Norman Power: Difference between revisions

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===Articles===
===Articles===
*[[1977]]: ''[[Amon Hen (journal|Amon Hen]]'' 28 (August 1977)
*[[1977]]: ''[[Amon Hen (journal)|Amon Hen]]'' 28 (August 1977)
**[Recollection; untitled?] (also published in ''[[Tolkien Centenary Conference 1992]]'')
**[Recollection; untitled?] (also published in ''[[Tolkien Centenary Conference 1992]]'')
*[[1992]]: ''[[Mythlore 69]]''
*[[1992]]: ''[[Mythlore 69]]''

Revision as of 09:20, 18 July 2010

"I shan't call it the end, till we've cleared up the mess." — Sam
This article or section needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of article quality.

Canon[1] Norman Sandiford Power (presumably[2] later taking the name Joseph Power), born in Liverpool, England, in 1925, is a retired professor of English Language and Literature at Walsh University.

Power was an undergraduate at Worcester College, Oxford, in the late 1930s, and attended Tolkien's invitational speech at the Lovelace Society in 1938.[3] After receiving his B.A. from the University of London, he later gained an exhibition to St. Catherine's College, Oxford, where he read for an Honors Degree in English Language and Literature.[4]

By the end of the life of Tolkien, they renewed their contact:

"How strange that I had no further contact with Tolkien until the nineteen-seventies when I had already been Vicar of Ladywood for over twenty years. Tolkien began to write to me about his old homes, and then, with amazing kindness, about my own scribbling."
― Norman Power, Tolkien Centenary Conference 1992

Bibliography, selected

Books

Articles

Filmography

  • 2008: A Wizard's Apprentice 1/4: Meeting Tolkien and C.S. Lewis (interview with Joseph Power)

References

  1. Canon = "one of several priests on the permanent staff of a cathedral" (Collins English Dictionary)
  2. Brother Joseph Power's experiences of Tolkien, at The Lord of the Rings Fanatics Plaza, as of July 18, 2010
  3. Power, Norman, "[Recollection; untitled]" in Tolkien Centenary Conference 1992
  4. Homepage of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Youngstown, as of July 16, 2010