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The Children of Húrin

The Children of Húrin is an epic fantasy novel which forms the completion of a tale by J. R. R. Tolkien. He wrote the original version of the story in the late 1910s, revising it several times later, but did not complete it before his death in 1973. His son, Christopher Tolkien, edited the manuscripts to form a consistent narrative, and published it in 2007 as an independent work. The book is illustrated by Alan Lee. The story is one of three "great tales" set in the First Age of Tolkien's Middle-earth, the other two being Beren and Lúthien and The Fall of Gondolin.

The Children of Húrin
Front cover of hardback edition
EditorChristopher Tolkien
AuthorJ. R. R. Tolkien
IllustratorAlan Lee
Cover artistAlan Lee
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SubjectTolkien's legendarium
GenreEpic Fantasy
Tragedy
Publisher
Publication date
2007
Media typePrint (hardback, paperback); audiobook; e-book
Pages320
ISBN978-0-618-89464-2
OCLC78790549
823/.912 22
LC ClassPR6039.O32 N37 2007

The book was in the main well received by critics, though some found it overblown or too fragmentary. Some critics wondered if it was suitable only for existing Tolkien aficionados, given the prose style and the large cast of characters, while others thought that despite its flaws it had the potential to reach a wider readership. Scholars have identified multiple themes in the tale, including evil, free will, predestination, heroism, courage, and the noble outlaw in the wilderness. The book's initial sales were double the U.S. publisher's expectations, and it reached number one on The New York Times Hardcover Fiction Best Seller list.

Background edit

Author edit

J. R. R. Tolkien was an English author and philologist of ancient Germanic languages, specialising in Old English, the language of the Anglo-Saxons; he spent much of his career as a professor at the University of Oxford.[1] He is best known for his novels about his invented Middle-earth, The Hobbit[2] and The Lord of the Rings,[3] and for the posthumously published The Silmarillion which provides a more mythical narrative about earlier ages.[4]

The story of The Children of Húrin is one of Tolkien's three "great tales" set in the First Age of Middle-earth, the other two being Beren and Lúthien and The Fall of Gondolin.[T 1][5]

In-universe edit

The lands of Middle-earth were populated by Men and other humanoid races: Elves, Dwarves, and Orcs, as well as divine beings, Valar and Maiar. The history and descent of the main characters begins five hundred years before the action of the book, when Morgoth, a Vala and the prime evil power, escapes from the Blessed Realm of Valinor to the north-west of Middle-earth. From his fortress of Angband he endeavours to gain control of the whole of Middle-earth, unleashing a war with the Elves that dwell in the land of Beleriand to the south. However, the Elves manage to stay his assault, and most of their realms remain unconquered; one of the most powerful of these is Doriath, ruled by Thingol. In addition, after some time the Noldorin Elves forsake Valinor and pursue Morgoth to Middle-earth in order to take vengeance upon him. Together with the Sindar of Beleriand, they proceed to lay siege to Angband, and establish new strongholds and realms in Middle-earth, including Hithlum ruled by Fingon, Nargothrond by Finrod Felagund and Gondolin by Turgon.

Three centuries pass, during which the first Men appear in Beleriand. These are the Edain, descendants of those Men who have rebelled against the rule of Morgoth's servants and journeyed westward. Most of the Elves welcome them, and they are given fiefs throughout Beleriand. The House of Bëor rules over the land of Ladros, the Folk of Haleth retreat to the forest of Brethil, and the lordship of Dor-lómin is granted to the House of Hador. Later, other Men enter Beleriand, the Easterlings, many of whom are in secret league with Morgoth. Eventually Morgoth manages to break the Siege of Angband in the Battle of Sudden Flame. The House of Bëor is destroyed and the Elves and Edain suffer heavy losses; however, many realms remain unconquered, including Dor-lómin, where the lordship has passed to Húrin.

Plot summary edit

 
Sketch map of Beleriand. Dor-Lomin is at top left. Doriath is the forest in the centre. Nargothrond is centre left. The Forest of Brethil (centre left) is just to the west of Doriath. Morgoth's underground fortress of Angband is in the Thangorodrim mountains (top centre).

Túrin, son of Húrin is a Man who lives in Dor-lómin. Húrin is taken prisoner by Morgoth after the Battle of Unnumbered Tears; Túrin is sent by his mother, Morwen, to live in the Elf-realm Doriath for protection after Easterlings invade their hometown. Morwen gives birth to Niënor, a girl. Morgoth curses Húrin and all his family, that evil will befall them for their whole lives.

King Thingol of Doriath takes Túrin as a foster-son. Túrin befriends Beleg, an expert hunter. Túrin accidentally causes the death of the King's counsellor Saeros, who attempts to jump a ravine while fleeing a wrothful Túrin. Túrin refuses to return to Doriath to face judgement and lives as an outlaw. Thingol pardons him and lets Beleg search for him.

Túrin becomes captain of a band of outlaws. Beleg locates the band while Túrin is absent; the outlaws leave him tied to a tree until he agrees to give them information. Túrin returns in time to cut Beleg free and, horrified by the outlaws' actions, resolves to forsake his cruel habits. Beleg tells him of the king's pardon but Túrin refuses to return to Doriath. Túrin and his men capture Mîm, a Petty-dwarf, who leads them to the caves at Amon Rûdh. Beleg returns to Túrin, who welcomes him. The outlaws resent the elf's presence and Mîm grows to hate him. Mîm betrays the outlaws to orcs; Túrin's entire band is killed, save for Beleg and Túrin. The orcs take Túrin towards Angband, leaving Beleg chained to a rock. Beleg escapes and pursues Túrin. Beleg happens across a mutilated elf, Gwindor of Nargothrond, sleeping in the forest of Taur-nu-Fuin. They enter the orc camp at night and carry Túrin, asleep, from the camp. Beleg begins to cut Túrin's bonds with his sword Anglachel, but the sword slips and cuts Túrin. Túrin, mistaking Beleg for an orc, kills Beleg with his own sword. When a flash of lightning reveals Beleg's face, Túrin falls into a frenzy. He refuses to leave Beleg's body until morning, when Gwindor is able to bury the elf. Túrin takes Anglachel but remains witless with grief.

