The Fellowship of the Ring Review

J. R. R. Tolkien published this book in 1954, and his imagination has fascinated several generations of readers.

“‘I am not made for perilous quests. I wish I had never seen the Ring! Why did it come to me? Why was I chosen?’ [cried Frodo].” 

“‘Such questions cannot be answered,’ said Gandalf. ‘You may be sure that it was not for any merit that others do not possess: not for power or wisdom, at any rate. But you have been chosen, and you must therefore use such strength and heart and wits as you have.’”

Tolkien’s epic adventure is a classic for a reason. 

Frodo Baggins is a peace-loving hobbit who is bequeathed a magic ring of enormous power, which brings danger to him and his closest friends. He must embark on a quest to rid the world of the evil the powerful ring and its master are wreaking on Middle Earth. 

Tolkien’s Middle Earth is the gold standard by which future high fantasy is measured. His imagination was incredible, and his attention to the detail of the world makes it feel so real. The pace is slower and the journey meanders in a way that does not feel quite modern, but the characters are interesting, the world fascinating, and Tolkien’s descriptive language is beautiful. He obviously cares about trees and growing things, and his best characters blend love of earth and love of people, while the villains despoil landscape and culture.

Some readers will be annoyed by digressions into Shire life and the strangeness of Tom Bombadil, wanting to get on with the quest, while other readers are inspired to write fan fiction about them. 

The themes of this story, of good vs. evil, of fascinating creatures and a complex and beautiful world, make it enduring. 

“‘But the only measure that [Sauron] knows is desire, desire for power; and so he judges all hearts. Into his heart the thought will not enter that any will refuse it, that having the Ring we may seek to destroy it.’” 

We all bring our own perspectives to any reading, and the (long) chapter “The Council of Elrond” is a great example of arguments about what to do with something that could give you great power. There is wisdom here for our current time. 

There isn’t really anything new I can say about this book, but it was so fun to revisit Middle Earth after a few years. There were many delightful details I had forgotten. For example, after Bilbo’s party where he disappears and leaves the ring to Frodo, seventeen years pass before Frodo leaves the Shire at Gandalf’s urging, to take the ring away to a safer location. Also, if you have never read the bit about Bilbo leaving pointed gifts to his various neighbors and relations, that section is hilarious (he leaves stationery to someone who never writes back; he leaves an umbrella to someone who always borrows from others, etc.). It is a great little portrait of the joys and trials of ordinary life. 

I listed to the audio version read by Andy Serkis, and his commitment to the story and the characters is impressive and immersive. He sings all the songs and his character voices are distinct. What a joy to hear.

I look forward to continuing the adventure in The Two Towers.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Books Read in January 2025

After a slower year of reading in 2024 (due to taking classes + work stress), I am hoping to read more this year. Here are the four books I read and finished in January:

Spark of the Everflame, by Penn Cole

Published 2024.

This is a fantasy romance book that I’d call it a “popcorn” book: fun to read, interesting magic system, plot-focused, fairly two-dimensional characters, not necessarily a book future generations will read. I enjoyed it, but I do not anticipate revisiting it. An entertaining story, but nothing profound. That is ok—I needed something light hearted while I had a lot of feelings around quitting my job of the past fourteen years. 

Our protagonist, Diem, is a young woman who lives in a world where there are Mortals and Descended, who are magic-wielders. The Descended rule over the mortals, and try to protect their bloodline and therefore their magic and power. Diem has grown up as a scrappy mortal who works both as a healer and also knows fighting tactics because this is a fantasy adventure book. Her mother warned her against the Descended, but after her mother disappears, Diem helps as a palace healer and meets a handsome broody prince (which could be tricky since she has a childhood sweetheart…), and Mortal/Descended fighting shenanigans ensue. 

The magic and world building structure was interesting and kept me reading even when I rolled my eyes a little bit at the love triangle and some of the pretty obvious plot points. 

The Fellowship of the Ring, by J. R. R. Tolkien

Published 1954.

This is also a fantasy book, but is very different in style and tone! I read for my 50 Classics challenge, which I’m basically resurrecting this year, as I didn’t read many classics last year (well, except I read a bunch of Agatha Christie books in the fall–those are definitely classic mysteries, so…partial credit to me). It will get its own post. 

Steal Like an Artist, by Austin Kleon

Published 2012.

This little book is full of encouragement and good advice for being creative. It is specifically geared toward people who are artists and/or identify as “creative,” but really, it’s excellent advice for everyone (the author agrees and says there are many ways of being creative, many of which are not explicitly labeled as such). 

I really appreciated the advice about not necessarily making art a job, especially when starting out. Obviously, I support anyone who wants to be a full-time artist! But for many of us, that is putting too high a burden on our creativity, and having a job to pay the bills and allow creative outlets on the side is a good way to balance our lives (she says while currently on a sabbatical…but my plan is to find a day job eventually once I’ve caught my breath, recovered, and figured out what I want to do next). 

