The Mythmakers, by John Hendrix, is a new book in the graphic novel format telling the tale of the remarkable fellowship of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.
Story
The content and storyline is amazing. The narrators, Mr. Goodwizard and Mr. Lion, walk the reader through the meaning and development through the meaning and development of the words myth, fairy tale, and fantasy. The narrators also show the lives of Lewis and Tolkien and how they created their respected stories. It captures their friendship perfectly, showing the sympathy and fellowship they had with each other.
Art
The artwork and illustrations were high-quality. The cover looks stunning with the first-edition Hobbit background style and the four main characters of the book (Goodwizard, Lion, Tolkien, and Lewis). Throughout the book, the color theme is purple, yellow, and a dull blue, which look great when all together. Every character looks different, and it is really easy to tell them apart. Overall, I really enjoyed the art.
Favorite Part
I had many favorite scenes from the book. One is C.S. Lewis’ conversion on the Addison Walk on pages 90-95. Some others are the Inkling Meeting on 104-107 and the coin flip (Tolkien and Lewis’ wager on who would write space travel or time travel stories) on pages 109-111. SPOILER ALERT: The book’s ending shows the true friendship between Lewis and Tolkien, and how the rift between them was healed in the end. The last chapter in the book is called “The Shadowlands and the Gray Havens,” a title I really appreciated.
Least Favorite Part
I had high hopes for this book when I first learned of it, and TheMythmakers met those high hopes. The author, however, said in his note that there were more stories that he left out but wished he could have included. So, my least favorite part was that he didn’t do as many stories as he could have. An extended edition would be amazing, and I know many people would read it.
Conclusion
I give The Mythmakers a five out of five with its enthralling world, enchanting artwork, and entertaining story.
The Rings of Power Season 2 plot was, for the most part, enjoyable and well-crafted. There were many good things about it, however, one of the lows was the Stranger/Harfoot/Rhun storyline. It was very disconnected to the rest of the world, and almost nothing significant happens compared to the other storylines. The first scene of the Stranger in the final episode was cut very strangely with no continuity from where we had last seen the Stranger with Tom Bombadil. I spent the entire scene thinking it was one of his visions or dreams, and I could not tell what was going on. Later in the episode, I realized the events of the scene had actually happened. I am not a fan of the Stranger turning out to be Gandalf. I was hoping for Blue not Grey. It is not how Gandalf was supposed to come to Middle Earth, and it is one age too early.
The Annatar/Celebrimbor part was by far the best thread. I liked how Annatar/Sauron played on Celebrimbor’s vices of pride and lust to create the best and most marvelous things of the age. Every time Celebrimbor started to catch on, Annatar manipulated him some more, making it Celebrimbor’s fault that the rings were flawed and turning the smiths and garrison of Eregion against him. It was enthralling to watch as Celebrimbor broke Sauron’s hold on his mind to get away and to prove whose will was mightier. In the end, he stood up against Sauron and died knowing that Sauron would one day be defeated.
The Southlands storyline served only to get Arondir to the siege of Eregion and make Theo in charge, and to introduce Isildur to his girlfriend who can’t go to Numenor with him (Boohoo!) At the ending of the Southlands story, it was fun to see Kemen demoted to the lowly task of dealing with the Southlanders after he messed everything up back home on Numenor with the Faithful and the Kingsmen.
The Khazad-Dum plot was good but could have been better. Durin IV was amazing. But Durin III’s ring obsession was too similar to the Bilbo scenes from the Peter Jackson LOTR trilogy. In the original story, the dwarven rings did not corrupt; they just enhanced wealth. But in Rings of Powers, they made the dwarven rings corrupt the king and drive him beyond sanity. During III’s last moments were moving as puts down the ring, tells his son he is strong, and jumps to strike the balrog. The balrog ends up killing the old king and collapses the passage. Although in the real lore, the balrog was not meant to be disturbed until much later, it was still an outstanding scene. The dwarf Narvi was nice to see, but it would have been nice to see more of him and Celebrimbor working together on the Doors of Durin and maybe even on the dwarven rings.