Túrin and Gwindor proceed to Nargothrond. Túrin becomes King Orodreth's chief counsellor and commander of his forces, and leads the Elves to considerable victories. Against all advice, Túrin refuses to hide Nargothrond from Morgoth or to avoid full-scale battle. Morgoth sends an orc-army commanded by the dragon, Glaurung; Nargothrond is defeated. The orcs, crossing easily over the bridge that Túrin had built, sack Nargothrond. Túrin returns as the prisoners are led away by the orcs, and encounters Glaurung. The dragon enchants and tricks him into returning to Dor-lómin to seek out Morwen and Niënor instead of rescuing the prisoners—among whom is Finduilas, Orodreth's daughter, who loved him.

In Dor-lómin, Túrin learns that Morwen and Niënor are in Doriath, and that Glaurung deceived him into letting Finduilas go to her death. He tracks Finduilas' captors to the forest of Brethil, only to learn she has been murdered. Grief-stricken, Túrin seeks sanctuary among the folk of Haleth. Túrin renames himself Turambar, "Master of Doom" in Quenya, and gradually supplants Brandir, Brethil's lame chieftain.

In Doriath, Morwen and Niënor hear rumours of Túrin's deeds; Morwen determines either to find Túrin or to hear news of his death. Against Thingol's advice, she rides out of Doriath alone; Niënor conceals herself among Mablung's riders whom Thingol sends to follow and protect Morwen. At Nargothrond, Mablung encounters Glaurung, who scatters the elves. Glaurung discovers Niënor's identity and enchants her so that her mind is made blank; she forgets her name and how to speak.

Mablung attempts to return to Doriath alone with Niënor. The two become stranded in the wilderness, and in an orc attack, Niënor runs into the woods and is lost. She collapses near Brethil on the grave of Finduilas, where Turambar finds her. He brings her back to the town, where she recovers the use of speech, but with no memory of her past life. Niënor and Turambar fall in love. They marry, not realising their kinship, and Niënor becomes pregnant.

Glaurung returns to exterminate the men of Brethil. Turambar leads an expedition to cut him off, and stabs Glaurung from beneath. As Glaurung lies dying, Turambar pulls his sword from the dragon's belly; blood spurts onto his hand and burns him. He faints; Niënor finds him and mistakes his swoon for death. In a last effort of malice, Glaurung opens his eyes and informs her that she and Turambar are brother and sister. Glaurung dies, and his spell of forgetfulness passes from Niënor. Remembering that her unborn child was begotten in incest, she drowns herself. When Turambar wakes, Brandir informs him of Niënor's death and of their true relationship as siblings, as he had overheard the dragon's words. Turambar accuses Brandir of leading Niënor to her death and publishing Glaurung's lies. He kills Brandir. Mablung confirms Brandir's tale, and Turambar kills himself with his sword.

The main narrative ends with Túrin's burial. Appended to this is an extract from The Wanderings of Húrin, which recounts how Húrin is at last released by Morgoth and comes to his children's grave. There he finds Morwen, who dies in her husband's arms.

Publication history edit

The Children of Húrin was published on 17 April 2007, by HarperCollins in the United Kingdom and Canada, and by Houghton Mifflin in the United States. Alan Lee, illustrator of other fantasy works by J. R. R. Tolkien (The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings) created the jacket painting, as well as the 33 illustrations within the book, eight of them full-page and in colour. Christopher Tolkien included a description of the evolution of the tale, several genealogical tables, and a redrawn map of Beleriand.[T 2]

Analysis edit

Source texts edit

A brief version of the story formed the base of chapter 21 of The Silmarillion, setting the tale in the context of the wars of Beleriand. Although based on the same texts used to complete the new book, the Silmarillion account leaves out the greater part of the tale. Other incomplete versions have been published in the Narn i Hîn Húrin in Unfinished Tales; Turambar and the Foalókë, in The Book of Lost Tales; and The Lay of the Children of Húrin, an early narrative poem in The Lays of Beleriand. None of these constitute a complete and mature narrative. Christopher Tolkien assembled them as follows:[T 3]

Christopher Tolkien's construction of The Children of Húrin[T 3]
The Children of Húrin Sources
Chs 1, 3–7 Narn i Hîn Húrin
Ch 2 The Silmarillion, ch. 20 Nírnaeth Arnoediad
Chs 8–12 The Silmarillion, with Narn i Hîn Húrin for the more developed sections, namely
  • the exploits of the outlaws in Dor-Cúarthol
  • Túrin's romantic connection with Finduilas
  • his debate with Gwindor over the Elves of Nargothrond's strategy for the fight against Morgoth
  • the coming of the Elves Gelmir and Arminas to the halls of Narog
Chs 13–18 Narn i Hîn Húrin (+ afterword)

