First edition. Fourteen essays dedicated to the memory of Tolkien. Review copy with slip. Jacket shows minor rubbing. 325 pages. cloth, dust jacket.. 8vo..
A good collection of essays in memory of Tolkien and on a wide range of subjects. The collection is divided into three sections, one on Tolkien, the second collects essays on medieval subjects and the third is on Tolkien's fantasy works. The chapters that stood out for me were the ones by Stanley, Bliss, Robinson and Frankis.
Contents
Preface
Part One
Professor J. R. R. Tolkien: Obituary from The Times, London, 3 September 1973
Valedictory Address to the University of Oxford, 5 June 1959 by J. R. R. Tolkien
1. The Man and the Scholar by S. T. R. O. d'Ardenne
Part Two
2. Beowulf Lines 3074–3075 by A. J. Bliss
3. Layamon's English Sources by P. J. Frankis
4. God, Death, and Loyalty in The Battle of Maldon by Fred C. Robinson
5. Geoweorpa: "Once Held in High Esteem" by E. G. Stanley
6. Narrative Insight in Laxdœla Saga by Ursula Dronke
7. Nosce te ipsum: Some Medieval Interpretations by J. A. W. Bennett
8. Chaucer's Man of Law and His Tale: The Eccentric Design by Robert T. Farrell
9. Chaucer and "Pite" by Douglas Gray
10. Make Believe: Chaucer's Rationale of Storytelling in The House of Fame by Geoffrey T. Shepherd
11. Moral Chaucer and Kindly Gower by Rosemary Woolf
Part Three
12. The Lord of the Rings as Romance by Derek S. Brewer
13. The Gospel of Middle-Earth according to J. R. R. Tolkien by William Dowie
14. Creation from Philology in The Lord of the Rings by T. A. Shippey
Handlist of the Published Writings of J. R. R. Tolkien by Humphrey Carpenter
I read three essays in the volume: Simone d'Ardenne's "The Man and the Scholar"; Ursula Dronke's "Narrative Insight in Laxdæla Saga"; and Derek Brewer's "The Lord of the Rings as Romance".
d'Ardenne's contribution was brief, but warm and personal, and Dronke's was a nice discussion of saga I studied (in translation) in a class on Norse Myths and Sagas. I liked both a lot.
Brewer's started out promising, but then degenerated into pablum as far as I'm concerned.
I started looking at the following essay, William Dowie's "The Gospel of Middle-Earth according to J. R. R. Tolkien," but it seemed to live up (or down?) to its name, so I left off.
(The Shippey essay is probably good, but based on the subject matter I'd imagine it's essentially an early rough draft of a portion of The Road to Middle-earth, which I just read.)