The Hobbit Reflection

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The Hobbit is your typical drown-yourself-into-an-adventure on a rainy Sunday afternoon book, a lovely classic for children’s literature and is filled with all sorts of intriguing stories along their quest. This book revolves around a pleasant hobbit named Mr. Bilbo Baggins, who loves his home very dearly, but encounters thirteen chirpy dwarves and a wizard one day, and is whisked off on a wild adventure he surely thought he’d never experience. He encounters many fights, enemies, companions, as he steadily takes upon the role of the group’s “burglar”. Overall, the book is very well written and is paced rather well. The book is set in a period of time where “the languages and letters were different from ours of today”, quoting from one of the very first lines of the book. The atmosphere changes …show more content…

The plot is shaped really well, as it leads critics to believe in that it was the author’s own experiences that had led him to such a thriller. The settings per chapter is changed due to their frequent change of location due to their journey, but I believe they had passed through places such as Misty Mountains, Rivendell, Lake-town, etc. The settings are creatively mapped out on the very start of the book and at the very end of the book, showing different angles of the world that is set in The Hobbit. Basically, in The Hobbit, Bilbo is firstly introduced as a home-lover, who was rather forced upon the role of the ‘Burglar’ and had been sent off on a quest for a dragon’s treasure, which was claimed to be stolen upon the record of history. They encounter many unexpected difficulties and near-death situations along the way, but the little troop of dwarves had shown him many sights of the world he’d never thought he would’ve

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