Be Specific About Books In Pursuance Of Farmer Giles of Ham
Original Title: | Farmer Giles of Ham |
ISBN: | 0618009361 (ISBN13: 9780618009367) |
Edition Language: | English |
Characters: | Farmer Giles, Chrysophylax Dives, Garm, Agatha of Ham |
Setting: | Ham, Thames Valley, The Little Kingdom |
Literary Awards: | Mythopoeic Scholarship Award Nominee for Inklings Studies (2000) |
J.R.R. Tolkien
Hardcover | Pages: 127 pages Rating: 3.85 | 7496 Users | 403 Reviews
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List Epithetical Books Farmer Giles of Ham
Title | : | Farmer Giles of Ham |
Author | : | J.R.R. Tolkien |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | (50th Anniversary Edition) |
Pages | : | Pages: 127 pages |
Published | : | November 15th 1999 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (first published 1949) |
Categories | : | Fantasy. Fiction. Classics. Short Stories |
Rendition Concering Books Farmer Giles of Ham
This is the 50th anniversary edition of Tolkien's best-loved short fairy story, originally told to his children in the 1920s and expanded for publication in 1949. Bluff Farmer Giles lives in a land-of-fable England, full of giants and dragons. A reluctant hero like the Brave Little Tailor or Bilbo in The Hobbit, Giles wins a great reputation by firing his blunderbuss at a wandering giant--who retreats not in fear but to avoid this tiresome stinging "insect". One thing leads to another, and despite all his excuses the now famous Giles is called to save his country from the marauding dragon Chrysophylax. He has a legendary anti-dragon sword and a lot of luck, but dragons can be as devious as politicians... Tolkien crammed much sly wit into his little story, plus jokey philological explanations that Giles's amazing adventures are commemorated in Thames Valley placenames like Worminghall and Thame. It's illustrated with nearly 50 line drawings by Paula Baynes: Tolkien loved these, but some look sadly faded here, like fourth-generation photocopies. As a bonus, the anniversary edition includes an introduction telling the story's history, a transcription of the original, unfinished draft, and 23 pages of notes on allusions and names (Chrysophylax means "keeper of gold", which is indeed what dragons do). A pleasant gift book. --David LangfordRating Epithetical Books Farmer Giles of Ham
Ratings: 3.85 From 7496 Users | 403 ReviewsDiscuss Epithetical Books Farmer Giles of Ham
Bought with the same Christmas book voucher as The Adventures of Tom Bombadil and Smith of Wootton Major. My copy is an extremely shabby piece of bookage now.My 3rd audiobook was as spectacular as I expected! I am really glad that I discovered it randomly while scrolling on Scribd. The audiobook was perfect, short and very cute. Really loved the idea that also here I could met Tolkien's legendary dragons and inscriptions. - A story from the Tales of a Perilous Realm
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Happenstance leads to a simple farmer's becoming a town hero, but it's the man's clever wit that manages to bend a fearsome dragon to his will. I was going to give this one only three stars as I was annoyed at how Farmer Giles treated his poor, faithful pooch, Garm, but the ending left me laughing, so four magical twinklers for this brief, fun fancy.
Entirely delightful and I frankly surprised that this story is not more popular. Clever twist with humorous dialog throughout it.
Farmer Giles of Ham is a short story from the master of fantasy fiction J.R.R.Tolkien. Although the story is about a hero and contains giants, dragons and talking dogs,(actually it is just one dog) it is not an epic tale full with action. Dont worry tho, because although it will not amaze you with great battles, it will put a smile on your face with great humourOne nice night a giant went for a walk. He was out for a while and got lost, he was also very hungry. He started to walk faster trying
This is such a charming little tale!Tolkien once said that he wrote his legendarium in an effort to create a British mythology, but honestly, none of his major works like the Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit or even the Silmarillion (my personal favourite!) ever really managed that like Farmer Giles of Ham.It's a rustic, rural, and simple story of a rustic, rural and simple folk. The Middle Kingdom, with its talking dogs, reasoning mares and the dragons and giants who are slowly fading into legend,
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