Sat, Jun 20 ¡ 12:00 PM PDT
Discussion only. Bring any edition - print, ebook, audiobook notes, whatever works.
Short summary
We finished The Fellowship of the Ring .
The Fellowship broke. Boromir fell. Frodo left. Sam followed. And now the story does something interesting: it refuses to stay with one hero.
This next stretch is the âmeanwhileâ section - Aragorn, Legolas, Gimli, Merry, and Pippin trying to survive the consequences of a mission that has already split apart.
And honestly, this is where some characters get way more interesting than they were before.
Aragorn stops being âmysterious Striderâ and has to become a leader in daylight. Merry and Pippin stop being comic relief and get pulled into the machinery of war. The Ents wake up. Rohan enters the story. Saruman becomes less abstract and more disgusting. And the world starts feeling politically alive, not just mythic.
If Fellowship was about forming trust, this section is about what happens after the group breaks and everyone has to become more than they thought they were.
Reading for this session
Weâre starting The Two Towers .
Read Book III :
The Departure of Boromir
The Riders of Rohan
The Uruk-hai
Treebeard
The White Rider
The King of the Golden Hall
Helmâs Deep
The Road to Isengard
Flotsam and Jetsam
The Voice of Saruman
The PalantĂr
This is a clean cutoff because it finishes the Aragorn / Rohan / Ents / Isengard half before we switch back to Frodo and Sam.
A few questions already sitting in my head
What does Boromirâs death do to the story? Is it redemption, tragedy, warning, or all three?
Aragorn finally has to lead. Does he feel natural in that role, or is he still becoming the person everyone needs him to be?
Merry and Pippin: when do they stop feeling like side characters? What changes them - danger, luck, friendship, or being underestimated?
Treebeard and the Ents: are they comic relief, ancient grief, environmental rage, or Tolkien saying âthe slowest people in the room may be the ones you should fearâ?
Rohan: what does this kingdom add to the world? Does it feel noble, fragile, tired, doomed, alive?
Sarumanâs voice: why is persuasion scarier here than brute force? What does Tolkien understand about people who make evil sound reasonable?
Helmâs Deep: does the battle feel heroic, desperate, or just like people being cornered by history?
One question I really want us to wrestle with
When the Fellowship breaks, does the story become weaker because everyone is separated - or stronger because people finally reveal who they are without the group protecting them?
What the night will feel like
Weâll start with a quick round:
Who surprised you most in this section?
Then weâll stay close to scenes and turning points - Boromirâs end, the chase, Fangorn, ThĂŠoden waking up, Helmâs Deep, Saruman talking, and that creepy little PalantĂr moment at the end.
No lore-flexing required.
No âwho knows the appendices best.â
Weâre reading the book as a living story about courage, manipulation, war, aging power, and what happens when ordinary people get pulled into events too large for them.
Going forward
If you like, bring one question you want to ask the room. Iâll bring questions, but I want to make space for questions from the Fellowship too.
When and where
đď¸ Date: Sat, June 20th
đ Time:e 12 PM
đ Location: We are meeting on level 5 south side room in the library for Lord of the Rings today
Cap 13 + waitlist
Iâm capping this at 13 again if I can. It was weirdly perfect.