Glow of the Everflame, by Penn Cole

Published 2024.

Book two of the Everflame series (quadrilogy? I’m not convinced that’s a word but it’s a four-book series). 

It’s hard to review a subsequent book without spoilers for the first book, but the journey of our plucky heroine continues. In book one, she was completely on the side of the mortals, but in book two, she meets more of the descended and realizes that they are also people who do not deserve to die. Many of them just don’t know about the misery of the mortals, and they aren’t all evil, just sheltered. 

The love triangle continues to be annoying, mostly because it’s pretty clear that Diem likes one more than the other, and also that guy is committed to protecting her, while the other guy is pretty flaky. But the author committed to the triangle, so the drama continues. 

I want to find out what happens and learn more about the other realms and their magic, so I plan to continue the series, but I’m much less invested in the romantic plot than the world building. 

2024 Reading Year In Review

Welcome to 2025. 2024 was a difficult year for me personally. My work-life was challenging, I was (and still am) studying for the Certified Financial Planner certification, and there were some other difficult things going on that I’m not going to get into here. 

My reading-for-pleasure life was pretty minimal last year as a result. I did read some good books, and in the fall I read a lot of Agatha Christie, which was lovely and about all I could handle between studying, working, and trying to occasionally hang out with people. 

I did read a lot of words last year, but most of them were for class. Outside of class, I read 23 books last year. 

Top 3 books from 2024: 

“The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory,” by Tim Alberta. A fascinating look at where and how white evangelicals got to the place they are politically. Alberta is a Christian and a journalist, so he has an interesting perspective. He is pretty clear that he thinks many Christians have exchanged their values for political power. This is nothing new (“Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their splendor. ‘All this I will give you,’ he said, ‘if you will bow down and worship me.’” -Matthew 4:8-9), it’s just the most recent iteration of this temptation. 

“Ghosted,” by Nancy French. A memoir of someone who has survived a tough life so far, and someone who got on the “wrong side” of right-wing American politics and has seen how vicious it can be. Clearly, this has been a reading theme over the past few years. French is a good writer and great story-teller, and I couldn’t put this down. 

“Middlemarch,” by George Eliot. This book deserves its place in the canon of great works of literature in the English language. It is about life in 19th century England in a small town, full of normal people living their normal lives, but also giving such interior descriptions that you recognize the hopes, fears, actions, inactions of the characters. At its core it looks at three relationships, and peels back layers to see the ways people misunderstand one another and how a good marriage can help you succeed as a human (which may or may not impact you financially, but certainly impacts you morally) and a bad marriage can ruin your life. 

This year, I am still studying, but I’m hoping that I will pass the exam in July and then be free from the burden of study for a while. That should give me some more space to read other things! 

2022 Reading Year In Review

For some unknown reason, I did not click “publish” on this two years ago. Hilarious. Well, here are some great books I read a couple years ago (spoiler from the future: 2023-2024 were also not great reading years, alas).

2022 was a difficult year in many ways, though there were some great bright spots as well (my youngest brother got married!). I slacked off on documenting my reading journey here so hopefully 2023 will be less intense and I will be a little more consistent.

I still read a lot of good books in 2022, and re-read some comfort books. My total count was forty-eight (48) books read, though only two were for my 50 Classics in 5 Years project. Obviously I’m planning to increase that classics-read number this year, and I’m extending my deadline for the project.

I would also like to read more nonfiction this year. I sometimes have a difficult time with nonfiction if the idea was better than the execution, or if the subject matter does not require as many pages as the book possesses. I am open to suggestions for great nonfiction!

Overall, I am pleased with my 2022 reading life. Keeping track of what I am reading has really helped me read more and it has been a good reference for what I read in what year (it’s amazing how quickly I forget what year I read something unless I have a list telling me). I entered most of the books I read in 2022 on Goodreads (though I appear to be missing a few books and decided I’m too lazy to go back and figure it out–I’m going to start fresh in 2023!), and I’m going to try to use it more consistently this year. We will see if that sticks.

Top 10 Books of 2022

Everyone likes a top-ten list, so here is mine for the year:

  1. David Copperfield, by Charles Dickens
  2. The Goblin Emperor, by Katherine Addison
  3. Persuasion, by Jane Austen
  4. Elder Race, by Adrian Tchaikovsky
  5. Death on the Nile, by Agatha Christie
  6. The Golden Enclaves, by Naomi Novik
  7. The Binti novella trilogy, by Nnedi Okorafor
  8. The Relentless Moon, by Mary Robinette Kowal
  9. The Thief, by Megan Whalen Turner
  10. The Murderbot Diaries series, by Martha Wells
  11. Honorable mention: A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking, by T. Kingfisher

If you just wanted the Top Ten list, there you have it, Happy New Year and happy reading. I hope 2023 is a good year of reading excellent and thought-provoking books!