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- Book Details
- English Books
- Rating:



(636)
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- Paperback 384 Pages
- Edition: New Ed
- ISBN-10: 0006754023
- ISBN-13: 9780006754022
- Publisher: Collins
- Pub date: Nov 02, 1998
- Dimensions: 20 cm x 13 cm x 2 cm Just how big is that?
- Also available as: Mass Market Paperback, Hardcover, Audio CD, Audio Cassette, Leather Bound, Library Binding, School & Library Binding, Unbound and Others
- In other languages:

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Long ago in elementary school one of the first 'chapter' novels I ever read (I was so proud at the time I recall), was one entitled The Hobbit.
I remember just loving the story but always being hungry and wishing I always had snacks around, but nothing much other than that (It's been so long). ... Continue
Long ago in elementary school one of the first 'chapter' novels I ever read (I was so proud at the time I recall), was one entitled The Hobbit.
I remember just loving the story but always being hungry and wishing I always had snacks around, but nothing much other than that (It's been so long).
Now, due to the fact that everyone around me seems to be hyped about the new Lord Of The Rings film and is reading the series, I decided to GASP! Go with the flow and start them as well (I have never read The Lord Of The Rings). I however, need completion when I read a series, so I decided to reread The Hobbit because well, I remembered nothing about it.
Now I do! Oh boy, it's a good thing I read it around Christmas because at least this time I was able to stuff myself every time a halfling (a more widely used term for Hobbit these days it appears) has a cake, or second breakfast, etc.
Bilbo Baggins is the hobbit in question's name and it's one that I have never forgotten since I first read it, even if I did forget exactly what he did.
When I started off on this adventure for the second time I was wary that perhaps it could be a little to childish nowadays for my liking. I have read the Chronicles of Narnia a second time later in life as well and found them a little to easy to read, but they were enjoyable.
At first I initially wasn't impressed. Bilbo, the wizard Gandalf, and a bunch of dwarves (not dwarfs), set out to steal back gold taken by a dragon named Smaug. A decent amount of pages in and it was just this little group travelling along, complaining, eating, and being watched over by Gandalf. I thought to myself, this is actually a pretty boring premise. Where is the grandeur? Where is the honourable quest (stealing gold doesn't do it for me)? Where is the heroism? That soon changed.
It took a little while, but eventually the group's guardian, Gandalf leaves. It is the up to these inexperienced dwarves along with a very inexperienced hobbit to finish the task. One bad thing after another happens and surprise, surprise! Bilbo's courage grows (reluctantly perhaps, but it does) and he saves the day for the entire group and himself many a time.
Now the story is a good one. Now it has meaning. Readers get to read along, as the spoilt little homebody Bilbo grows as a person, becomes honourable, and heroic. It's a tale everyone should like.
As a prelude to the Lord Of The Rings, I don't really know how this fits in (I haven't read them, but I did see the first film and see some obvious ties of which I won't go into here) but it's still a very good read at any age. While my skeptical brain may not have been as lost in the world of Middle Earth as it once was when I was a child, The Hobbit still entertained me quite a bit.
The Hobbit and the rest of Tolkien's works are stunning when you sit back and think of it. Sure the novels read a little like really well written Dungeons and Dragons books, but these were the first! There was nothing similar to The Hobbit back then. Tolkien invented 'orcs' and many other fantasy specifics that fantasy writers have used time and again.
The Hobbit and Tolkien created a genre, which many have expanded upon and perhaps improved upon, but they still stand the test of time as classic epic fantasy.
Reread many many years after my first (and second and third etc...) reading and The Hobbit is still a wonderful read. It reads almost as if it was spoken, not written. Not as dense or detailed as the Lord of the Rings trilogy, but sets in motion the events of that trilogy.
This is the class prequel to the LOTR trilogy. I never made it through the trilogy because I just thought The Hobbit was so much better! I read this for the first time in 5th grade. Its a great story - so fantastic and brilliant. It really is another world. One day I'll read the Trilogy... after I r ... Continue
This is the class prequel to the LOTR trilogy. I never made it through the trilogy because I just thought The Hobbit was so much better! I read this for the first time in 5th grade. Its a great story - so fantastic and brilliant. It really is another world. One day I'll read the Trilogy... after I reread the Hobbit :)
Alcune discutibili scelte nella traduzione italiana; per quanto (pare) "lo Hobbit annotato" italiano abbia riveduto qualcosa a parità di traduttrice...
... che si riserva ai grandi libri.
E questo è un grande libro. Non lo rileggevo da una decina d'anni e l'ho trovato più bello di come me lo ricordassi. Scritto con una maestria spaventosa, coinvolgente, ricco di descrizioni da mozzare il fiato – Guillermo del Toro, prendi nota, io credo in te! ... Continue
... che si riserva ai grandi libri.
E questo è un grande libro. Non lo rileggevo da una decina d'anni e l'ho trovato più bello di come me lo ricordassi. Scritto con una maestria spaventosa, coinvolgente, ricco di descrizioni da mozzare il fiato – Guillermo del Toro, prendi nota, io credo in te!
E poi rileggerlo e far riferimento agli eventi successivi è una goduria.
E poi insomma, Bilbo Baggins è adorabile, l'hobbit migliore che vi possa capitare di incontrare nelle vostre avventure.
Bilbo >>> Frodo. Ecco.
il mio inglese non è abbastanza tosto... sigh