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The Hobbit (Leatherette Collector's Edition)

The Hobbit (Leatherette Collector's Edition)

List Price: $35.00
Your Price: $22.05
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: My first try at fantasy with "The Hobbit"
Review: I recently read the "Hobbit" so that I could then move onto "The Lord of the Rings" and then go see "The Lord of the Rings" movies.

I have never read Fantasy books before so this was my first one, and I have to say that Fantasy takes some getting used to.

While I enjoyed "The Hobbit", I did find some parts of it slow and uninteresting. I decided that Fantasy is probably not my favorite genre, however, the the book was still good and I would recommend it.

"The Hobbit" tells the story of Bilbo Baggins, a hobbit, along with Gandalf the wizard and a band of dwarves taking a journey to try and reclaim treasure taken from the dwarves ancestors by an evil dragon.

For someone used to reading books grounded closer to reality, the plot of this book may sound kind of funny. But after you read about the experiances of this group of adventurers, you will have to agree it is quite a fun story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Phenomenal Illustrations in a Beautiful Book
Review: There is no question that J.R.R. Tolkien's story of The Hobbit is outstanding literature, so I will keep this review strictly to specifically the Alan Lee illustrated hard cover edition. Many people feel that the only high quality hard covers are leather bound. This book should quickly prove this to be false. Upon removing the dust cover you will find green cloth covering with a beautiful gold dragon in the lower right corner (non other than Smaug himself). The pages are crisp and bright white, not a hint of yellow. The illustrations, scattered generously throughout, are both in color and in black and white and intermingle beautifully with the story. Alan Lee has truely captured Tolkien's characters better than any of the other artists who have tried. The detail in each illustration was enough to hold my attention for quite some time and definately added to my enjoyment of this timeless classic. Whoever feels pictures are for children needs to purchase this book and find the child in himself again.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: He puts David the Gnome to Shame
Review: This is the first fantasy book that I ever read. Some will call The Hobbit a children's book, and I suppose that it could be. But, at age 23, I really enjoyed it. Each chapter has it's own plot, complete with problem and resolution, and a hook at the end to keep you turning the pages. Although Tolkien has his long-winded moments in this book, as LOR readers should be familiar with, the plot is great. I have read The Fellowship of the Ring, and I (GASP!) think that this book is better, from the standpoint of not being bored with any of it. Of course, once you read it, you'll want to find out what happens next, and the LOR series will soon follow.
I highly recommend this book. It's entertaining from start to finish, and it's a great book for people young and old.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: child's introduction to the Ring's world
Review: The style of The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings are quite different, though they share the same author and universe. The Hobbit is more childlike with sillier characters. The world is not so large and dark as in the Rings. There is much less background texture in languages, history and poetry.
I've read the Hobbit twice over the decades, but the Lord of the Rings about eight times. You pretty much see everything in one reading, while there is new detail each time in the Lord of the Rings.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Hobbit (Collector's Edition)
Review: This review is more about the Collector's Edition packaging rather than the work itself, which has been reviewed a great number of times already and, for the most part, hailed to be a fine work to read for anyone who likes adventures, dragons, wizards and other strange and wonderous things.

The Collector's Edition is boxed in green leather-like material, with a title nicely displayed on the front, while gold and red runes and English text stamp out the title on the boxes' spine.

The book itself is also bound in the same green leather-ette, and the gold and red stamp are present here as well. Please note that the material is not leather, rather a good imitation of it.

The paper is thick, with the text being printed in black with green accents. The text itself is large, easy to read and goes on for 320 pages. I did not notice any imperfection, missing paragraphs or pages or chapters.

There are five full color illustrations by J.R.R. himself and a good number of two colored drawings. You will also find Thror's Map as drawn by the author.

Overall, this packaging is sturdy and sure to last for generations and many re-readings. Despite the rather high cost, it is a worthy investment and it looks well and impressive on your bookshelf.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful Book
Review: This book, The Hobbit was very much enjoyed by me and my companions on our journey across the mountains. Every night we would bond together when reading this amazing book. Thank you lord for having it written.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best Fantasy Prelude I've Ever Read
Review: I have read this book and I loved it. It is good almost from the start. I prefer it over the Narnia series prelude 'The Magicians Nephew' which I've also read. The Hobbit is better than most of the books in the Narnia series. It should be required reading, tying in adventure and fantasy and making a pretty little bow.
Plus, with Houghton Mifflin, the Original Publisher, you can't go wrong. Happy Reading.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: such a great book!
Review: i first read this book when i was in 8th grade (abt 10 years ago)and i fell in love with J.R.R. Tolkien. this book chronicles the adventure of a little hobbit named bilbo baggins. in the beginning he's visited by the wizard gandalf and whisked away to the greatest adventure of his life. throughout the course of the journey he comes into contact with elves, orcs, dwarves, giant spider creatures, gollum, and the One ring. there's wars, wizardry, cunning, intellect and lots of confusing place names but you'll love it anyway. this book is a classic and should be read by everyone even those who aren't big fans of fantasy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: still with harry?
Review: I am just a reader who happened to see someone else interested in the book they were reading. it happened to be the hobbit and you might say i was inspired to read it. Now, if you are still hooked on harry potter, read this classic and you will be blown away by the magic of it. its better than harry and the rest are too.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Secret of the Hobbit and the Lord of the Ring!
Review: J.R.R. Tolkien's Hobbit has created a 20th Century myth base on the Jungian archetype of modern man' search for a mystical
center. The key to the Hobbit is that is the beginning of the
atomic essence of the great journey of the Hero. The call to
adventure is the beginning of the trilogy of the Lord of the Ring. The universal secret of the Hobbit is that he has achieved the power of riddle of the Egyptian god thoth who has
given man the cleverness of speech but not the "gravitas" of speech. This gives him a superficial victory over ring. The
Lord of the Ring brings Frido into the second stage of the call
to adventure which prepares the hero to enter the underworld
which is controlled by the powers of darkness and chaos. The
life and death struggle lead not only to the destruction of
the ring but the recovery of the great boon or great treasure that reveals the secret of Tolkien: the bliss is the great
center of the human quest. The bliss of discovery and

knowledge of the real vs. illusion; good vs. evil and the
reality of enviroment over the commerical poisioning of Gaia.
The trials and tribulation are part of the Two Towers and
the Return of the King represent the struggle to escape from
drowning in the evil and poison of the soul. Frido must return
to the world or face a Rip Van Winkle sleep into the ages of
evil. The grand epic of the Lord of the Rings captures the
mythic quality of human existence which transcends race, sex,

nationality and re-affirms Jungs universal discovery of the
profound meaning of myth which has been lost and found in the
twentieth century. Jung like Tolkien had been in a T.S. Eliot
Wasteland of World War I and the utter collapse of Western
Civilization into the dustpan of history. The Tolkien myth
has attempted to re-integrate Marcuse's One dimensional Man
into a new world based on new languages and new insight into
the Middle Earth. Jung's great perceptions of the healing power
of myth explains why The Lord of the Rings holds a new paradigm of hope in the background of the Great Terror in New York and
disintegration of human integrity.


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