
If that is something that is essential to you, maybe choose that. I like the deluxe editions for the slipcase and the cloth binding. But Harper & Collins reserved the right to do more print runs of the deluxe editions. It‘s just the first print run that is limited to it. All of them together just look amazing on the shelf and the quality is really good.Īlso the 4000 copy first print run does not mean it is a real limited edition. If i‘d have to choose, I personally prefer the Standard Edition, especially since it will match the Hobbit + LOTR boxed set, Fall of Gondolin, Children of Hurin & Beren and Luthien. I will be getting both Editions for the upcoming Silmarillion. This in it’s style matches the upcoming Silmarillion Deluxe Edition. Tolkien written in 1951 which provides a brilliant exposition of the earlier Ages, and almost 50 full-colour paintings by Ted Nasmith, including some which appear here for the first time.I am owning both the Unfinished Tales Standard Illustrated Edition, which matches the style of the Boxset that you own and the respective deluxe edition of it. This special edition presents anew this seminal first step towards mapping out the posthumous publishing of Middle-earth, and the beginning of an illustrious forty years and more than twenty books celebrating his father's legacy. Tolkien could not publish The Silmarillion in his lifetime, as it grew with him, so he would leave it to his son, Christopher, to edit the work from many manuscripts and bring his father's great vision to publishable form, so completing the literary achievement of a lifetime. The Akallabeth recounts the downfall of the great island kingdom of Numenor at the end of the Second Age and Of the Rings of Power tells of the great events at the end of the Third Age, as told in The Lord of the Rings. The Ainulindale is a myth of the Creation and in the Valaquenta the nature and powers of the gods is described.


Accompanying these tales are several shorter works. They are set in an age when Morgoth, the first Dark Lord, dwelt in Middle-earth, and the Elves made war upon him in his impenetrable fortress in Angband for the recovery of the Silmarils, three jewels containing the last remaining pure light of Valinor, seized by Morgoth and set in his iron crown. Tolkien's imaginative writing, a collection of narratives ranging in time from the Elder Days of Middle-earth, through the Second Age and the rise of Sauron, to the end of the War of the Ring. Including brand-new paintings, this is a fully illustrated new edition of the forerunner to The Lord of the Rings, telling the earlier history of Middle-earth, recounting the events of the First and Second Ages, and introducing some of the key characters, such as Galadriel, Elrond, Elendil and the Dark Lord, Sauron.
