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The Fellowship of the ring. What I found was that reading these stories that I think I know so well to my children (8 and 9) is that you get a new appreciation and understanding by reading them to someone else, particularly a child. I find my self recapping and explaining the story multiple times and become far more aware of the details than I would re-reading it myself.



I noticed the same thing. We are at the end of Two towers and thanks to forcing those books onto my children (lets face it - they are quite slow and "boring" in comparison to normal children books) I have found new appreciation for stories contained in them.

But be advised that there are downsides to this - this time around I won't be able to stop myself from buying Frodos/Bilbos "Sting" when attending Fantasy Covent here in Warsaw (and its comming this weekend)


I think they are willing to put up with / indulge me reading something I enjoy to have a bit of close time together. The like the challenge of it being a massive book, but I remember finding the two towers pretty boring as a kid myself. I may stop for a bit after fellowship as I always thought that was the most readable of the books myself. I suppose that makes me not a true fan. I found the Silmarillion completely unreadable, but I do like middle earth.


username checks out.

it's my first time reading it, and i'd recommend it to anyone who has an interest in LotR and has only seen the movies; it adds so much context and nuance.


>> username checks out

Only tentatively :)

Thorin is from Hobbit and was long gone when plot of LOTR started.




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