Editorial process edit

Christopher Tolkien quoted his father's own words on his fictional universe, that he "had in mind to make a body of more or less connected legend... I would draw some of the great tales in fullness, and leave many only placed in the scheme, and sketched."[T 4] He explained his editorial function as "presenting my father's long version of the legend of the Children of Húrin as an independent work, between its own covers, with a minimum of editorial presence, and above all in continuous narrative without gaps or interruptions, if this could be done without distortion or invention".[T 5] Ethan Gilsdorf, reviewing the book, wrote of the editorial function that Christopher Tolkien "explains his editorial process this way: "While I have had to introduce bridging passages here and there in the piecing together of different drafts, there is no element of extraneous 'invention' of any kind, however slight." He was criticized for having tampered with his father's text when putting The Silmarillion together. This pre-emptive strike must be meant to allay the fears of Tolkien's most persnickety readers."[6] Christopher Tolkien explained that in Unfinished Tales "the story breaks off at the point where Beleg, having at last found Túrin among the outlaws, cannot persuade him to return to Doriath (pp. 115-119 in the new text), and does not take up again until the outlaws encounter the Petty-dwarves." He states that he used The Silmarillion to fill the gap.[T 6] He had already explained in Unfinished Tales how he had used the Narn and The Silmarillion to achieve a complete tale of Túrin: "I have contrived a narrative, in scale commensurate with other parts of the Narn out of the existing materials ...; but from that point onwards, I have found it unprofitable to attempt it... I have cited isolated fragments from this part of the projected larger narrative.[T 7]

Influences edit

The story, as already published in The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales, is mainly based on the legend of Kullervo, a character from the compilation of Finnish folklore poems called Kalevala. Tolkien drew inspiration from the Kalevala for "The Story of Kullervo" in 1914, which was to become the model for his tale of Túrin.[7] Túrin (like Kullervo) also resembles Sigmund, the father of Sigurd in the Volsunga saga, in the incestuous relationship he had with his sister. In Richard Wagner's opera, Die Walküre (likewise drawn in part from the Volsung myths), Siegmund and Sieglinde are parallels of Túrin and Niënor.[8] Túrin further resembles Sigurd himself, as both achieve great renown for the slaying of a dragon of immense power and magic. Turin's suicide following an exchange of words with his sword is lifted essentially unchanged from Kullervo's tale in Kalevala.[7]

Tolkien mentioned Túrin's resemblance to figures from Classical, Finnish, and Norse tales in a letter:

There is the Children of Húrin, the tragic tale of Túrin Turambar and his sister Níniel – of which Túrin is the hero: a figure that might be said (by people who like that sort of thing, though it is not very useful) to be derived from elements in Sigurd the Volsung, Oedipus, and the Finnish Kullervo.[T 8]

The moral issues in The Children of Húrin have been compared to Tolkien's analysis of The Battle of Maldon that shows Tolkien's interest in the "theory of courage",[9] and distinguish between arrogance and true courage. Túrin's decision to build a bridge at Nargothrond which enables the invasion by Morgoth's forces resembles the character Byrthtnoth from The Battle of Maldon.[10]

Themes edit

The themes explored in the story include evil, free will and predestination. The book reflects also on heroism and courage. It has been suggested that Túrin's character is not only shaped by Morgoth's curse but that he himself is also partly responsible for his actions. The curse cannot completely control his free will, and Túrin displays traits like arrogance, pride and a desire for honour, that eventually cause the doom of his allies and family.[11] Jesse Mitchell, in Mythlore, compares Túrin both to the Byronic hero and to the absurd hero of Camus's The Myth of Sisyphus.[12]

Philip Vogel and Kenton Sena, in Journal of Tolkien Research, add the theme of the "noble outlaw archetype", which they compare to Joseph Campbell's American monomyth: Túrin sometimes thinks of himself as an outsider, but he comes from and returns to the Dor-lómin community.[13] Further, they examine the role of wilderness, the perilous borderlands around civilized realms, in Túrin's life. Fleeing from Doriath, he goes into an exile of his own choosing in the wilderness, partly identifying as an outlaw fitting the "Wild Man archetype", partly rejecting the outlaws' desperate ways.[13]

Reception edit

The initial reviews following the publication of The Children of Húrin were mostly positive. Likening it to a Greek tragedy, the author Elizabeth Hand in The Washington Post called it "a bleak, darkly beautiful tale" which "possesses the mythic resonance and grim sense of inexorable fate".[14] The screenwriter and novelist Frank Cottrell-Boyce wrote a positive review in The Independent, in particular describing the chapter "The Death of Túrin" as "dry, mad, humourless, hard-going and completely brilliant".[15] Bryan Appleyard of The Sunday Times set The Children of Húrin above other Tolkien writings, noting its "intense and very grown-up manner" and "a real feeling of high seriousness".[16] Maurice Chittenden of The Sunday Times said that "it may merit an X-certificate" owing to the number of violent deaths.[17] The novelist Philip Hensher in The Daily Telegraph said there were many reasons to detest the book, and enumerated them, but relented for its powerful final episode "in which an incestuous passion and a battle with a great dragon enfold each other". He disagreed with Tolkien about what gave power to his writing: Tolkien thought it was its links to antiquity; Hensher, for its modernity, referencing imperialism not feudalism, and an elf capable of evil.[18]

The book received negative reviews[a] from the Detroit Free Press which called it "dull and unfinished",[19] Entertainment Weekly which described it as "awkward and immature" with an "impenetrable forest of names ... overstuffed with strangled syntax",[20] and The Guardian, which stated that it was about "a derivative Wagnerian hero ... on a quasi-symbolic quest".[21]

 
Illustrator Alan Lee signing copies of The Children of Húrin

Other critics distinguished two audiences. Tom Deveson of The Sunday Times said that "although J. R. R. Tolkien aficionados will be thrilled, others will find The Children of Hurin barely readable".[22] Kelly Grovier from The Observer, on the other hand, stated that it "will please all but the most puritanical of his fans", referring to the scepticism about Christopher Tolkien's involvement.[23] Jeremy Marshall of The Times generally echoed this, writing that "It is worthy of a readership beyond Tolkien devotees," although he thought it was flawed; he stated that "occasionally the prose is too stilted, the dialogue too portentous, the unexplained names too opaque". He presupposed that: "In The Children of Húrin we could at last have the successor to The Lord of the Rings that was so earnestly and hopelessly sought by Tolkien’s publishers in the late 1950s."[24]

