Friday, December 10, 2021

"In the Tolkien Tradition"

So, pulling my books off the shelf yesterday to check something before hitting send on my most recent post, I noticed the blurb slipped just below the author's name on the front cover of this one. For those who can't see the small type, here's what it says:




The Weirdstone of Brisingamen

ALAN GARNER

A fantastic novel in the Tolkien tradition

"A prime favorite of mine."

--ANDRE NORTON 

It's the  ' in the Tolkien tradition' part that's interesting. This book (a 1960 Ace paperback) must have been among the first, if not the first, to try to sell a fantasy novel by claiming on the cover that it was like Tolkien or the next Tolkien or that  if you liked Tolkien, you'll love . . .

I wonder how many books have borne some version of that line over the years. Dozens? A hundred? More?  

But to see if so early -- for a book published in 1954-56 to already be used as a milestone/marker in 1960 strikes me as extraordinary, and once again drives home the point that there's only one Tolkien, and his impact was early, massive, and enduring.


--John R.

--current reading: KA by John Crowley





 

3 comments:

Mykhailo Nazarenko said...

ISFDB lists this as the 1966 edition (https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?7707). 1960 is the year of the Collins hardcover.

Wurmbrand said...

Of possible interest:

https://tolkienandfantasy.blogspot.com/2011/07/pre-1970-paperbacks-with-comparisons-to.html

https://tolkienandfantasy.blogspot.com/2011/11/dale-nelsons-summation-on-tolkien-in.html

Dale Nelson

John D. Rateliff said...

Dear Mykhailo
Thanks for the corrective. This makes things more interesting. So much so that I've decided to move the discussion out of Comments and into a follow-up post of its own.
--John R.