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'''''Untangling Tolkien: A Chronology and Commentary for The Lord of the Rings''''' a reference book for ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' written by Michael W. Perry.
'''''Untangling Tolkien: A Chronology and Commentary for The Lord of the Rings''''' a reference book for ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' written by Michael W. Perry.
==Reception==
In a review (dated 20 December 2003) on Amazon.com, [[David Bratman]] notes the good intention of the author to expand the chronology found in [[Appendix B]] of ''The Lord of the Rings'', but critises the book for containing a lot of "''bloopers and misconceived ideas''". Another (anonymous) reviewer (commenting on 30 October 2004) claims that "''[a]pparently the author has corrected many of the errors that David Bratman objected to''", in the third printing of the book (released May 2004).<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/Untangling-Tolkien-Chronology-Commentary-Rings/dp/1587420198 Untangling Tolkien: A Chronology and Commentary for The Lord of the Rings] at [http://www.amazon.com/ref=gno_logo Amazon.com] (accessed 4 November 2011)</ref>


==From the publisher==
==From the publisher==
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A few facts illustrate how helpful this chronology is. Most of narrative is a deliberately confusing sea of next days and third days that leave readers as confused as the tale's main characters.The middle 60 percent of The Lord of the Rings gives the current date only once. In the narrative as a whole, the date is given only 23 times, or once for every 43 pages, and most of those come when the plot is moving slowly. That's why those who want to dig deeper and understand better what Tolkien was saying will find this book a must-have.
A few facts illustrate how helpful this chronology is. Most of narrative is a deliberately confusing sea of next days and third days that leave readers as confused as the tale's main characters.The middle 60 percent of The Lord of the Rings gives the current date only once. In the narrative as a whole, the date is given only 23 times, or once for every 43 pages, and most of those come when the plot is moving slowly. That's why those who want to dig deeper and understand better what Tolkien was saying will find this book a must-have.


'''About the Author'''
==Reception==
 
In a review (dated 20 December 2003) on Amazon.com, [[David Bratman]] notes the good intention of the author to expand the chronology found in [[Appendix B]] of ''The Lord of the Rings'', but critises the book for containing a lot of "''bloopers and misconceived ideas''". Another (anonymous) reviewer (commenting on 30 October 2004) claims that "''[a]pparently the author has corrected many of the errors that David Bratman objected to''", in the third printing of the book (released May 2004).<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/Untangling-Tolkien-Chronology-Commentary-Rings/dp/1587420198 Untangling Tolkien: A Chronology and Commentary for The Lord of the Rings] at [http://www.amazon.com/ref=gno_logo Amazon.com] (accessed 4 November 2011)</ref>


Mike Perry is a writer living in Seattle. He first read The Lord of the Rings while riding across the Sinai desert bouncing around in the back of a Bedouin truck. He now rereads it to beat the boredom of Seattle's gray and rainy winters.
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[[Category:Reference books]]

Revision as of 07:16, 2 June 2015

Untangling Tolkien: A Chronology and Commentary for The Lord of the Rings
Untangling Tolkien.png
AuthorMichael W. Perry
PublisherInkling Books
Released5 September 2003 (first edition)
FormatPaperback
Pages252
ISBN978-1587420191

Untangling Tolkien: A Chronology and Commentary for The Lord of the Rings a reference book for The Lord of the Rings written by Michael W. Perry.

From the publisher

Here is the book that Tolkien fans have needed for half a century--a detailed, book-length chronology of J. R. R. Tolkien's complex tale. Whether you are a serious Tolkien fan or simply someone who enjoys reading the story over and over again, this is the book for you. It's the first totally new reference for The Lord of the Rings since the 1970s.

Beginning over 1400 years before the major events in Tolkien's epic, it describes, year-by-year, the amazing and imaginative background history that Tolkien created for his masterpiece. Then for the main narrative, it becomes a day-by-day reference, describing what each character does on that day and all the places where those events are described in Tolkien's writings. You can find out, for instance, what Merry and Pippin are doing as Sam perpares rabbit stew on the morning of March 7.

Probe deeper into Tolkien. See why someone as serious as Gandalf was interested in fun-loving Hobbits. Discover an exciting new plot, based on Tolkien's notes, that begins when Aragorn captures Gollum. Follow along as the Black Riders and Gandalf race for the Shire. Decide for yourself whether Sauron and the Ring have any ties to Hitler and Stalin. Explore what Tolkien believed about nature and technology.

A few facts illustrate how helpful this chronology is. Most of narrative is a deliberately confusing sea of next days and third days that leave readers as confused as the tale's main characters.The middle 60 percent of The Lord of the Rings gives the current date only once. In the narrative as a whole, the date is given only 23 times, or once for every 43 pages, and most of those come when the plot is moving slowly. That's why those who want to dig deeper and understand better what Tolkien was saying will find this book a must-have.

Reception

In a review (dated 20 December 2003) on Amazon.com, David Bratman notes the good intention of the author to expand the chronology found in Appendix B of The Lord of the Rings, but critises the book for containing a lot of "bloopers and misconceived ideas". Another (anonymous) reviewer (commenting on 30 October 2004) claims that "[a]pparently the author has corrected many of the errors that David Bratman objected to", in the third printing of the book (released May 2004).[1]

References