Almost there: the eleventh book in the History of Middle-earth series--The War of the Jewels (WJ)--is read.
Before talking about this specific volume, the unfamiliar may appreciate a brief rundown on what the HoMe series consists of. (Those already familiar can skip down to the 'OVERVIEW COMPLETE' line.)
The premise of this series is essentially J.R.R. Tolkien’s son, Christopher, publishing the notes of his father in such a way as to show readers the progression and development of the mythology and tales of his legendarium. He started drafting what would later be known as The Silmarillion far back in the days before he even knew what a hobbit was, and worked on this larger, grander work off and on literally into the last month of his life. As a result, he left behind REAMS of notes and jottings and scribbles and letters and everything in between, spanning decades of thoughts and reconsiderations and re-reconsiderations concerning both the older myths as well as the most prominent and complete work of The Lord of the Rings. As a labor of love, Christopher Tolkien endeavored to sift through, sort, and organize (to the best of his ability) all of this information and attempt to publish it as a kind of literary history of it all (hence the title of the series).
So, the HoMe series is BASICALLY a collection of drafts of stories that we have published more fully and completely elsewhere–namely, The Silmarillion and The Lord of the Rings. I repeat this to emphasize the fact that its target audience is not only incredibly small, but also incredibly singular in their interests. THIS STUFF IS NOT FOR PEOPLE WHO JUST CASUALLY LIKE THE LORD OF THE RINGS (movies or book). Now, that isn’t to ‘gatekeep’ or anything–it’s just an attempt at honesty. Even as someone who LOVES Tolkien’s work and reads The Silmarillion for fun annually, some of the HoMe is quite dry and even boring–admittedly, I skipped a few sections here and there! That’s just how detailed and meticulous the Tolkien offspring was in compiling his father’s notes: it’s even too much for some hardcore fans!
However, HoMe does have an audience and I find myself numbered among them. Over the course of the last several years I have picked my way through this series very slowly, relative to my undying love for Tolkien’s work and the veracity with which I have devoured his more completed stuff. Nonetheless, I’ve set my face towards finishing the series and the end of the tunnel is in sight! (The inevitable, and likely much quicker, re-read is also in sight!)
-----OVERVIEW COMPLETE-------
The eleventh volume, WJ, continues the exploration of Tolkien’s re-visiting of his older Silmarillion work in the mid- and late-fifties after the publication of LotR, and stretching into the sixties as well. With that work completed and out in the wild, Tolkien needed to go back and revise the older tales in order to make them cohere with some of the new developments of the mythology discovered during the production of LotR. It wasn’t going to be a small task, but he desperately wanted the broader mythology published if at all possible. Sadly, he would pass away before he was able to complete this monumental objective, but the notes and essays he left behind that his son collected are absolutely fascinating.
A sizable chunk of WJ deals with exactly this: simply (‘simply’) a documentation of Tolkien’s re-workings of the middle and later tales in the Silmarillion accounts. Like most of the other volumes of HoMe, this section contains a lot of overlapping drafts that kind of spiral up towards what would have been a coherent final product had the author had more time to develop it. This section contains some interesting parts, but is very much like the majority of HoMe in that it’s a lot of repeated material and can at times drag because of this.
The remainder of the volume, a little over half of the book, contains a few sections of drafting and notations on the further development of the Silmarillion material, as well as several essays (in various stages of completion) dealing with an assortment of philosophical and linguistic subjects. One section, called 'The Wanderings of Húrin', zooms in on a part of The Silmarillion that is rather short and scant in detail and expands on it tremendously, revealing so many intricate details of the culture and society of Men at this time in the Histories, well beyond anything else we see in other extant writings. It's actually incredible and I didn't expect to enjoy it as much as I ended up doing.
After this large section, a few smaller chapters give some details about a smattering of minor details of things like Maeglin and the Ents and Eagles. This is followed by the final section titled 'Quendi and Eldar'--another large essay, this time dealing almost exclusively with Elvish language, specifically with the origins and meaning of particular words and elements. In all honesty, while there are some true gems of genius found in these kinds of Tolkien's work, I find myself mainly skimming these parts, stopping only at new section heading or when the format seems to indicate some kind of narrative is being laid out. Otherwise, sections like this (not uncommon over the course of HoMe) are very akin to 'real' language textbooks and reference works--dictionaries and stuff. It's fascinating on the level of 'Wow. This guy made all this up.', but most of the actual reading is pretty dry. That's totally fine with me. Actually, the coolest aspect of this kind of thing is, really, this is what Tolkien's work was all about for him. He wasn't interested in merely making a story for money or to get famous. He loved language; he loved inventing his only languages; he wanted to create a world to give his languages 'authentic' history, so as to make them more realistic and coherent AS languages. That's really the genesis of all his work. And this is showcased in a huge way in sections like the final one in WJ. While I don't (currently) feel like reading every detail about every word and element he was defining and crafting an origin for, I love the idea that I now have access to a huge swath of his original ideas about these things. It exists, and I have access to it. It's very cool, in that sense. (Also, this section ends with a short draft of the story of the first Awakening of the Elves, and it's really interesting.)
In the final analysis, the more I read of the HoMe series, the more I fall in love with it. The early volumes, when I was less familiar with the subject matter and the style of Christopher Tolkien’s documentary approach to it, were more of a slog to get through at times. Of course, there are slower and less interesting parts of the latter volumes, but there are also so many more unique gems of Tolkienian information to be mined from their pages. I won’t go so far as to say these are perfect books, or that every Tolkien fan ‘needs’ to read them, but they are so extraordinary, and I doubt there are many (if any) literary projects quite like them. I’m very much looking forward to the remainder of the series and recommend any hardcore Tolkien fan with a good deal of patience to take a look at these volumes if they have a chance.