12
Christopher Tolkien's preface in the "pocket edition" is a reprint of the text published in 2007, with a small change in pagination and the reproduction of Mirkwood. The 2007 text was revised and shortened, omitting the facsimile manuscript pages and the rest of the art printed earlier; presumably this was done because John Rateliff's History of The Hobbit was published that same year and included transcription from the earliest surviving manuscript as well as some comment on illustrations (for which one also could refer to our J.R.R. Tolkien: Artist and Illustrator).
Christopher's foreword (as it was first called) dates from the 50th anniversary Hobbit of 1987. It was revised and expanded in the deluxe edition of 2004, in which the manuscript facsimiles were printed in colour (they're in black and white in the 1987 edition). We reproduced Tolkien's illustrations in The Art of The Hobbit, but of the two pages of manuscript only the one with art on it (the early sketch of Thror's Map). John Rateliff also reproduced only the first of the two pages in his History.
A fuller comparison may be found in a new post on our blog.
The printing and binding of the "Pocket Hobbit" are perfectly good for an ordinary trade book, though of course the type (reduced from the standard edition) is somewhat small. Anyway, it doesn't include the full text of Christopher's foreword or the manuscript facsimiles.
Wayne & Christina
Christopher's foreword (as it was first called) dates from the 50th anniversary Hobbit of 1987. It was revised and expanded in the deluxe edition of 2004, in which the manuscript facsimiles were printed in colour (they're in black and white in the 1987 edition). We reproduced Tolkien's illustrations in The Art of The Hobbit, but of the two pages of manuscript only the one with art on it (the early sketch of Thror's Map). John Rateliff also reproduced only the first of the two pages in his History.
A fuller comparison may be found in a new post on our blog.
The printing and binding of the "Pocket Hobbit" are perfectly good for an ordinary trade book, though of course the type (reduced from the standard edition) is somewhat small. Anyway, it doesn't include the full text of Christopher's foreword or the manuscript facsimiles.
Wayne & Christina
Thanks for that W&C! (--or should that be H&Sc?) I have just read your expanded explanation in your blog. Very interesting.
BH
BH
I found the first printing yesterday in WH Smith in Oxford, surprised it is on sale in the UK, but nice to have both versions of the book
So the story about first impressions only shipping abroad would appear to be utter rubbish then...
BH
BH
I'm assuming you didn't though? i.e. you had the 2nd impression already, that you bought in the UK somewhere; & the 1st impression you just acquired, again in the UK. Being angry for others is, of course, perfectly fine & proper though!
But, yes, pretty annoying for those who had the 1st impression shipped from Canada or Australia, or something, only to find the 1st impressions (if it turns out to be the case) are now in shops here in the UK.
I don't have either, but I'm keeping my eyes open...
BH
P.S. Trotter, you are perilously close to a massive 1000 posts on old TCG!
But, yes, pretty annoying for those who had the 1st impression shipped from Canada or Australia, or something, only to find the 1st impressions (if it turns out to be the case) are now in shops here in the UK.
I don't have either, but I'm keeping my eyes open...
BH
P.S. Trotter, you are perilously close to a massive 1000 posts on old TCG!
No I just had the second printing until I found the first yesterday, had not noticed that I am close to 1000 posts, though Khamul is also not far off.
12