Jemima Aslana
New Member
I'd say he could write songs - songs where the feet are actually the same in all the stanzas which is more than can be said for many a famed poet. Whether said songs are poetry, that's another discussion, but they're most definitely apt for putting to music.
As for the novels as a whole: I read them the first time a long time ago (can't quite place it) I enjoyed the story greatly. As I've grown older and more experienced with literature I've come to realise that story-telling was not Tolkien's strong suit. He was not a story-teller, he had an immense amount of creativity, an immense imagination and a flair for artful language, but these three alone doth not make a fantastic book. He created one of the most vast and detailed worlds fantasy literature ever saw, he 'realised' his imagined world in an impressive scope and thought of almost everything - from languages and eating habits to History of world and races, and he put it all down in a beautiful language - but he forgot all about characters. I can't think of any character from his books that is anything but a stereo-type, they are all flat and quite inconsequential personality-wise, and that takes away from the work enough for it to no longer qualify as a 'good' work of fiction. Tolkien simple did not have what it takes to make his story and characters engaging. He wrote History - epic history, as it is written in the Kalevala and the Icelandic sagas, but not a well-told story.
I'm a fan of Tolkien - I won't bother denying it, I still enjoy reading his works, enjoy it greatly even, but only as a world/History-creation project, not as a fictional novel.
As for the novels as a whole: I read them the first time a long time ago (can't quite place it) I enjoyed the story greatly. As I've grown older and more experienced with literature I've come to realise that story-telling was not Tolkien's strong suit. He was not a story-teller, he had an immense amount of creativity, an immense imagination and a flair for artful language, but these three alone doth not make a fantastic book. He created one of the most vast and detailed worlds fantasy literature ever saw, he 'realised' his imagined world in an impressive scope and thought of almost everything - from languages and eating habits to History of world and races, and he put it all down in a beautiful language - but he forgot all about characters. I can't think of any character from his books that is anything but a stereo-type, they are all flat and quite inconsequential personality-wise, and that takes away from the work enough for it to no longer qualify as a 'good' work of fiction. Tolkien simple did not have what it takes to make his story and characters engaging. He wrote History - epic history, as it is written in the Kalevala and the Icelandic sagas, but not a well-told story.
I'm a fan of Tolkien - I won't bother denying it, I still enjoy reading his works, enjoy it greatly even, but only as a world/History-creation project, not as a fictional novel.