Week 6: The Hobbit

The 1930’s children’s book, The Hobbit is a perfect example of a hero’s journey tale. It starts off with Bilbo Baggins living his normal hobbit life when he meets a wizard called Gandalf and receives his call to adventure. At first, Bilbo refuses his call to adventure when 13 dwarfs show up to his home in Shire ready to fight and kill a dragon. Gandalf acts as Bilbo’s mentor and leads him across the threshold when he leaves shire and decides to join the group on the journey. As the story continues it fits perfectly into each step of the hero’s journey diagram. This was my first time reading anything that was this type of fantasy and comparing it to the hero’s journey setup. In the past, I’ve used historical fiction in previous English classes but this was the first time the hero’s journey truly fit into the plot the story with such ease without having to force any of the steps. I thought that the story was okay, I didn’t mind it but it wasn’t my favorite book type we’ve read this semester so far.

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