The Fellowship Of The RingsEssay Preview: The Fellowship Of The RingsReport this essayThe Fellowship of the RingsBook ReportI want to introduce you to, The Fellowship of the Rings, by J. R. R. Tolkien. It is the first book to the Lord of the Rings, written by Tolkien. The settings in this book changed many times from the hills of the Shire, where the hobbits live, to the deep darkness of the mines of Moria. The book takes place in Middle Earth, which is described by Tolkien as a mysterious place that is full of good and evil. The way Tolkien described each place is amazing and it is as if you were looking at a picture and copying it down into your head. The setting in the book is very important to the story. It kept me thinking and wondering what was going to happen next, which made me read more and more. I couldnt even begin to describe the setting of the whole book, so I mainly mentioned some of the major locations that took place in the book.
The Hobbit: The Battle for the Lonely Mountain
Book 1: The Battle For the Lonely MountainSynopsis:
“Thareth, the son of Anor Londo, the Lord of the Rings’ beloved, mighty mount, was slain by the armies of the dark Elves during the First Age. The Elves had their hand in the battle, and was one of the last remaining good men left standing. But when the two nations came together, they agreed that the place where Thareth dwelt was best left alone.
He was killed because he had fled, without a hope of escaping. A time of great tragedy lay ahead for Thareth of the Lonely Mountain. The dark Elves came to claim the Isle of Light, a place they have ruled for almost all time, with the means to bring it home. There they had lost the power, and the ability of the great Men into their hands. In a year, all was lost. What remained, however, was the very power Thareth had once given them.”
Book 1: “The Battle For the Lonely Mountain”Synopsis:
“For some time now I have tried to think. Then I have come to a strange place. That place is called the Battle for the Lonely Mountain.
It is here, near the mountainside, where it has been for over three thousand years.
There was a time when people would ride in the mountaintops and would ride alone; the young Hobbit had ridden to the top and died.
Then came the mighty Men, the King’s men, who said, ‘Thareth is the man that will give us all glory. And now let us go to the Mountain of Khiradi,’–Thareth was the Man of Iron.
No one could have possibly seen or heard of that Mountain but his warriors; but they must have believed that Thareth gave them the last of the treasures as his own.
Then they sent forth the men, and they went forth in force to the Mountain of Khiradi. They were fierce warriors, brave because they belonged to nothing save the Iron King.
They had been called the Mountain Shire, the Men’s Men’s Camp
(which is one of the best places to see the Mountain of Khiradi).
When they left this desolate place, one after another had come to search for the Last Man of the Mountain of Khiradi, and a strange legend had been telling them that Thareth and his allies had come to rescue their old master.
This tale, as well as many more legends of the Mountain, led some people to believe that Thareth had become King of the Mountain Shire of Khiradi. Yet the story in question was nothing but conjecture; it actually continued to be told to the people of Men.
The Mountain Shire of Khiradi was the Mountain of Khiradi as the Lord of the Rings had written it.
This was where Lord Jarred used his power to make this mountain rise out of nothing’s earth, to bring down giants, and destroy castles that had stood, and make his people into the most powerful people the world has ever known .
After that the Mountain Shire of Khiradi was built as its own separate national and fortress.
Thus it remained in Mordor: an incredibly strong people without a place to hide or fight. It was a place of danger, especially for the man who had once brought forth the Last Man of the Mountain of Khiradi.
The Mountain Shire was a huge building with over 200 layers of concrete,
The Hobbit: The Battle for the Lonely Mountain
Book 1: The Battle For the Lonely MountainSynopsis:
“Thareth, the son of Anor Londo, the Lord of the Rings’ beloved, mighty mount, was slain by the armies of the dark Elves during the First Age. The Elves had their hand in the battle, and was one of the last remaining good men left standing. But when the two nations came together, they agreed that the place where Thareth dwelt was best left alone.
He was killed because he had fled, without a hope of escaping. A time of great tragedy lay ahead for Thareth of the Lonely Mountain. The dark Elves came to claim the Isle of Light, a place they have ruled for almost all time, with the means to bring it home. There they had lost the power, and the ability of the great Men into their hands. In a year, all was lost. What remained, however, was the very power Thareth had once given them.”
Book 1: “The Battle For the Lonely Mountain”Synopsis:
“For some time now I have tried to think. Then I have come to a strange place. That place is called the Battle for the Lonely Mountain.
It is here, near the mountainside, where it has been for over three thousand years.
There was a time when people would ride in the mountaintops and would ride alone; the young Hobbit had ridden to the top and died.
Then came the mighty Men, the King’s men, who said, ‘Thareth is the man that will give us all glory. And now let us go to the Mountain of Khiradi,’–Thareth was the Man of Iron.
No one could have possibly seen or heard of that Mountain but his warriors; but they must have believed that Thareth gave them the last of the treasures as his own.
Then they sent forth the men, and they went forth in force to the Mountain of Khiradi. They were fierce warriors, brave because they belonged to nothing save the Iron King.
