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Shorter Notices All who love that kind of children's book which can be read and re-read by adults should take note that a new star has appeared in this constellation. If you like the adventures of Ratty and Mole you will like THE HOBBIT, by J. R. R. Tolkien (Allen and Unwin, 7s. 6d.). If. in those adventures, you prized the solidity of the social and geographical context in which your small friends moved, you will like " The Hobbit " even better. The hobbit himself, Mr. Bilbo Baggins. is as prosaic as Mole, but fate sets him wander- ing among dwarfs and elves, over goblin mountains, in search of dragon-guarded gold. Every one he meets can be enjoyed in the nursery; but to the trained eye some characters will seem almost mythopoeic- notably lugubrious gollum the fish-man, and the ferociously benevolent Beorn, half man, half bear, in his garden buzzing with bees. The truth is that in this book a number of good thihgs, never before united, have come together; a fund of humour, an understanding of children, and a happy fusion of the scholar's with the poet's grasp of mythology. On the edge of a valley one of Professor Tolkien's char- acters can pause and say: " It smells like elves." It may be years before we pro- duce another author with such a nose for an elf. The Professor has the air of inventing nothing. He has studied trolls and dragons at first hand and describes them with that fidelity which is worth oceans of glib " originality." The maps (with runes) are excellent, and will be found thoroughly reliable by young travellers in the same region. A House in Provence SUNSET HOUSE: More Pcrfume from Provence, by Lady Fortescue (Black- wood, 8s. 6d.), is, in essence, an account of changing houses. Lady Fortescue left the Provencal home in which her installa- tion with her late husband, the historian of the British Army, was so charmingly and amusingly described in " Perfume from Provence" and took a smaller one. The new book is as attractive and humorous as its predecessor. The diffi- culties, delays, and minor disasters all end in laughter, and the venture was crowned with success. Those who read Lady Fortescue's sketches of scenery and flowers will envy her, but she is equally to be envied for her philosophy; her gift for winning affection from people who, though always ready with a smile, do not give it easily; a love of beautiful things; an eye for drollery, and a habit of passing from gaiety to deep feeling without in- congruity. SHORTER NOTICES PROFESSOR TOLKIEN'S " HOBBIT "
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