The Lindon, Elrond, and Galadriel plot was a fine plot–not the worst but not the best. Cirdan was a great canon character to see, and I really missed him in the second half of the season. I liked how Elrond was against using the rings, and it was fun to see him lead the charge of the Lindon army. Galadriel still needs improvement as a character, but she did get a lot, lot better. I enjoyed how when she sees the Eregion guards she puts them in their place by reminding them of Celebrimbor’s authority as the true lord of Eregion.
The Numenor plot was amazing, one of the best, how Ar-Pharazon steals Miriel’s eagle and throne and how the political infighting becomes serious. One nice part was when Elendil turned in his sword as he was stripped of his position, and Valandil said, “Captain leaving deck.” All the Faithful sailors turned and saluted in a dramatic gesture which made Kemen upset. Another great part was when Kemen killed Valandil and blamed Elendil for starting the fight. Elendil’s unwavering moral compass was nice and accurate of his character. He said lines like: “Faith is not faith unless it is lived,” making the Numenor plot great to watch.
Favorite Characters and Events
My first and most favorite character from Season 2 is Elendil. We got to see who he really was at his core this season, how when everyone else says Yes, he says No. He knows what is right and what is wrong. He lets nothing get in the way of his faith, even his family. The actor Lloyd Owens captured Elendil perfectly.
My second favorite character is Annatar, Lord of Gifts (Sauron). It was nice to finally get this plot back to canon, the way it should have been in Season 1. I like how he says that he will choose good, but every time a choice comes, he chooses evil. His romance with Mirdania is just a tool. When the time comes, he throws her off the wall, making it look like Celebrimbor did it. He manipulates nearly everyone in the show.
Some other great characters are Elrond, Arondir with his cool elf stunts, Cirdan, and Celebrimbor. These actors had amazing acting talents.
One of my favorite scenes is the Elendil trial where he says, “Yes, I will renounce my crimes. No, I will not pledge loyalty to Ar-Pharazon the traitor.” The tension and the Numenorean music playing in the background turns it into one of the best scenes.
Another great scene is when Narvi says to Durin IV, “There’s an elf that needs to talk to you,” and Durin says, “Let him in!” Narvi says, “We need to do it quietly, for this elf has been banished from all dwarven realms.” The Watcher and Durin both realize that it is Elrond at the same time, and we feel their deep connection.
A fun scene is where Arondir and Isildur kill the Nameless Thing and Arondir says: “There are many nameless things in the deeps of this world. This one we shall call…supper.” It was fun to see the grim and serious Arondir make a joke.
Least Favorite Characters and Events
My least favorite character is the Stranger because his story is boring and takes away from the Numenor and Eregion story, Oh yeah, and also because he is Gandalf.
I still dislike Nori (the Harfoot) a lot.
Tom Bombadil was cool to see. The actor looks like how I imagined him. But his outfit was poorly done. His bright blue jacket was more a pale, faded, ragged outer robe than “bright blue his jacket is.” His boots were yellowish leather, not really “big yellow boots.” His hat was not the pilgrim-style hat I imagined it to be. Also, his singing skills need to improve. It shouldn’t be non-emotional mumbles. It should be loud and jolly.
One thing I noticed in both seasons is that Galadriel really likes to take advantage of her “plot armor.” In Season 1, she walks into a volcano with no ill effects. In Season 2, she jumps off a cliff.
I enjoyed seeing Gil-galad fighting in the siege of Eregion and can’t wait to see him and Elendil team up against Sauron in the Battle of the Last Alliance.
I am scared where the Stranger…I mean, “Gandalf” storyline is going.
I hope Galadriel is done with being a rage monster for good.
Source Material
It was great to see key canon book moments like the forging of the rings of power, the siege of Eregion, the reign of Ar-Pharazon, and the finding of Rivendell.
