How We‘re Celebrating Tolkien Reading Day 2020

Happy Tolkien Reading Day, friends! This is one of my favorite days of the year for many reasons and I hope you’ll find some time today to celebrate the life and works of J.R.R. Tolkien today. (If you’re reading this and wondering what in the world Tolkien Reading Day even is, you can read all about it here.) I also wrote about why today is important within the Christian community, what it meant to Tolkien, and how March 25th is a sort of bridge between our world and Middle-Earth here.

10 Simple Ways to Live like a Hobbit (While You’re Stuck at Home)

Last month, I published my first ever eBook — Thirty Days in the Shire — a guide to slowing down, living simply, and becoming more of a Hobbit at Heart. The book includes a list of thirty challenges to complete within the thirty days, along with five hobbity habits to begin putting into practice.

One of the hobbity habits is to stay at home as much as possible, inspired by the tendency of most Hobbits to prefer their cozy chair by the fire over any and all sorts of adventure.

Photo Recap: Our 2019 Hobbit Party

I wanted to share some photos from our Hobbit Party this past September. Better late than never, right? This was our first year hosting our Hobbit Party at our new house, and it turned out quite well! I’m so grateful to the friends who came over, several of them driving in from out of town, to spend the evening with us. I cannot wait until next year!

Guest Post: 3 Reasons Leaf by Niggle is my Favorite Tolkien Treasure

As a Middle-earth aficionado, I have read J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion. Currently, I am navigating the land of Beleriand as I am reading The Children of Húrin. While these books are creative and profound, my personal favorite Tolkien work [so far this may be subject to change!] does not take place in a mythic land or through the medium of an epic adventure tale. Instead, a short story published in 1945 wins my personal Pulitzer. Leaf by Niggle does not follow hobbits, elves, dwarves, or contain any sinister evil such as Sauron or Morgoth. Instead, the plots details of a simple painter’s journey in the afterlife.

Film Review: Tolkien (2019)

When watching a non-fiction biographical film, there are two separate and fundamental questions which deserve to be asked – and answered. First off, does the film present genuine characters, a decent plot, and inevitably an entertaining product? High standards, yes. But cinema is an art form, and these points are just as good as any to begin a critique. Secondly, and primarily in regard to non-fiction productions, does the film portray historical events and figures accurately?

Evil Labours in Vain: Tolkien on Suffering, Hope, and God's Plan (Letter 64)

I was reading through some of Tolkien’s letters this evening (compiled and available here) and I was so moved by this passage that I thought I’d share it with all of you. One sentence in particular stood out to me the most, “All we do know, and that to a large extent by direct experience, is that evil labours with vast power and perpetual success --in vain: preparing always only the soil for unexpected good to sprout in.” That is such an encouragement to my weary soul, and I hope it is for you, too.