That's beautiful (first link) -- I want a hardbound edition with the two colored maps. The maps are so cool in the hardbound editions.
LotR - The Return of the King: "We named the *dog* 'Strider'".
Frodo: Please, what does it always mean, this... this "Aragorn"? Elrond: That's his name. Aragorn, son of Arathorn. Aragorn: I like "Strider." Elrond: We named the *dog* "Strider".
A discussion of Lord of the Rings - The Return of the King. If you're a pervy hobbit fancier, this is the place for you.
I still want to get the Alan Lee illustrated edition, with the blue dustjacket. I've drooled over my godfather's first editions enough to appreciate the idea of having multiple editions in stock, especially one with such nice extras like pictures and hardcover.
Have people seen this edition of the book?
The only thing keeping me from getting it is that I currently have a one volume edition of the trilogy, and I find it awkward to read. It's just too thick. I've been eying the Alan Lee illustrated three volume set. Nutty has a set, and it's gorgeous.
FWIW, I have the 50th Anniversary Edition of The Hobbit, which is a lovely thing.
I like the one-volume paperback edition, since I can go from reading FotR to checking out something in the timeline or elsewhere in the appendices without trying to find my RotK book.
I am a fan of the Alan Lee 3 vols. HC set. I shopped around for a while before settling on it, and as DX notes the single-volume book can be a bit hard to hold due to its size.
Also, because its 2nd print color was red, it looked to me inordinately like the Bible, and I found that irritating. I mean, (1) green or blue would have been better choices and (2) if you're going to print 2-color, there are more creative things you can do with it -- see, e.g., The Neverending Story.
The Lee HCs have high-quality glossy pages, with a fairly large type, so they're very readable (though not convenient to read on public transit).
I have the one volume LotR too.
But you are right -- a three-volume would be less awkward.
Do they have the fold-out maps?
I like the one-volume paperback edition, since I can go from reading FotR to checking out something in the timeline or elsewhere in the appendices without trying to find my RotK book.
The separate volumes are smaller and easier to carry, though. The one volume feels like a brick when carrying or reading for extended periods of time.
I just have the cheap $7 3-volume set. I got them before the movies came out so they don't have movie pictures in them. But I also have the Complete Guide to Middle-Earth which is great. It's like a dictionary/encyclopedia for all the LOTR books and the Silmarillion. (It'll even tell you what page of what edition to look at for the actual text and gives definitions - i.e. "Galad" as in Galadriel = light)
Well, I'm saving up my pennies for the RotKEE gift set, for the Minas Tirith statue (with a hidey-hole in the base!) and bonus disc on the symphony. It's only one more month until the release date!
I forwarded the Amazon notice about the EE to my clueless husband. Now I have to wait until Christmas to see if he will follow through on my blatant hint or not.