The Tolkien scholar Nicholas Birns commented that the book solves a longstanding problem, that Tolkien's Middle-earth writing is "really one giant work", whereas to a publisher, it consists of one complete novel, one children's book, and an enormous mass of background materials, some of them more or less consisting of stories. The Children of Húrin finally, in Birns's view, provides a "short, accessible" work from Tolkien's legendarium that can let people in; he contrasts this with Marcel Proust, whose admittedly great oeuvre remains hard to enter.[25]

The Children of Húrin debuted at number one on The New York Times Hardcover Fiction Best Seller list.[26] According to Houghton Mifflin, the U.S. publisher, 900,000 copies were in print worldwide in the first two weeks, double their initial expectations.[27] HarperCollins, the U.K. publisher, claimed 330,000 copies were in print in the U.K. in the first two weeks.[27]

Notes edit

References edit

Primary edit

  1. ^ Tolkien 2007, pp. 269–282 "The Evolution of the Great Tales"
  2. ^ Tolkien 2007, Front Matter, Table of Contents
  3. ^ a b Tolkien 2007, pp. 283–292 "The Composition of the Text"
  4. ^ Tolkien 2007, p. 9
  5. ^ Tolkien 2007, p. 7
  6. ^ Tolkien 2007, p. 286
  7. ^ Tolkien 1980, p. 9
  8. ^ Carpenter 2023, letter No. 131 to Milton Waldman, late 1951

Secondary edit

  1. ^ Carpenter 1977, pp. 111, 200, 266.
  2. ^ Carpenter 1977, pp. 179–186.
  3. ^ Carpenter 1977, pp. 187–208.
  4. ^ Carpenter 1977, pp. 79, 83–85, 256.
  5. ^ Neville, Kate (2017). "[Review] Beren and Lúthien. J.R.R. Tolkien. Ed. Christopher Tolkien. Illustrated by Alan Lee". Mythlore. 36 (1). Article 17.
  6. ^ Gilsdorf, Ethan (26 April 2007). "Book Review of The Children of Húrin". The Boston Globe.
  7. ^ a b Shippey, Tom (2004). "Tolkien and the Appeal of the Pagan". In Chance, Jane (ed.). Tolkien and the Invention of Myth. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 155–156. ISBN 9780813123011.
  8. ^ Hoffman, Curtiss (2008). Seven Story Tower : a Mythic Journey Through Space And Time. New York: Basic Books. ch. 9 Master of Fate: The Art of Mythopoeia. ISBN 978-0-465-01238-1. OCLC 792687220. her [Niënor's] Germanic counterpart, Sieglinde, in Wagner's Die Walküre: his Siegmund (who, like Túrin, has disguised himself under an alias) sings the praises of the metaphorical sibling incest of Spring and love, but it is Sieglinde who recognizes him and maneuvers him into the real thing,...
  9. ^ Solopova 2009, p. 48, citing West, R. C. (2000). "Túrin's Ofermod: An Old English Theme in the Development of the Story of Túrin". In Flieger, Verlyn; Hostetter, Carl F. (eds.). Tolkien's Legendarium: Essays on The History of Middle-earth. Greenwood Press. pp. 233–245.
  10. ^ Solopova 2009, p. 48
  11. ^ Solopova 2009, pp. 46–47
  12. ^ Mitchell, Jesse (2010). "Master of Doom by Doom Mastered: Heroism, Fate, and Death in The Children of Húrin". Mythlore. 29 (1). Article 7.
  13. ^ a b Vogel, Philip J.; Sena, Kenton L. (2020). "Peril and Possibility: Wilderness as a Space of Becoming in Tolkien's The Children of Húrin and Whedon's Firefly and Serenity". Journal of Tolkien Research. 10 (1). Article 6.
  14. ^ Hand, Elizabeth (27 April 2007). "The Return of the King". The Washington Post. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  15. ^ Cottrell-Boyce, Frank (18 April 2007). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 20 May 2007. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  16. ^ Appleyard, Bryan (8 April 2007). "What took them so long?". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  17. ^ Chittenden, Maurice (24 September 2006). "X-rated Tolkien: it's not for the kiddies". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  18. ^ Hensher, Philip (28 April 2007). "Húrin the money". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
  19. ^ Salij, Marta (18 April 2007). "Just kick the hobbit and don't suffer 'The Children of Hurin'". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved 8 June 2008.
  20. ^ Giles, Jeff (17 April 2007). . Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on 9 September 2007. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  21. ^ Crace, John (24 April 2007). "The Children of Húrin by J. R. R. Tolkien". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  22. ^ Deveson, Tom (15 April 2007). . The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  23. ^ Grovier, Kelly (27 April 2007). "In the name of the father". The Observer. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  24. ^ Marshall, Jeremy (14 April 2007). "Tolkien, before Bilbo". The Times. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  25. ^ Birns, Nicholas (2008). "The Children of Húrin, Narn i Chîn Húrin: The Tale of the Children of Húrin (review)". Tolkien Studies. 5 (1). Project MUSE: 189–200. doi:10.1353/tks.0.0022. S2CID 170183671.
  26. ^ "The New York Times: Books-Best-Seller Lists". The New York Times. 6 May 2007. Retrieved 6 May 2007.
  27. ^ a b Italie, Hillel (1 May 2007). "Sales soar for new Tolkien novel". Associated Press. Retrieved 17 November 2007.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Statement about the book by the Tolkien Estate
  • FAQ on the subject of The Children of Húrin 14 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine by the Tolkien Estate
  • Statement about the book by HarperCollins
  • Interview about the book with Adam Tolkien (in Spanish but with an English version at the bottom of the page)
  • The Children of Húrin FAQ
  • The Children of Húrin with analysis and reviews

