Everyone has read Lord of the Rings. Most people have read The Hobbit. Quite a few got through The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales unscathed. But how many have read Mr Bliss?
I got a facsimile edition of it for Christmas a few years back, and it is lovely. It reproduces a manuscript illustrated by the author.
The book itself is on the Children's Book end of the spectrum, and does not really delve deeply into the forces of good and evil. But it does contain a man with appropriate appreciation for tall headgear, a Girabbit (a cross between a Giraffe and a Rabbit, which should put Richard Dawkins into an early grave if he ever heard of it), a red-wheeled motorcar (which makes me rethink my abhorrence of that type of machinery), a Mr Day, a Mrs Knight, a poor donkey with a difficult life, and an Adventure of sorts involving sometimes luminescent bears.
Since you haven't already stormed out to purchase the item (as you are clearly still reading this), I expect you want more information. Writing style, perhaps? It is a little like a nonsensical, surrealism-tinged Wodehouse. I strongly suspect children's toys were part of the inspiration. Children's toys alone cannot account for it all, though. Like when Mr Bliss says "I am blessed and bothered ... if it isn't the Girabbit's head sticking out of my chimney; and he seems to be munching a carpet". I suspect it takes a very special sort of brain to make that happen.
To conclude: I really want a Girabbit.
I got a facsimile edition of it for Christmas a few years back, and it is lovely. It reproduces a manuscript illustrated by the author.
The book itself is on the Children's Book end of the spectrum, and does not really delve deeply into the forces of good and evil. But it does contain a man with appropriate appreciation for tall headgear, a Girabbit (a cross between a Giraffe and a Rabbit, which should put Richard Dawkins into an early grave if he ever heard of it), a red-wheeled motorcar (which makes me rethink my abhorrence of that type of machinery), a Mr Day, a Mrs Knight, a poor donkey with a difficult life, and an Adventure of sorts involving sometimes luminescent bears.
Since you haven't already stormed out to purchase the item (as you are clearly still reading this), I expect you want more information. Writing style, perhaps? It is a little like a nonsensical, surrealism-tinged Wodehouse. I strongly suspect children's toys were part of the inspiration. Children's toys alone cannot account for it all, though. Like when Mr Bliss says "I am blessed and bothered ... if it isn't the Girabbit's head sticking out of my chimney; and he seems to be munching a carpet". I suspect it takes a very special sort of brain to make that happen.
To conclude: I really want a Girabbit.
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
structured procrastinator
/Other Literature: Mr Bliss by J.R.R. Tolkien
29/11/2009 05:01:34 PM
- 5120 Views
I'm Ashamed to Say I've Never Heard of It.
01/12/2009 01:17:32 PM
- 1461 Views
Few people have, I think.
01/12/2009 01:19:23 PM
- 1448 Views
Yes, but Tolkien Is My Harkaway.
01/12/2009 01:30:55 PM
- 1599 Views
Oh, I adore Tolkien
01/12/2009 01:34:58 PM
- 1579 Views
Still the Master, IMHO.
01/12/2009 02:12:43 PM
- 1367 Views
Re: Still the Master, IMHO.
01/12/2009 02:19:28 PM
- 1493 Views
You Wanted Me to Read Pratchett and Now I Have.
01/12/2009 02:56:06 PM
- 1551 Views
Re: You Wanted Me to Read Pratchett and Now I Have.
01/12/2009 03:20:25 PM
- 1356 Views
In Context It Makes Sense, I Think.
01/12/2009 03:28:37 PM
- 1457 Views
Re: In Context It Makes Sense, I Think.
01/12/2009 03:30:18 PM
- 1551 Views
Re: In Context It Makes Sense, I Think.
01/12/2009 04:41:07 PM
- 1415 Views