28 Dec, 2014
(edited)Edited by Trotter on 2014-12-28 4:08:30 PM UTC
Edited by Trotter on 2014-12-28 4:09:31 PM UTC
Edited by Trotter on 2014-12-28 4:50:02 PM UTC
2014-12-28 3:54:04 PM UTC
28 Dec, 2014
2014-12-28 4:34:46 PM UTC
THE HOBBIT,
Grafton, 1991, Pb, 6th imp.
http://tolkienbooks.net/php/details.php?reference=24200THE LORD OF THE RINGS,
HarperCollins, 1993, Pb, 1st imp.
http://tolkienbooks.net/php/details.php?reference=46280 THE SILMARILLION,
HarperCollins, 1994, Pb 1st imp.
http://tolkienbooks.net/php/details.php?reference=62280I still have all of these & use them as reading copies. I read LotRs, for the first time in many years, in early-to-mid 2013 (I think); and
The Silmarillion in June this year. I may have read
The Hobbit around this time, too; but can't recall exactly. LotRs is nearly falling apart; the other two are okay. I also have an additional duplicate collectable copy (no spine fade) of
The Silmarillion; also a 1st imp. I'd read
The Hobbit previous to my acquisition of the above 1991/92
Grafton copy (I first read it in primary school, several years earlier); but the other two editions are contemporary with my first reading of them.
BH
31 Dec, 2014
2014-12-31 5:55:25 PM UTC
5 Jan, 2015
2015-1-5 7:40:42 PM UTC
Owned myself, was a set of the fiftieth anniversary Lord of the Rings/Hobbit paperbacks in the US (and I still cringe at the artwork...) I only post a sample of one of the book covers below to spare the faint of heart.
I was offered the original Michael Herring artwork once at reasonable prices, but didn't have to think too hard before declining.
My parents had first US edition hardcovers that I read and re-read many times growing up, those are still in the family collection but unfortunately I was not kind to the dustjackets. Not first impressions thankfully.
I have no idea which version of The Silmarillion was my first, but it was a US paperback from the 80s. I doubt I still have that particular copy (as I run across so many, I have taken to only keeping the best condition copies of each edition).
Growing up in the US has made my early collecting stories rather boring and uneventful, I am afraid. Only when I had the budget to shop online did anything truly noteworthy join the collection.
5 Jan, 2015
2015-1-5 7:54:50 PM UTC
If we ever do a thread on what are the worst covers of the Lord of the Rings?
Then the Michael Herring editions must rank quite highly.
As a collector, who has a strict rule of only collecting UK editions of Tolkien's books, I now have quite a few US editions :)
I can't bring myself to buy this set though.
5 Jan, 2015
2015-1-5 9:03:48 PM UTC
Trotter wrote:
As a collector, who has a strict rule of only collecting UK editions of Tolkien's books, I now have quite a few US editions :)
Does this mean, that now you have essentially collected everything, you still have the collecting bug? :)
6 Jan, 2015
2015-1-6 10:15:26 PM UTC
These ones, plus the smaller-format BCA Hardback Sil. (that looks like the GA&U one, but with red boards and smaller).
These remain my favourite paperbacks, and I don't think they have been bested or are likely to be, as artwork tastes have changed, I think.
6 Jan, 2015
2015-1-6 10:51:20 PM UTC
For The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings: the Ballantine paperbacks with Barbara Remington covers. This was in 1970.
For The Silmarillion, the Houghton Mifflin first edition, bought on publication in 1977.
Wayne