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Tolkien s world randel helms biography

          Randel McCraw Helms (born November 16, in Montgomery, Alabama) is an American professor of English literature, a writer on J. R. R. Tolkien and critical..

          The development of a theory of fantasy - The Hobbit and the discovery of a world - A world of myth - The Lord of the Rings as contemporary mythology - Stucture and aesthetic - Tolkien's minor prose.

        1. The development of a theory of fantasy - The Hobbit and the discovery of a world - A world of myth - The Lord of the Rings as contemporary mythology - Stucture and aesthetic - Tolkien's minor prose.
        2. Randel Helms looks at Tolkien's major works, "The Hobbit" and "Lord of the Rings", both separately and in relation to each other, and traces the development.
        3. Randel McCraw Helms (born November 16, in Montgomery, Alabama) is an American professor of English literature, a writer on J. R. R. Tolkien and critical.
        4. Now, in this long-awaited study, Professor Helms shows how the master story-teller succeeded in combining a scholarly knowledge of traditional mythological.
        5. Tolkien's World is a study by scholar Randel Helms of J.R.R.
        6. Randel Helms

          Literature professor

          Randel McCraw Helms, also known as Loyce Helms[1] (born November 16, 1942, in Montgomery, Alabama)[2] is an American professor of English literature, a writer on J.

          R. R. Tolkien and critical writer on the Bible.

          Biography

          Helms studied at University of California, Riverside, B.A. 1964, University of Washington, Ph.D. 1968, then taught from 1968 at the University of California as assistant professor of English, before becoming professor at the Department of English, Arizona State University.

          In 2007 he established the Randel and Susan McCraw Helms Homecoming Writing Contest for undergraduate students.[3]

          Writings on William Blake

          As Loyce Randel Helms he wrote his dissertation on William Blake: Artful Thunder: a Literary Study of Prophecy[4][5] He has also written on Blake's "Everlasting Gospel" (1980).[6]

          Writings on Tolkien

          Helms's many writings on J.

          R. R. Tolkien