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#1 |
Pile O'Bones
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 15
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i live in the middle east and i was just browsing at a shop when i saw lotr and bought it and am hooked ever since!was 15 at the time.
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#2 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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Lets See
Well lets see... I first read the book after seeing a stage peformance of the Hobbit in Birmingham, it was very good and was my first introduction to the world of tolkien. As soon as I got home I got my Mothers very old edition of LoTR out and began reading it, I had a lot of trouble but I still read the book (all 6 in one edition) in around two weeks and thoroughly enjoyed it (even if I found myself lost in details by the end and very confused). I then proceded to read it many more times and maybe a year later discovered that they had just began producing LoTR the film (around 1998).
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#3 |
Guard of the Citadel
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Oxon
Posts: 2,205
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when I saw the first movie I definitely decided that LOTR was something for me, and since I enjoy learning English I bought the book in English. I think I was...13 at that time
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“The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike.”
Delos B. McKown |
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#4 |
Pile O'Bones
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 11
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I was given the LOTR in 1993 for christmas. I was 10 and my mum passed it to me with the words 'i hope you enjoy this as much as i do'. I began to read it immediately and i was enraptured. However it still took me 6 months to complete it and it pains me to admit that most of it flew over my head. It wasn't the story that had me hooked but rather the fact i had found something that fed my, apparently, overactive and fanciful imagination. Who had ever heard of Elves that didn't have wings and magic wands when they were 10, or Orcs or Ents or Dwarves who didn't have toadstools (thankyou Enid Blyton). It was what i had been looking for! I began reading it every year and each year my understanding grew. 1996 saw The Silmarillion in my Santa sack.... 8 months and 8 tonnes of confusion but wow!!!!!! Oddly i then received The Hobbit in 1997 for my birthday: a rather backward introduction to Middle Earth, but i wouldn't have it any other way. By the time i made it to The Hobbit i had already developed my passion for Middle Earth, a passion which sees every January herald the beginning of my Tolkien marathon: The Silmarillion; The Hobbit and finally LOTR. I have managed to complete this marathon by early March ( i am slowed by endless note taking and cross referencing these days), but nonetheless it is one highly enjoyable matrathon!!!!
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for Sauron took to himself the name of Annatar; the Lord of Gifts |
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#5 |
Shady She-Penguin
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: In a far land beyond the Sea
Posts: 8,093
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I read it for the first time around eight or nine years ago, I was eight ears old back then. That wasn't, however, my first LotR experience; I had seen the Bakshi cartoon before and the book had been read aloud to me a few years earlier.
It took me from late spring to early autumn to read the book and still bears marks from being carried everywhere. I also remember reading it in my grandparents' place and falling asleep on the book since I was so tired and it was so late, but I didn't want to stop reading. I still remember that the chapter which I was reading was The Great River.
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Like the stars chase the sun, over the glowing hill I will conquer Blood is running deep, some things never sleep Double Fenris
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