children, húrin, epic, fantasy, novel, which, forms, completion, tale, tolkien, wrote, original, version, story, late, 1910s, revising, several, times, later, complete, before, death, 1973, christopher, tolkien, edited, manuscripts, form, consistent, narrative. The Children of Hurin is an epic fantasy novel which forms the completion of a tale by J R R Tolkien He wrote the original version of the story in the late 1910s revising it several times later but did not complete it before his death in 1973 His son Christopher Tolkien edited the manuscripts to form a consistent narrative and published it in 2007 as an independent work The book is illustrated by Alan Lee The story is one of three great tales set in the First Age of Tolkien s Middle earth the other two being Beren and Luthien and The Fall of Gondolin The Children of HurinFront cover of hardback editionEditorChristopher TolkienAuthorJ R R TolkienIllustratorAlan LeeCover artistAlan LeeCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishSubjectTolkien s legendariumGenreEpic FantasyTragedyPublisherHarperCollins UK Houghton Mifflin US Publication date2007Media typePrint hardback paperback audiobook e bookPages320ISBN978 0 618 89464 2OCLC78790549Dewey Decimal823 912 22LC ClassPR6039 O32 N37 2007 The book was in the main well received by critics though some found it overblown or too fragmentary Some critics wondered if it was suitable only for existing Tolkien aficionados given the prose style and the large cast of characters while others thought that despite its flaws it had the potential to reach a wider readership Scholars have identified multiple themes in the tale including evil free will predestination heroism courage and the noble outlaw in the wilderness The book s initial sales were double the U S publisher s expectations and it reached number one on The New York Times Hardcover Fiction Best Seller list Contents 1 Background 1 1 Author 1 2 In universe 2 Plot summary 3 Publication history 4 Analysis 4 1 Source texts 4 2 Editorial process 4 3 Influences 4 4 Themes 5 Reception 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Primary 7 2 Secondary 8 Sources 9 External linksBackground editAuthor edit J R R Tolkien was an English author and philologist of ancient Germanic languages specialising in Old English the language of the Anglo Saxons he spent much of his career as a professor at the University of Oxford 1 He is best known for his novels about his invented Middle earth The Hobbit 2 and The Lord of the Rings 3 and for the posthumously published The Silmarillion which provides a more mythical narrative about earlier ages 4 The story of The Children of Hurin is one of Tolkien s three great tales set in the First Age of Middle earth the other two being Beren and Luthien and The Fall of Gondolin T 1 5 In universe edit Main article The Silmarillion The lands of Middle earth were populated by Men and other humanoid races Elves Dwarves and Orcs as well as divine beings Valar and Maiar The history and descent of the main characters begins five hundred years before the action of the book when Morgoth a Vala and the prime evil power escapes from the Blessed Realm of Valinor to the north west of Middle earth From his fortress of Angband he endeavours to gain control of the whole of Middle earth unleashing a war with the Elves that dwell in the land of Beleriand to the south However the Elves manage to stay his assault and most of their realms remain unconquered one of the most powerful of these is Doriath ruled by Thingol In addition after some time the Noldorin Elves forsake Valinor and pursue Morgoth to Middle earth in order to take vengeance upon him Together with the Sindar of Beleriand they proceed to lay siege to Angband and establish new strongholds and realms in Middle earth including Hithlum ruled by Fingon Nargothrond by Finrod Felagund and Gondolin by Turgon Three centuries pass during which the first Men appear in Beleriand These are the Edain descendants of those Men who have rebelled against the rule of Morgoth s servants and journeyed westward Most of the Elves welcome them and they are given fiefs throughout Beleriand The House of Beor rules over the land of Ladros the Folk of Haleth retreat to the forest of Brethil and the lordship of Dor lomin is granted to the House of Hador Later other Men enter Beleriand the Easterlings many of whom are in secret league with Morgoth Eventually Morgoth manages to break the Siege of Angband in the Battle of Sudden Flame The House of Beor is destroyed and the Elves and Edain suffer heavy losses however many realms remain unconquered including Dor lomin where the lordship has passed to Hurin Plot summary editSee also Turin Turambar nbsp Sketch map of Beleriand Dor Lomin is at top left Doriath is the forest in the centre Nargothrond is centre left The Forest of Brethil centre left is just to the west of Doriath Morgoth s underground fortress of Angband is in the Thangorodrim mountains top centre Turin son of Hurin is a Man who lives in Dor lomin Hurin is taken prisoner by Morgoth after the Battle of Unnumbered Tears Turin is sent by his mother Morwen to live in the Elf realm Doriath for protection after Easterlings invade their hometown Morwen gives birth to Nienor a girl Morgoth curses Hurin and all his family that evil will befall them for their whole lives King Thingol of Doriath takes Turin as a foster son Turin befriends Beleg an expert hunter Turin accidentally causes the death of the King s counsellor Saeros who attempts to jump a ravine while fleeing a wrothful Turin Turin refuses to return to Doriath to face judgement and lives as an outlaw Thingol pardons him and lets Beleg search for him Turin becomes captain of a band of outlaws Beleg locates the band while Turin is absent the outlaws leave him tied to a tree until he agrees to give them information Turin returns in time to cut Beleg free and horrified by the outlaws actions resolves to forsake his cruel habits Beleg tells him of the king s pardon but Turin refuses to return to Doriath Turin and his men capture Mim a Petty dwarf who leads them to the caves at Amon Rudh Beleg returns to Turin who welcomes him The outlaws resent the elf s presence and Mim grows to hate