I did not like the many out of place story bits like “Gandalf,” the balrog (although it was really cool), Tom Bombadil, barrow wights, and more.
There are several original aspects of the show such as Arondir’s thread, Isildur being stuck in Middle-earth, the majority of the dwarven plot, but they worked better with the world than the out-of-place, unchronological pieces of lore that were shoved into the second age.
Overall Assessment
Season 2 of Rings of Power was enormously better than its predecessor, Season 1. It had better canon moments and better storylines altogether. It wasn’t relying on one good storyline to hold up the rest of the show’s flaws, but had many strong threads that were enjoyable to watch.
I give it six out of seven dwarven rings, 7.5 out of 9 rings for men, and most of the hair on a hobbit’s toes.
There are several major Tolkien adaptations are coming up this year. You may know of some, but you may not be aware of others. So I am going to quickly cover what are the adaptations and when they are coming out.
Rings of Power
The Amazon television series season 2 will be premiering on August 29, 2024. They have sent out a full trailer in eager anticipation of the release date. From the trailer images, I think that season 2 will be so much better and lore-following than season 1. Also, allegedly, three episodes will be released on the 29th and the five next episodes will come out on a weekly basis.
War of the Rohirrim
The new Warner Bros. animated movie War of the Rohirrim is set to come up in December 13, 2024. the Executive Producer is Phillipa Boynes who is the one of the original producers of the Lord of the Rings movie. There is no trailer as of this date, but a few images have been released.
Tales of the Shire
The Tales of the Shire is a video game. It is made by Weta Workshops game department. Weta Workshop is back! They worked a ton on the Lord of the Rings movie prop making and much more. the game is said to be a “Cozy” game. The Tales of the Shire is supposed to come out in the latter half of 2024.
Gollum movie
Warner Bros. proclaimed that they will be making three new middle-earth films (not counting War of the Rohirrim) the first one of the Films is a Gollum movie covering Gandalf and Aragorn’s hunt for Gollum. Also, Peter Jackson is returning to lead yet another Middle-Earth film, but even better Andy Serkis is back to play Gollum and direct the movie. The first release’s date is some time in 2026 The other two movies have yet to be announced.
Amazon Lord of the Rings MMO
For those who are unaware of what an MMO is, it is a Massively Multiplayer game. Amazon is a making a LOTR game. My hopes are not high, but I will not condemn it before it comes out…I will wait and see. Its release date is in 2029, but it is so far out that the date could easily change.
Conclusion
I will eagerly await theses new adaptations like you all. My hopes are for the best adaptions of Tolkien’s world.
In The Hobbit food is abundant, from hobbit larders to troll caves. The hobbit society is based around food and drink as much as fellowship, and trolls bond over food as well. Other havens within The Hobbit, such as Beorn’s home, are also. marked by abundant food. Every culture in Middle Earth depends on food, but none more than the hobbits.
The hobbits cherish food like no other race, as demonstrated by Bilbo. Food is more than a life need. It is the fuel of their very society. It brings them together at the table, multiple times a day as they engage in the mannerly ritual of eating.
Trolls, on the other hand, are far less polite with their eating habits. Trolls generally eater whatever they can get. In The Hobbit, the three trolls that we encounter are having a supper of mutton (sheep meat). But trolls find man flesh the most delicious. In the story, they took a very long time to decide how to cook their food once they had caught it. The appetite of a troll is humongous.
Another humongous eater of Middle-earth was Beorn. Beorn is regarded as a good cook and host. Beorn collects most of his food, like milk and honey, from his animals. Beorn’s honey cakes are famous in Wilderland and loved by many. But Beorn seldom gives them to travelers.
Food throughout Middle-earth is cherished and loved, and hobbits, trolls, and Beorn all used food in their own way. The hobbits enjoyed cozy meals with tea and sharing conversation, the trolls scavenged for whatever they could find, and Beorn’s relationship with his animals provided bountiful food whenever it was needed. In every world, food should bring fellowship and friendship.