The Lord of the Rings Trilogy in one Volume

$195.00

6W J. R. R. Tolkien. Illustrated by Alan Lee. London: Harper Collins Publishers, 1991.

Notes

J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings is a towering, epochal masterpiece of high fantasy that stands as one of the most influential literary achievements of the 20th century. Originally published in three volumes between 1954 and 1955, the sweeping narrative chronicles the desperate, epic quest to destroy the One Ring—an artifact of absolute malevolence forged by the Dark Lord, Sauron, to enslave Middle-earth. The fate of civilization falls upon Frodo Baggins, a small, unassuming Hobbit who must journey into the volcanic heart of the blighted land of Mordor to cast the Ring into the fires of Mount Doom. Accompanied by a diverse fellowship of Hobbits, Men, an Elf, a Dwarf, and the wizard Gandalf, the narrative expands into a grand canvas of colossal wars, ancient lineages, and shifting political alliances. Beneath its breathtaking scale and complex linguistic world-building, the text operates as a profound exploration of the corrupting nature of absolute power, the heavy psychological scars of industrial warfare, the beauty of platonic friendship, and the ultimate triumph of quiet, ordinary humility over overwhelming systemic evil.
Tolkien (1892–1973), was a brilliant Oxford philologist and professor of Old English who viewed his fictional mythos as a vast linguistic playground. Rather than merely inventing a story and populating it with monsters, Tolkien spent decades meticulously constructing entire language families—most notably the elvish tongues of Quenya and Sindarin—and subsequently built the history, geography, and cultures of Middle-earth simply to give his invented words a living context. Written over a grueling twelve-year period that spanned the dark anxieties of World War II, the work was deeply colored by Tolkien’s own traumatic combat experiences during the Battle of the Somme, a reality that infused his prose with a haunting sense of historical grief and a poignant melancholy for a fading world.
Commissioned by HarperCollins to celebrate the centenary of Tolkien's birth, the landmark 1992 Centenary Edition showcases Alan Lee’s magnificent suite of 50 watercolor plates, marking a deliberate shift away from the cartoonish, overly bright fantasy art of the mid-20th century. Lee, an acclaimed British artist and conceptual designer, leveraged a hyper-detailed, ethereal aesthetic characterized by intricate line work and delicate, atmospheric watercolor washes of misty grey, muted green, and ancient stone. His paintings treated the architectural ruins of Osgiliath, the majestic spires of Minas Tirith, and the sweeping, gnarled landscapes of Lothlórien not as fantastical backdrops, but as real, historically weathered places heavy with the passage of time. Lee’s evocative, grounded realism so perfectly matched Tolkien’s textual vision that it directly earned him an Academy Award for his subsequent work as the lead conceptual designer for Peter Jackson’s film adaptations, cementing this illustrated edition as the definitive, ultimate visual standard for serious bibliophiles and collectors worldwide.
Description
Brown cloth binding with gilt emblem to upper board and spine. Original dust wrapper. Red silk marker. Fine condition.