him Mim betrays the outlaws to orcs Turin s entire band is killed save for Beleg and Turin The orcs take Turin towards Angband leaving Beleg chained to a rock Beleg escapes and pursues Turin Beleg happens across a mutilated elf Gwindor of Nargothrond sleeping in the forest of Taur nu Fuin They enter the orc camp at night and carry Turin asleep from the camp Beleg begins to cut Turin s bonds with his sword Anglachel but the sword slips and cuts Turin Turin mistaking Beleg for an orc kills Beleg with his own sword When a flash of lightning reveals Beleg s face Turin falls into a frenzy He refuses to leave Beleg s body until morning when Gwindor is able to bury the elf Turin takes Anglachel but remains witless with grief Turin and Gwindor proceed to Nargothrond Turin becomes King Orodreth s chief counsellor and commander of his forces and leads the Elves to considerable victories Against all advice Turin refuses to hide Nargothrond from Morgoth or to avoid full scale battle Morgoth sends an orc army commanded by the dragon Glaurung Nargothrond is defeated The orcs crossing easily over the bridge that Turin had built sack Nargothrond Turin returns as the prisoners are led away by the orcs and encounters Glaurung The dragon enchants and tricks him into returning to Dor lomin to seek out Morwen and Nienor instead of rescuing the prisoners among whom is Finduilas Orodreth s daughter who loved him In Dor lomin Turin learns that Morwen and Nienor are in Doriath and that Glaurung deceived him into letting Finduilas go to her death He tracks Finduilas captors to the forest of Brethil only to learn she has been murdered Grief stricken Turin seeks sanctuary among the folk of Haleth Turin renames himself Turambar Master of Doom in Quenya and gradually supplants Brandir Brethil s lame chieftain In Doriath Morwen and Nienor hear rumours of Turin s deeds Morwen determines either to find Turin or to hear news of his death Against Thingol s advice she rides out of Doriath alone Nienor conceals herself among Mablung s riders whom Thingol sends to follow and protect Morwen At Nargothrond Mablung encounters Glaurung who scatters the elves Glaurung discovers Nienor s identity and enchants her so that her mind is made blank she forgets her name and how to speak Mablung attempts to return to Doriath alone with Nienor The two become stranded in the wilderness and in an orc attack Nienor runs into the woods and is lost She collapses near Brethil on the grave of Finduilas where Turambar finds her He brings her back to the town where she recovers the use of speech but with no memory of her past life Nienor and Turambar fall in love They marry not realising their kinship and Nienor becomes pregnant Glaurung returns to exterminate the men of Brethil Turambar leads an expedition to cut him off and stabs Glaurung from beneath As Glaurung lies dying Turambar pulls his sword from the dragon s belly blood spurts onto his hand and burns him He faints Nienor finds him and mistakes his swoon for death In a last effort of malice Glaurung opens his eyes and informs her that she and Turambar are brother and sister Glaurung dies and his spell of forgetfulness passes from Nienor Remembering that her unborn child was begotten in incest she drowns herself When Turambar wakes Brandir informs him of Nienor s death and of their true relationship as siblings as he had overheard the dragon s words Turambar accuses Brandir of leading Nienor to her death and publishing Glaurung s lies He kills Brandir Mablung confirms Brandir s tale and Turambar kills himself with his sword The main narrative ends with Turin s burial Appended to this is an extract from The Wanderings of Hurin which recounts how Hurin is at last released by Morgoth and comes to his children s grave There he finds Morwen who dies in her husband s arms Publication history editThe Children of Hurin was published on 17 April 2007 by HarperCollins in the United Kingdom and Canada and by Houghton Mifflin in the United States Alan Lee illustrator of other fantasy works by J R R Tolkien The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings created the jacket painting as well as the 33 illustrations within the book eight of them full page and in colour Christopher Tolkien included a description of the evolution of the tale several genealogical tables and a redrawn map of Beleriand T 2 Analysis editSource texts edit A brief version of the story formed the base of chapter 21 of The Silmarillion setting the tale in the context of the wars of Beleriand Although based on the same texts used to complete the new book the Silmarillion account leaves out the greater part of the tale Other incomplete versions have been published in the Narn i Hin Hurin in Unfinished Tales Turambar and the Foaloke in The Book of Lost Tales and The Lay of the Children of Hurin an early narrative poem in The Lays of Beleriand None of these constitute a complete and mature narrative Christopher Tolkien assembled them as follows T 3 Christopher Tolkien s construction of The Children of Hurin T 3 The Children of Hurin Sources Chs 1 3 7 Narn i Hin Hurin Ch 2 The Silmarillion ch 20 Nirnaeth Arnoediad Chs 8 12 The Silmarillion with Narn i Hin Hurin for the more developed sections namely the exploits of the outlaws in Dor Cuarthol Turin s romantic connection with Finduilas his debate with Gwindor over the Elves of Nargothrond s strategy for the fight against Morgoth the coming of the Elves Gelmir and Arminas to the halls of Narog Chs 13 18 Narn i Hin Hurin afterword Editorial process edit Further information Tolkien s legendarium A presented collection Christopher Tolkien quoted his father s own words on his fictional universe that he had in mind to make a body of more or less connected legend I would draw some of the great tales in fullness and leave many only placed in the scheme and sketched T 4 He explained his editorial function as presenting my father s long version of the legend of the Children of Hurin as an independent work between its own covers with a minimum of editorial presence and above all in continuous narrative without gaps or interruptions if this could be done without distortion or invention T 5 Ethan Gilsdorf reviewing the book wrote of