GrimTuesday said:
tintaman said:
+1 Internets to the person who mentioned Beowulf, was definitely one of Tolkiens bigger influences. As to the OP? Despite the fact that LOTR is probably one of my favourite books, I can see your point. Personally I love overly descriptive writing (Peter F Hamilton, Tolkien, Charles Stross etc.) but that's just because I'm a bit weird, it's certainly not for everyone. Overrated though? By his fans maybe, but that's the same for...well pretty much everything that has fans.
What I'm talking about when I say overrated is he is often held up as the epitome of fantasy writers even thought they are plenty who are better at crafting a story than he is. Yes he was a spectacular world builder but his stories suffered because of it.
Thing is though, that's just your spin on things. I'm one of those wierdy geeks who thinks Tolkien was an excellent world-builder
and an excellent story teller. Lord Of The Rings isn't just an excercise in describing trees and rocks. You've got epic moments like Eowyn's face-off against the Witch-King (which the movie butchered btw), mixed with scenes of pure fucking tragedy (the scene in ROTK where Gollum sees the hobbits sleeping and almost abandons his plan to murder them, or the entire Scouring of the Shire chapter), and scenes of almost Zen-like wisdom and intelligence (pretty much anything Gandalf says, especially at the start of the Fellowship). It follows characters through ups (birthday parties and coronations) and downs (being kidnapped by uruks, poisoned by spiders, and stabbed by wraiths straight out of your worst nightmare), and manages to do so in a way that doesn't feel contrived or forced: he doesn't add random bits of violence or action just to keep the tension high. Nor does he have characters follow predictable hollywood character arcs, which the films completely missed. Frodo does go through some pretty major character changes, but they're also pretty un-family friendly: the quest essentially breaks him as a person, and leaves him unable to live in normal society. Hence why he disappears in the boat at the end.
TLDR: There is far too much that happens in the Lord Of The Rings to simply write Tolkien off as a world builder, not a storyteller. Every element of the story, from mythological symbolism, to character motivation, was given incredible amounts of thought by the man. If you don't dig it, that's completely cool, but don't blindly accept the idea that he was a sub-par writer who wrote about nothing but trees. There is a lot more to LOTR than that.
Also, don't use the films as a representation of the books. They're enjoyable, but touch on about 1/10th the stuff the books do.