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'''''The Antioch Review'' (Winter 2015, Volume 73, Number 1)''' includes the article "A Song for J.R.R. Tolkien" by Sue Parman. In her article, Parman includes quotations from letters she received from [[J.R.R. Tolkien]].  
'''''The Antioch Review'' (Winter 2015, Volume 73, Number 1)''' includes the article "A Song for J.R.R. Tolkien" by Sue Parman. In her article, Parman includes quotations from letters she received from [[J.R.R. Tolkien]].<ref>{{webcite|author=Sue Parman|articleurl=http://www.sueparman.com/blog/posts/39600|articlename=Montaigne's Tower; For Beregond, who asked|dated=8 October 2021|website=[http://www.sueparman.com/blog www.sueparman.com]|accessed=9 October 2021}}</ref>


In her youth, Parman adapted some of Tolkien's poetry to music and sent him a recording on tape. On 6 June 1964, Tolkien sent her a handwritten letter:
In her youth, Parman adapted some of Tolkien's poetry to music and sent him a recording on tape. On 6 June 1964, Tolkien sent her a handwritten letter:
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:''“Mr. Tolkien thanked me for the tape of the songs I’d made from his poems. He regretted that he couldn’t play it because he lacked the proper machine, and wouldn’t be at home when I arrived in England (his wife’s illness required him to go ‘in search of less damp and more warmth’), but the address on Sandfield Road in Oxford would find him eventually”… I re-read Mr. Tolkien’s letter and noticed a few lines I hadn’t paid much attention to before: ‘Also after a period of severe troubles, and personal illness, I am more than short on time, and behind with various contracts. I am also to add to my difficulties at present without a secretary.’”''
:''“Mr. Tolkien thanked me for the tape of the songs I’d made from his poems. He regretted that he couldn’t play it because he lacked the proper machine, and wouldn’t be at home when I arrived in England (his wife’s illness required him to go ‘in search of less damp and more warmth’), but the address on Sandfield Road in Oxford would find him eventually”… I re-read Mr. Tolkien’s letter and noticed a few lines I hadn’t paid much attention to before: ‘Also after a period of severe troubles, and personal illness, I am more than short on time, and behind with various contracts. I am also to add to my difficulties at present without a secretary.’”''


Parman also received another letter from Tolkien, dated 20 May 1965, typed, and signed by Tolkien's secretary.
Parman also received another letter from Tolkien, dated 20 May 1965, typed, and signed by Tolkien's secretary.<ref>{{webcite|author=Jennifer Berry|articleurl=http://www.facebook.com/groups/TheTolkienSociety.EducationalCharity/posts/10159272537526068/|articlename=(Tolkien Society Facebook group post)|dated=30 September 2021|website=FB|accessed=9 October 2021}}</ref>


==External links==
*[http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7723/antiochreview.73.1.0034?refreqid=excelsior%3A67c09e390ac05d440b6c3269cbc1aa8d A Song for J.R.R. Tolkien] at JSTOR
{{references}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Antioch Review Winter 2015}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Antioch Review Winter 2015}}
[[Category:Journals]]
[[Category:Publications by title]]
[[Category:Publications by title]]

Revision as of 11:55, 9 October 2021

The Antioch Review (Volume 73, Number 1
Antioch Review.jpg
EditorRobert S. Fogarty
ReleasedWinter 2015
FormatAcademic journal

The Antioch Review (Winter 2015, Volume 73, Number 1) includes the article "A Song for J.R.R. Tolkien" by Sue Parman. In her article, Parman includes quotations from letters she received from J.R.R. Tolkien.[1]

In her youth, Parman adapted some of Tolkien's poetry to music and sent him a recording on tape. On 6 June 1964, Tolkien sent her a handwritten letter:

“Mr. Tolkien thanked me for the tape of the songs I’d made from his poems. He regretted that he couldn’t play it because he lacked the proper machine, and wouldn’t be at home when I arrived in England (his wife’s illness required him to go ‘in search of less damp and more warmth’), but the address on Sandfield Road in Oxford would find him eventually”… I re-read Mr. Tolkien’s letter and noticed a few lines I hadn’t paid much attention to before: ‘Also after a period of severe troubles, and personal illness, I am more than short on time, and behind with various contracts. I am also to add to my difficulties at present without a secretary.’”

Parman also received another letter from Tolkien, dated 20 May 1965, typed, and signed by Tolkien's secretary.[2]

External links

References

  1. Sue Parman, "Montaigne's Tower; For Beregond, who asked" dated 8 October 2021, www.sueparman.com (accessed 9 October 2021)
  2. Jennifer Berry, "(Tolkien Society Facebook group post)" dated 30 September 2021, Facebook (accessed 9 October 2021)