TolkienGuide.com
Powered by Collectors Since 2006
Sign In
TolkienGuide.com
Important links:

Guide to Tolkien's Letters
(Nominated for 2026 Tolkien Society Award)
-
Guide to Tolkien Calendars
-
Winner of the 2019 Tolkien Society award for Best Website

1...56789
22 Nov, 2025
2025-11-22 3:55:22 PM UTC
The William Morrow Bovadium Fragments was released in the U.S. this week.

Here is my ARC, same in everyway as the HarperCollins volume, with title pages swapped out and logos changed. My third copy...perhaps too many ;)
Gallery

5058_6921db7469f4d.jpeg 5712X4284 px
22 Nov, 2025
2025-11-22 5:28:06 PM UTC
What's the binding like on the William Morrow version? Sewn or glued? They don't have it in the store near me so I can't check in advance. Thanks!
22 Nov, 2025
2025-11-22 5:32:08 PM UTC

calaei wrote:

What's the binding like on the William Morrow version? Sewn or glued? They don't have it in the store near me so I can't check in advance. Thanks!

Sewn binding, with ribbon marker. Same as the HarperCollins volume.
18 Dec, 2025
2025-12-18 6:09:23 PM UTC
Here's a worthy review of the book in the L.A. Review of Books that appreciates its publication, does not reduce the book to merely an environmentalist tract, and recognizes some of its larger themes such as spiritual decay and civilizational decline.

https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/isengard-in-oxford/
12 January (edited)
2026-1-12 5:35:54 PM UTC


Deluxe slipcased edition of this previously unknown short satirical fantasy by J.R.R. Tolkien edited by his son, Christopher Tolkien, accompanied by illustrations from the author together with an essay, 'The Origin of Bovadium', by Richard Ovenden OBE, and featuring an exclusive foldout colour frontispiece.

As Christopher Tolkien notes in his Introduction, The Bovadium Fragments was a ‘satirical fantasy’ written by his father, which grew out of a planning controversy that erupted in Oxford in the late 1940s, when J.R.R. Tolkien was the Merton Professor of English Language and Literature.

Written initially for his own amusement, Tolkien’s tale was a private academic jest that poked gentle fun at such things as 'the pomposities of archaeologists' and 'the hideousness of college crockery'. However, it was at the same time expressing a barbed cri de coeur against the inexorable rise of motor transport and 'machine-worship' that was overwhelming the tranquillity of his beloved city.

Enriched by a selection of illustrations by the author, and enhanced by Christopher Tolkien's notes and commentary, readers can enjoy at last this tale of an imagined Oxford viewed through the lens of future (and not wholly reliable) academic study.

Richard Ovenden's accompanying essay paints a vivid portrait of Oxford during that time. He also provides rich background to the casus belli which led to the furore that Tolkien witnessed first-hand, as the embers of debate between town planners and the university colleges were fanned into flame.

Playful, erudite, and ultimately tragically moving, The Bovadium Fragments is like nothing else that J.R.R. Tolkien wrote, and its themes remain both provocative and timely. Within its lines may be found a concern for the fragility of our natural world, a love of which that was shared by both father and son. As Christopher Tolkien’s final presentation of his father’s work, it is therefore perhaps fitting that The Bovadium Fragments should be their coda.


This site uses affiliate links for which we may be compensated
$68.00 Amazon.com (Hardcover) - Availability: LEADTIME
£53.46 Amazon.co.uk (Hardcover) - Availability: IN_STOCK
€69.97 Amazon.de (Gebundene Ausgabe) - Availability: IN_STOCK_SCARCE
£65.01 AbeBooks - Availability: Click to check
$78.77 eBay US - Availability: Click to check
£78.76 eBay UK - Availability: Click to check

HarperCollins Link

Gallery

965_696530ead00b9.jpg 1379X1500 px
16 January (edited)
2026-1-16 6:05:29 PM UTC
Three new deluxes this year - looking forward to it! You still cannot get them all on the HC website though, when you click on the deluxe image of this and letters, you get taken to the trade order page. Ony the biography link works for me. A shame!
17 January
2026-1-17 8:52:38 AM UTC
If you want a signed copy of this book, then I would imagine that Blackwells will probably sell them. They have a big advantage that Richard Ovendon works next door to the shop.
25 January
2026-1-25 1:58:56 PM UTC
Has anyone compiled a list of errata for this volume? I have noted quite a few errors/typos. In particular, the Latin text seems not to have been proofread (Cresar for Caesar, redificia for aedificia). I can make a complete list available if anyone is interested and it hasn’t been posted elsewhere.
25 January
2026-1-25 2:09:15 PM UTC
That would be very helpful, HarperCollins staff will most likely see it if you post it on this site.
26 January
2026-1-26 6:15:14 AM UTC

Philomythos wrote:

Has anyone compiled a list of errata for this volume? I have noted quite a few errors/typos. In particular, the Latin text seems not to have been proofread (Cresar for Caesar, redificia for aedificia). I can make a complete list available if anyone is interested and it hasn’t been posted elsewhere.

Please do, it would be nice if they can get these errors fixed before the deluxe edition comes out this year.
1...56789
Jump to Last
All original content © by the submitting authors. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Contact Us