of the provincial, petit-bourgeois mentality that self-styled intellectuals take such great pains to renounce.

The Wagnerian reference is another giveaway: Wagner's is a name that automatically implies that those who invoke him are intellectuals who understand music. As is often the case, though, Appleyard's invocation of Wagner reveals a lack of understanding of both the composer and Tolkien, not to mention the real relationship between their works. I expect that Wagner here is used as shorthand for an operatic style of presentation (which is also the epic style of presentation, which predates opera) unless the reviewer is so badly informed as to think that Wagner actually invented those stories himself. All in all, it confirms my general impression that newspaper literary reviews tell one more about the reviewer than the work reviewed, which renders them useless save as a beginner's guide to being a pretentious bore.

Anyway, since better people than I have pointed out the deficiencies of that article there remains little more for me to say than that Michael Drout promises to post on his site his own critique of Tolkien's style, which, since M.D. actually knows what he's talking about, should be worth a look. This pointless babble from News International I can do without: what isn't obvious or derivative in it is wrong.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Neithan Tol Turambar
I do not read ANY of CT's middle Earth history because much of that material was rejected by Tolkien himself as it did not entirely harmonize with his inner vision.
There's no easy way to say this, but that rules out reading The Silmarillion as well. CRT put that together from the very material that yielded The History of Middle-earth, even writing some passages himself. There is no pure vision of the Silmarillion material endorsed by JRRT, and even what he rejected can only be inferred from his later revisions. Some parts of the HME were at one time or another under consideration by publishers; some of it had already been published; some of it is taken from lectures that Tolkien delivered annually to students. The old Fall of Gondolin was probably more publicised before 1977 than anything about Hurin, since it was read to the Oxford essay club (strictly speaking, a forum for academic papers) by its author. It's more complicated than Tolkien rejecting something and CRT publishing it later; rather JRRT left behind a lot of drafts, many of them incomplete, and little or no indication of what he wanted to retain or reject. Yes, the LR material in volumes 6-9 was definitely never intended to see the light of day, but even that is a stage in the evolution of a grand idea that never fully emerged. Part of the reason for that was that there simply wasn't a single inner vision, rather there were many, each of which informed particular stories or phases of development. The picture will never be complete, but that's no reason not to appreciate each fragment on its own terms, since each has value of itself. Moreover, since JRRT specifically appointed CRT to publish, withhold or destroy his unpublished works at his own discretion, we might regard JRRT's approval as given to all of the posthumous publications. I don't say that this is definitely the case, but it's one way of looking at things; in fact, all that I can say about this with any certainty is that HME contains most of Tolkien's best writing, both verse and prose; make of that what you will. With any luck The Children of Hurin will give a glimpse of that to readers who would never get through the History.

As for asking what Tolkien said, I consider it the first and most important step to finding a meaning: unless you know exactly what was said you can't hope to interpret what was meant. Meaning is an elusive enough beast even without the additional cover of misquotation and paraphrase.

On the 17th I'll be doing something; possibly I'll be trying to buy a copy of the new book, but more likely I won't. It isn't going anywhere.
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Old 04-11-2007, 09:27 AM   #12
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Appleyard is quite well-respected as a journalist, though - apart from taking the Murdoch dollar. I was surprised (as I've already mentioned on the Flieger thread - so I also apologise for referring to conversations/links past) how much of this article he'd actually lifted from the original AN Wilson piece in the Telegraph, back in 2001. Wilson did a biography of Lewis and does seem to be a Tolkien fan, albeit a critical one. Here, the expletives are not deleted. Interesting that the Telegraph was less prudish six years ago than the Sunday Times is today. The Wilson piece is much better, but then Wilson, although I often disagree with him, is very smart.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...w24.xml&page=1
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