1924 – Fifty New Poems for Children (Goblin Feet) – 1st Edition – Hard Cover – D. Appleton and Company
First published by Basil Blackwell in England.
First published by Basil Blackwell in England.
Even though this was an English based publisher, ChatGPT gives the following evidence on it being distributed in America: The strongest piece of context is the publisher. Longmans, Green and Co. had a New York office, and bibliographic history for the firm notes that into the 1930s it published some books simultaneously, or nearly so,
See here for details in Hobbit First Editions: https://www.tolkienbooks.us/hob/us/hc/the-hobbit-1938
Goblin Feet, Hobbit excerpt: Riddles, Song: Road Goes Ever on, Poem: Lullaby for Bilbo Baggins.
UK edition published a year earlier by Burns & Oates in England. I have been unable to locate a copy with a dustjacket.
The book club edition is indicated on cover flap.
This is technically the 3rd edition of the anthology but it is the first one with Tolkien content.
This has two simultaneously released variants and I am including both here in one entry. The variant with the blue spine has heavy duty construction and was meant for institutional use.
This book took and combined selected chapters from the earlier The Golden Treasury of Children’s Literature series and combined them into an omnibus edition.
Tolkien translated the book of job from French and also provided feedback on other portions of the translation project.
This book took and combined selected chapters from the earlier The Golden Treasury of Children’s Literature series and combined them into an omnibus edition. This variant has additional text on the cover.
This version lacks the “Selected for Boys and Girls” text on the cover. 1971 was selected as a publication year because the copyright page includes a Library of Congress Catalog Card Number and and those began showing up in 1971.
Contains an essay titled “Guide to the Names in The Lord of the Rings”. It has in the first three editions of the book but removed from later editions. Tolkien originally wrote this guide to assist translators of The Lord of the Rings. He was reacting to some early foreign editions (specifically the first Dutch
This book took and combined selected chapters from the earlier The Golden Treasury of Children’s Literature series and combined them into an omnibus edition. This variant has additional text on the cover.
This version has the “Selected for Boys and Girls” text on the cover and includes an ISBN number. Based on there just being one ISBN number is what likely published in the mid 1980s.
This version has a bar code and a price of $18.95 so it was likely published in the mid-1990s.
Includes numerous quotes from unpublished correspondence, diaries and notebooks. Also quotes (mostly only in part) from numerous pieces of early poetry, some of which are previously unpublished or hard to find. From https://tolkienlibrary.com/booksabouttolkien/tandthegreatwar/description.php: This dense but informative study addresses the long-standing controversy over how J.R.R. tolkien’s WWI experience influenced his literary creations. A London journalist,
Contains a Tolkien manuscript and letter.
The Name ‘Nodens’ and “The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth” extracts.
Based on the barcode data and price ($26.99) this edition is likely around 2015 give or take a few years. Available new at the time of this writing.
From : https://tolkiengateway.net/wiki/J.R.R._Tolkien:_The_Art_of_the_Manuscript J.R.R. Tolkien: The Art of the Manuscript is an exhibition catalogue which accompanies an 2022 exhibition of the same name. The exhibition was held between 19 August and 23 December 2022, organized collaboratively by Marquette University’s Raynor Memorial Libraries and the Haggerty Museum of Art, curated by Tolkien Archivist William M. Fliss