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Title: Fellowship of the Ring
Series: Lord of the Rings #1
Author: John Tolkien
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 432
Format: Digital Edition
Series: Lord of the Rings #1
Author: John Tolkien
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 432
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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Bilbo, after the
events from The Hobbit, has settled down to a nice slightly
eccentric life. He adopts one of his nephews, Frodo, as his heir and
begins to write his memoirs. On his One Hundred and Eleventieth
birthday, Bilbo disappears and leaves everything to Frodo. Only
Gandalf knows that Bilbo has gone to Rivendell.
Several decades
later Gandalf visits Frodo and reveals that the little gold ring that
allowed Bilbo to turn invisible, and that he left to Frodo, is
actually a ring of great power, possibly The One Ring that was made
by Sauron to control all the other rings of power. Gandalf tells
Frodo he needs to go to Rivendell to take counsel and that he,
Gandalf, will return in a year to help guide him there.
A year passes and
no word of Gandalf. Frodo has been preparing and his cover story is
that he is moving to Buckland, another settlement of hobbits. Two of
his cousins, Merry and Pippin, along with Frodo's gardener Sam, have
all been helping him move. On the way to Buckland, Frodo runs into a
black rider that inspires complete unreasoning terror in his heart.
No longer knowing who to trust, Frodo and his companions begin their
trek to Rivendell.
Having several
adventures, the hobbits meet up with Strider, a human ranger who
Gandalf trusted. They all head for Rivendell, doing their best to
avoid the attention of the Black Riders, who Strider reveals are
Ringwraiths, Sauron's powerful underlings. The Group makes it to
Rivendell and Gandalf shows up. He tells them that the head of the
Wizard's Council, Saruman the White, has been corrupted by a lust for
power. Now the world must deal with Sauron and Sarumon, both who want
the One Ring for the power it contains. Elrond, the elven lord of
Rivendell, tells that the Ring will corrupt any being who uses it and
that it must be destroyed. The only way to destroy it is to cast it
back into the fiery Mount Doom from which it was created.
A Company is
gathered. They set out. Hindered in many ways, they must eventually
decide what they are going to do with the Ring. Gandalf perishes
defending them from a Balrog, a being almost equal in power to Sauron
himself. Eventually, one of the Companions, a human named Boromir,
falls under the influence of the Ring and tries to take it from
Frodo.
Frodo flees, along
with Sam and heads off on his own towards Mt Doom. The book ends with
the Fellowship breaking apart and heading their own ways.
My
Thoughts:
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This is going to be a lot shorter of a review than my 2012 one.
I enjoyed this but was not raving about it. A thoroughly good story
that is at once personal and cozy and yet epic in scope all at the
same time. It is no wonder that this trilogy ended up spawning the
Fantasy Genre as we know it today.
The reason this doesn't get more than 4stars from, and never will, is
all the blasted songs and poetry. Sometimes they contained pertinent
information to the current story and other times they were simply a
history lesson and at others they were just an expression by the
character. You never knew which. I ended up just skipping them, plot
points be forsaken.
Anyone who reads Fantasy should read this trilogy. Period.
★★★★☆
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