the editorial function that Christopher Tolkien explains his editorial process this way While I have had to introduce bridging passages here and there in the piecing together of different drafts there is no element of extraneous invention of any kind however slight He was criticized for having tampered with his father s text when putting The Silmarillion together This pre emptive strike must be meant to allay the fears of Tolkien s most persnickety readers 6 Christopher Tolkien explained that in Unfinished Tales the story breaks off at the point where Beleg having at last found Turin among the outlaws cannot persuade him to return to Doriath pp 115 119 in the new text and does not take up again until the outlaws encounter the Petty dwarves He states that he used The Silmarillion to fill the gap T 6 He had already explained in Unfinished Tales how he had used the Narn and The Silmarillion to achieve a complete tale of Turin I have contrived a narrative in scale commensurate with other parts of the Narn out of the existing materials but from that point onwards I have found it unprofitable to attempt it I have cited isolated fragments from this part of the projected larger narrative T 7 Influences edit Further information Finnish influences on Tolkien The story as already published in The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales is mainly based on the legend of Kullervo a character from the compilation of Finnish folklore poems called Kalevala Tolkien drew inspiration from the Kalevala for The Story of Kullervo in 1914 which was to become the model for his tale of Turin 7 Turin like Kullervo also resembles Sigmund the father of Sigurd in the Volsunga saga in the incestuous relationship he had with his sister In Richard Wagner s opera Die Walkure likewise drawn in part from the Volsung myths Siegmund and Sieglinde are parallels of Turin and Nienor 8 Turin further resembles Sigurd himself as both achieve great renown for the slaying of a dragon of immense power and magic Turin s suicide following an exchange of words with his sword is lifted essentially unchanged from Kullervo s tale in Kalevala 7 Tolkien mentioned Turin s resemblance to figures from Classical Finnish and Norse tales in a letter There is the Children of Hurin the tragic tale of Turin Turambar and his sister Niniel of which Turin is the hero a figure that might be said by people who like that sort of thing though it is not very useful to be derived from elements in Sigurd the Volsung Oedipus and the Finnish Kullervo T 8 The moral issues in The Children of Hurin have been compared to Tolkien s analysis of The Battle of Maldon that shows Tolkien s interest in the theory of courage 9 and distinguish between arrogance and true courage Turin s decision to build a bridge at Nargothrond which enables the invasion by Morgoth s forces resembles the character Byrthtnoth from The Battle of Maldon 10 Themes edit The themes explored in the story include evil free will and predestination The book reflects also on heroism and courage It has been suggested that Turin s character is not only shaped by Morgoth s curse but that he himself is also partly responsible for his actions The curse cannot completely control his free will and Turin displays traits like arrogance pride and a desire for honour that eventually cause the doom of his allies and family 11 Jesse Mitchell in Mythlore compares Turin both to the Byronic hero and to the absurd hero of Camus s The Myth of Sisyphus 12 Philip Vogel and Kenton Sena in Journal of Tolkien Research add the theme of the noble outlaw archetype which they compare to Joseph Campbell s American monomyth Turin sometimes thinks of himself as an outsider but he comes from and returns to the Dor lomin community 13 Further they examine the role of wilderness the perilous borderlands around civilized realms in Turin s life Fleeing from Doriath he goes into an exile of his own choosing in the wilderness partly identifying as an outlaw fitting the Wild Man archetype partly rejecting the outlaws desperate ways 13 Reception editThe initial reviews following the publication of The Children of Hurin were mostly positive Likening it to a Greek tragedy the author Elizabeth Hand in The Washington Post called it a bleak darkly beautiful tale which possesses the mythic resonance and grim sense of inexorable fate 14 The screenwriter and novelist Frank Cottrell Boyce wrote a positive review in The Independent in particular describing the chapter The Death of Turin as dry mad humourless hard going and completely brilliant 15 Bryan Appleyard of The Sunday Times set The Children of Hurin above other Tolkien writings noting its intense and very grown up manner and a real feeling of high seriousness 16 Maurice Chittenden of The Sunday Times said that it may merit an X certificate owing to the number of violent deaths 17 The novelist Philip Hensher in The Daily Telegraph said there were many reasons to detest the book and enumerated them but relented for its powerful final episode in which an incestuous passion and a battle with a great dragon enfold each other He disagreed with Tolkien about what gave power to his writing Tolkien thought it was its links to antiquity Hensher for its modernity referencing imperialism not feudalism and an elf capable of evil 18 The book received negative reviews a from the Detroit Free Press which called it dull and unfinished 19 Entertainment Weekly which described it as awkward and immature with an impenetrable forest of names overstuffed with strangled syntax 20 and The Guardian which stated that it was about a derivative Wagnerian hero on a quasi symbolic quest 21 nbsp Illustrator Alan Lee signing copies of The Children of Hurin Other critics distinguished two audiences Tom Deveson of The Sunday Times said that although J R R Tolkien aficionados will be thrilled others will find The Children of Hurin barely readable 22 Kelly Grovier from The Observer on the other hand stated that it will please all but the most puritanical of his fans referring to the scepticism about Christopher Tolkien s involvement 23 Jeremy Marshall of The Times generally echoed this writing that It is worthy of a readership beyond Tolkien devotees although