Cagliostro wrote:Well, didn't he write LOTR by starting until he got stuck, then starting over from the beginning again until he finally got through it all? It certainly explains why Fellowship is the best book of the three.
There were several "waves" of revision for Fellowship, especially the first half. He'd get a few chapters in, and then go back to the beginning and revise it in light of the new stuff. This kept happening all the way to Rivendell. However, the first chapter itself--especially Bilbo's party--was rewritten
dozens of times. [I know the feeling.

] As for the journey itself, he included and/or contemplated many different numbers of Hobbits to accompany Frodo (Bingo). The original Fellowship had no Dwarf or Elf, all the way to Moria.
Menolly wrote:I thought Leaf by Niggle was written as an example of allegory in response to Lewis' Narnia? Or did I totally get that impression on my own?
I never heard that. Could be. He was influenced by Lewis in the beginning, and they planned on writing a large story together ... something about time and space. But I believe it was in Tolkien's Letters (an excellent book!) that he acknowledges
Leaf by Niggle to be autobiographical allegory for his own writing process ... concentrating on the individual leaves so much that he couldn't finish painting the tree. He knew he was going to die before he finished his entire vision.