Smith Of Wootton Major

"Smith of Wootton Major", first published in 1967, is a short story by J. R. R. Tolkien. The book is intended to explain the meaning of Faery by means of a brief story about a cook and his cake. The story is about a boy who gets a fay-star in a slice of cake from the Master Cook during the Twenty-Four Feast, and explores Faery until it is time to hand on the fay-star. The book was orginally called "The Great Cake", but the title was changed to "Smith of Wootton Major" in an attempt to suggest an early work by P.G. Wodehouse. The story was first published in the Christmas edition of "Redbook" magazine, New York on # 23 November 1967 but without the illustrations by Pauline Baynes that appeared in the published book. It is sometimes published in an omnibus edition with "Farmer Giles of Ham", another Tolkien novella with illustrations by Pauline Baynes. It is not directly connected to the Middle-earth legendarium, although both Faery and Valinor are lands outside of the normal world and they may be one and the same.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
meigs field
u.s. highway 101
poetic edda
patriotic union of kurdistan
iraqi constitutional monarchy
flag of sweden
iraqi national accord
supreme council for the islamic revolution in iraq
valkyrie
shonen ai
yuri
decapitation
english restoration
chicago's american
thunderstorm
pinocchio
adrenochrome
bishop of utrecht
new thought movement
city status in the united kingdom
idi amin
hafez al assad
franois duvalier
x ray photoelectron spectroscopy
john kinzie
william whitelaw, 1st viscount whitelaw
ent
merlyn rees
billy wright (terrorist)
stadtholder
silkworm
flamethrower
radical environmentalism
476 bc
nathuram godse
enochian
belcher islands
arizona league
gulf coast league
arizona fall league
culture of sydney
rocks push
mona lisa
crime in sydney