he thought it was flawed he stated that occasionally the prose is too stilted the dialogue too portentous the unexplained names too opaque He presupposed that In The Children of Hurin we could at last have the successor to The Lord of the Rings that was so earnestly and hopelessly sought by Tolkien s publishers in the late 1950s 24 The Tolkien scholar Nicholas Birns commented that the book solves a longstanding problem that Tolkien s Middle earth writing is really one giant work whereas to a publisher it consists of one complete novel one children s book and an enormous mass of background materials some of them more or less consisting of stories The Children of Hurin finally in Birns s view provides a short accessible work from Tolkien s legendarium that can let people in he contrasts this with Marcel Proust whose admittedly great oeuvre remains hard to enter 25 The Children of Hurin debuted at number one on The New York Times Hardcover Fiction Best Seller list 26 According to Houghton Mifflin the U S publisher 900 000 copies were in print worldwide in the first two weeks double their initial expectations 27 HarperCollins the U K publisher claimed 330 000 copies were in print in the U K in the first two weeks 27 Notes edit Compare the literary reception of The Lord of the Rings References editPrimary edit Tolkien 2007 pp 269 282 The Evolution of the Great Tales Tolkien 2007 Front Matter Table of Contents a b Tolkien 2007 pp 283 292 The Composition of the Text Tolkien 2007 p 9 Tolkien 2007 p 7 Tolkien 2007 p 286 Tolkien 1980 p 9 Carpenter 2023 letter No 131 to Milton Waldman late 1951 Secondary edit Carpenter 1977 pp 111 200 266 Carpenter 1977 pp 179 186 Carpenter 1977 pp 187 208 Carpenter 1977 pp 79 83 85 256 Neville Kate 2017 Review Beren and Luthien J R R Tolkien Ed Christopher Tolkien Illustrated by Alan Lee Mythlore 36 1 Article 17 Gilsdorf Ethan 26 April 2007 Book Review of The Children of Hurin The Boston Globe a b Shippey Tom 2004 Tolkien and the Appeal of the Pagan In Chance Jane ed Tolkien and the Invention of Myth University Press of Kentucky pp 155 156 ISBN 9780813123011 Hoffman Curtiss 2008 Seven Story Tower a Mythic Journey Through Space And Time New York Basic Books ch 9 Master of Fate The Art of Mythopoeia ISBN 978 0 465 01238 1 OCLC 792687220 her Nienor s Germanic counterpart Sieglinde in Wagner s Die Walkure his Siegmund who like Turin has disguised himself under an alias sings the praises of the metaphorical sibling incest of Spring and love but it is Sieglinde who recognizes him and maneuvers him into the real thing Solopova 2009 p 48 citing West R C 2000 Turin s Ofermod An Old English Theme in the Development of the Story of Turin In Flieger Verlyn Hostetter Carl F eds Tolkien s Legendarium Essays on The History of Middle earth Greenwood Press pp 233 245 Solopova 2009 p 48 Solopova 2009 pp 46 47 Mitchell Jesse 2010 Master of Doom by Doom Mastered Heroism Fate and Death in The Children of Hurin Mythlore 29 1 Article 7 a b Vogel Philip J Sena Kenton L 2020 Peril and Possibility Wilderness as a Space of Becoming in Tolkien s The Children of Hurin and Whedon s Firefly and Serenity Journal of Tolkien Research 10 1 Article 6 Hand Elizabeth 27 April 2007 The Return of the King The Washington Post Retrieved 22 September 2007 Cottrell Boyce Frank 18 April 2007 Spreading the elfish gene The Independent Archived from the original on 20 May 2007 Retrieved 22 September 2007 Appleyard Bryan 8 April 2007 What took them so long The Sunday Times Retrieved 22 September 2007 Chittenden Maurice 24 September 2006 X rated Tolkien it s not for the kiddies The Sunday Times Retrieved 22 September 2007 Hensher Philip 28 April 2007 Hurin the money The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 31 July 2020 Salij Marta 18 April 2007 Just kick the hobbit and don t suffer The Children of Hurin Detroit Free Press Retrieved 8 June 2008 Giles Jeff 17 April 2007 The Children of Hurin Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 9 September 2007 Retrieved 22 September 2007 Crace John 24 April 2007 The Children of Hurin by J R R Tolkien The Guardian Retrieved 22 September 2007 Deveson Tom 15 April 2007 Away with the fairies The Sunday Times Archived from the original on 17 May 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2007 Grovier Kelly 27 April 2007 In the name of the father The Observer Retrieved 22 September 2007 Marshall Jeremy 14 April 2007 Tolkien before Bilbo The Times Retrieved 22 September 2007 Birns Nicholas 2008 The Children of Hurin Narn i Chin Hurin The Tale of the Children of Hurin review Tolkien Studies 5 1 Project MUSE 189 200 doi 10 1353 tks 0 0022 S2CID 170183671 The New York Times Books Best Seller Lists The New York Times 6 May 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2007 a b Italie Hillel 1 May 2007 Sales soar for new Tolkien novel Associated Press Retrieved 17 November 2007 Sources editCarpenter Humphrey 1977 J R R Tolkien A Biography New York Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 04 928037 3 Carpenter Humphrey ed 2023 1981 The Letters of J R R Tolkien Revised and Expanded Edition New York Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 35 865298 4 Solopova Elizabeth 2009 Languages Myths and History An Introduction to the Linguistic and Literary Background of J R R Tolkien s Fiction New York City North Landing Books ISBN 978 0 9816607 1 4 Tolkien J R R 1980 Christopher Tolkien ed Unfinished Tales Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 29917 3 Tolkien J R R 2007 Christopher Tolkien ed The Children of Hurin London HarperCollins ISBN 0 007 24622 6 External links editStatement about the book by the Tolkien Estate FAQ on the subject of The Children of Hurin Archived 14 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine by the Tolkien Estate Statement about the book by HarperCollins Interview about the book with Adam Tolkien in Spanish but with an English version at the bottom of the page The Children of Hurin FAQ The Children of Hurin with analysis and reviews Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Children of Hurin amp oldid 1204586771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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