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apilgriminnarnia.com | ||
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fellowdustmag.com
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| | | | | Douglas A. Anderson describes his journey to become a scholar of the Inklings and of little-known authors who wrote fantasy, science-fiction, supernatural, and decadent fiction that needs to be remembered. | |
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stephencwinter.com
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| | | | | The Two Towers by J.R.R Tolkien (Harper Collins 1991, 2007) pp. 939-942 Frodo and Sam follow Gollum into Shelob's Lair and enter a darkness such as they had not known since the passage through Moria. But at least in Moria there had been a sense of space and a movement of air. "Here the air... | |
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theimaginativeconservative.org
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| | | | | The Great War destroyed much the Inklings had held true, personally and culturally. Each lost friends, and each felt the guilt that any survivor of a war feels. Many of them refused to talk about their own experiences, for good or ill. J.R.R. Tolkien, perhaps, provides the best example. (essay by Bradley Birzer) | |
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brettjtalley.com
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| | | The Horror of Brett J. Talley | ||