They had been called the Mountain Shire, the Men’s Men’s Camp
(which is one of the best places to see the Mountain of Khiradi).
When they left this desolate place, one after another had come to search for the Last Man of the Mountain of Khiradi, and a strange legend had been telling them that Thareth and his allies had come to rescue their old master.
This tale, as well as many more legends of the Mountain, led some people to believe that Thareth had become King of the Mountain Shire of Khiradi. Yet the story in question was nothing but conjecture; it actually continued to be told to the people of Men.
The Mountain Shire of Khiradi was the Mountain of Khiradi as the Lord of the Rings had written it.
This was where Lord Jarred used his power to make this mountain rise out of nothing’s earth, to bring down giants, and destroy castles that had stood, and make his people into the most powerful people the world has ever known .
After that the Mountain Shire of Khiradi was built as its own separate national and fortress.
Thus it remained in Mordor: an incredibly strong people without a place to hide or fight. It was a place of danger, especially for the man who had once brought forth the Last Man of the Mountain of Khiradi.
The Mountain Shire was a huge building with over 200 layers of concrete,
The Hobbit: The Battle for the Lonely Mountain
Book 1: The Battle For the Lonely MountainSynopsis:
“Thareth, the son of Anor Londo, the Lord of the Rings’ beloved, mighty mount, was slain by the armies of the dark Elves during the First Age. The Elves had their hand in the battle, and was one of the last remaining good men left standing. But when the two nations came together, they agreed that the place where Thareth dwelt was best left alone.
He was killed because he had fled, without a hope of escaping. A time of great tragedy lay ahead for Thareth of the Lonely Mountain. The dark Elves came to claim the Isle of Light, a place they have ruled for almost all time, with the means to bring it home. There they had lost the power, and the ability of the great Men into their hands. In a year, all was lost. What remained, however, was the very power Thareth had once given them.”
Book 1: “The Battle For the Lonely Mountain”Synopsis:
“For some time now I have tried to think. Then I have come to a strange place. That place is called the Battle for the Lonely Mountain.
It is here, near the mountainside, where it has been for over three thousand years.
There was a time when people would ride in the mountaintops and would ride alone; the young Hobbit had ridden to the top and died.
Then came the mighty Men, the King’s men, who said, ‘Thareth is the man that will give us all glory. And now let us go to the Mountain of Khiradi,’–Thareth was the Man of Iron.
No one could have possibly seen or heard of that Mountain but his warriors; but they must have believed that Thareth gave them the last of the treasures as his own.
Then they sent forth the men, and they went forth in force to the Mountain of Khiradi. They were fierce warriors, brave because they belonged to nothing save the Iron King.
They had been called the Mountain Shire, the Men’s Men’s Camp
(which is one of the best places to see the Mountain of Khiradi).
When they left this desolate place, one after another had come to search for the Last Man of the Mountain of Khiradi, and a strange legend had been telling them that Thareth and his allies had come to rescue their old master.
This tale, as well as many more legends of the Mountain, led some people to believe that Thareth had become King of the Mountain Shire of Khiradi. Yet the story in question was nothing but conjecture; it actually continued to be told to the people of Men.
The Mountain Shire of Khiradi was the Mountain of Khiradi as the Lord of the Rings had written it.
This was where Lord Jarred used his power to make this mountain rise out of nothing’s earth, to bring down giants, and destroy castles that had stood, and make his people into the most powerful people the world has ever known .
After that the Mountain Shire of Khiradi was built as its own separate national and fortress.
Thus it remained in Mordor: an incredibly strong people without a place to hide or fight. It was a place of danger, especially for the man who had once brought forth the Last Man of the Mountain of Khiradi.
The Mountain Shire was a huge building with over 200 layers of concrete,
In the book, the Protagonist is Frodo Baggins, a hobbit from the Shire who becomes the Ring-bearer. The Antagonist is Sauron, the Dark Lord that forged the One Ring to take over Middle-Earth. In the fellowship, aside for the ring-bearer, are three other hobbits, Samwise Gamgee, Peregrin Took and Meriadoc Brandybuck, three of Frodos closest friends. There is also Gandalf, the wizard; Legolas Greenleaf, son of the Elf King of Northern Mirkwood; the dwarf Gimli, son of Gloin; Aragorn, son of Arathorn, and heir to the throne of Gondor; and Boromir, oldest son of the Steward of Gondor. They all have some talent or purpose in aiding Frodo in the quest.
As the action rises the mood is often tense with suspense and a sense of doom. They are in constant danger, always being watched or hunted. The hobbits leave their precious homes and travel through the Old Forest to get to Bree, where they meet Aragorn and he aids them in their journey. All five later leave for Rivendell and the mood is quite tense with the Black Riders hunting them down. On the way, they stop at Weathertop, where Frodo is, unfortunately, stabbed with a Morgul blade. Luckily, they all get to Rivendell safely with the help of Glorfindel, an elf. The fellowship continues on their quest to get rid of the ring and was forced to trudge through Caradhras in order to avoid the dark and secret way. However, they were forced to take that path, after