JohnDillworth
Posts: 3100
Joined: 3/19/2009 Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: BBfanboy quote:
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel I re-read my favorite books regularly. Every few years or thereabouts. Either I don't have a great memory or I'm not paying careful attention while reading. I didn't read Tolkien until after I saw the first Lord movie, solo, in a nearly empty theater, after it had been out awhile. The movie was so magnificient (IMO) that it prompted me to read all the books. I'm not a fan of "fantasy," but I love those books and the movies. Well done. Tolkien started writing the book in 1937 as a commentary on the nature of war, after his experience in WWI. He did not complete the book until after WWII and he brought in some notions about what drives nations to that kind of evil. Some claim that the "One Ring" represented Nazi philosophies as a whole and that the rings of power represented the individual elements (racism, suppression of truth, scapegoats, prosperity at the expense of moral turpitude) that drove a people to support their evil, mad ruler. The quest for complete power over the world is the "One Ring". It took destruction of the Nazi regime and all its elements of power over the people to destroy the danger of one cruel leader running the world. But the notion is still out there, in several places around the world. I'm sure the shadow of WWII was impossible to ignore in the writing of the books. One of the most poignant, lasting feelings is right at the end when the protagonist does not live happily ever after. The quest and the war had taken too much. He lived thought it, but would not live a long nor happy life. Michael Ondaatje covers the same ground in the English Patient and even more so in his new, and excellent, Warlight. The shadows of great events carry down though generations whether one likes it or not. Good book Warlight. Another book the comes to mind is the powerful classic The Plague, by Albert Camus. Yes....on the surface it is an outstanding book about a plague and how people and society treat each other.....but it is, I beleive, a metaphor for the Nazi occupation. I could go on, The Magic Mountain, The Magus...but I am depressing myself. On with he war
< Message edited by JohnDillworth -- 10/19/2018 10:18:59 PM >
_____________________________
Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly
|