Amazon Germany has come down to €25.90 for those who like to get a decent preorder price locked in.
Amazon US KINDLE only
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0C7 ... onId=1MGPYB6YW3HWK55XCGG2
(with a note by the side of the 'listing': The Kindle title is not currently available for purchase )
I'm so looking forward to this.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0C7 ... onId=1MGPYB6YW3HWK55XCGG2
(with a note by the side of the 'listing': The Kindle title is not currently available for purchase )
I'm so looking forward to this.
Trying to work out if prefer the Colour version of the cover more than the new Black & White one. The colour picture is used on Tolkien's Lost Chaucer by John Bowers.
Trotter wrote:
Trying to work out if prefer the Colour version of the cover more than the new Black & White one. The colour picture is used on Tolkien's Lost Chaucer by John Bowers.
Hard to go wrong with either...but I think I prefer the Black and White one.
I am glad they didn't use the exact same photograph as I found Tolkien to look slightly put out on the TLC whereas on the new letters he looks slightly more relaxed. One can see that he is slightly open mouthed on the TLC cover.
I really like the cover for the new letters volume.
I really like the cover for the new letters volume.
According to edelweiss, it "includes 150 new letters and more than 50,000 words of additional text".
For comparison, the original Letters has 200k words. The excised part of Letter 131 has 4400 words.
For comparison, the original Letters has 200k words. The excised part of Letter 131 has 4400 words.
HarperCollins is publishing a revised and expanded edition of The Letters of J R R Tolkien, edited by Humphrey Carpenter with the assistance of Christopher Tolkien, containing an additional 150 letters.
HarperCollins holds world rights in all languages for Tolkien’s works. The new edition will publish in November 2023.
Carpenter’s widow, Mari Prichard, said: “Humphrey Carpenter’s connection with Tolkien began at an early age. He was born into academic Oxford where Tolkien was known for his scholarship, and for The Hobbit, long before the fame of The Lord of the Rings. As a boy, he devoured the book, writing his own list of key characters on the front cover, together with small drawings of them.
“Humphrey read English at Oxford, with Tolkien’s son Christopher as one of his lecturers in Old and Middle English. Together with a friend, composer Paul Drayton, then teaching at New College’s choir school, he came up with the idea of The Hobbit as a musical, to be performed by the pupils. This was the first ever adaptation, and it would need the author’s permission. So a meeting was arranged and they spent a long afternoon in Tolkien’s home-office, hearing about revisions to The Lord of the Rings, elvish philology and much else, until Tolkien, wreathed in pipe smoke, heard what they proposed and answered that a school production would be perfectly all right.
“In December 1967 Tolkien came with Edith, his wife, to see a performance. He was reported to have looked happy when Humphrey’s script exactly followed his words, a bit bemused when it didn’t! Humphrey returned to Oxford as a producer/presenter for the new BBC local radio station. His breakfast show included biographies of Oxford characters, and Tolkien naturally became a subject. This led to him writing the first, and still only, fully authorised biography and then working closely with Christopher Tolkien to edit the letters.
“I am so pleased that, with this new edition of The Letters of J R R Tolkien, Humphrey and Christopher’s painstaking work can finally be appreciated as it was originally intended.”
Chris Smith, publishing director, added: “Since it was first published in 1981, Letters has become the closest thing we can ever have to J R R Tolkien’s autobiography. Within its selection of just over 350 letters, edited by Tolkien’s official biographer, Humphrey Carpenter, and his son and literary executor, Christopher, Tolkien is revealed in all his colours: storyteller, academic, friend, husband, father and grandfather. They are intimate, heartfelt, wise, funny, fascinating; they brilliantly showcase the lost art of letter-writing and are a time-machine transporting us into the life of one of the 20th century’s literary greats.
“But this was not the book envisaged by Humphrey and Christopher. At the publisher’s request, they were required to reduce the original selection to what was then deemed a publishable extent. By going back to the editors’ original typescripts and notes, it has finally been possible for us to reinstate the 150 letters they excised purely for length – an additional 50,000 words – and publish the book as originally intended.”
https://www.thebookseller.com/rights/h ... rs-as-originally-intended
US Release Hardback November 14,2023
https://gizmodo.com/letters-of-jrr-tol ... hobbit-updated-1850514583
The original Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, published in 1981, included extracts from over 350 letters from the Lord of the Rings author to various people in his life and literary sphere. It was heavily edited for clarity, as Tolkien was a prolific correspondent and the editors knew that focusing the book would help it be used as a canon expansion in fan and academic circles.
Now, HarperCollins has announced a revised and expanded edition of The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien. Humphrey Carpenter (the editor involved in the original publication in the ‘80s) is credited posthumously as the editor, alongside the assistance of J.R.R. Tolkien’s son, Christopher Tolkien, who passed away in 2020.
Carpenter wrote the first and only fully authorized biography of Tolkien, and later worked “closely with Christopher Tolkien to edit the letters,” according to a HarperCollins press release. Christopher Tolkien was heavily involved in all literary endeavors concerning his father’s work, as he was the literary executor of the Tolkien estate.
HarperCollins’ senior vice president, Jennifer Hart, says that this manuscript more accurately reflects the original intention of Carpenter and Christopher Tolkien. Describing the 1981 book, she says that “at the publisher’s request, [Carpenter and Tolkien] were required to reduce the original selection to what was then deemed a publishable extent. By going back to the editors’ original typescripts and notes, it has finally been possible for us to reinstate the 150 letters they excised purely for length—an additional 50,000 words—and publish the book as originally intended.”
The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien will be published on November 14, 2023
https://gizmodo.com/letters-of-jrr-tol ... hobbit-updated-1850514583
I'm very excited by this. I love Tolkien's letters on so many counts but, primarily, because it's a chance to spend some time in the company of Tolkien the man. Through his letters he comes across as erudite, charming, humane, courteous, traditionally English and occasionally cantankerous, in the best sense of the word.
Every reader of the letters has their favourites. I love the letter to the real life Sam Gamgee. Tolkien promised him a set of the first editions, personally signed to Mr Gamgee. I don't know if this set has ever been uncovered. I should imagine it would be extremely valuable. I also like the alternative letters drafted by Tolkien to put his pro-Nazi German publishers in their place.
I do wonder how they are going to deal with the numbering of the letters in this edition? Since so many scholars and fans refer to the letters by number I can't imagine that Harper Collins would want to tamper with that. I assume the new letters are going in chronologically rather than in a lump at the end - so how will they number them without interfering with the established number ordering?
Every reader of the letters has their favourites. I love the letter to the real life Sam Gamgee. Tolkien promised him a set of the first editions, personally signed to Mr Gamgee. I don't know if this set has ever been uncovered. I should imagine it would be extremely valuable. I also like the alternative letters drafted by Tolkien to put his pro-Nazi German publishers in their place.
I do wonder how they are going to deal with the numbering of the letters in this edition? Since so many scholars and fans refer to the letters by number I can't imagine that Harper Collins would want to tamper with that. I assume the new letters are going in chronologically rather than in a lump at the end - so how will they number them without interfering with the established number ordering?