“Recent Convert”, a regular contributor to the lively debate and discussion here on the Ink Desk, asked me, in a comment to my recent post on “The Philosophy of Tolkien”, what I thought of the work of Tom Shippey, one of the world’s leading Tolkien scholars. I would respond as follows:

Tom Shippey, for those who don’t know, is the author of The Road to Middle-earth and, more recently, the excellent J.R.R. Tolkien: Author of the Century. He is, in my judgement, possibly the finest Tolkien scholar alive today, in spite of the fact that he is not a Christian (as far as I know) and has a singular blind-spot about the profundity of Catholic symbolism and imagery in The Lord of the Rings.

It might seem odd to suggest that someone could be the finest of scholars of Tolkien’s masterpiece whilst being singularly blind to the fact that The Lord of the Rings is, to quote Tolkien himself, “a fundamentally religious and Catholic work”. Yet, in spite of this real Achilles heel, Shippey is so good on the linguistic dimension of Tolkien’s work, and so defiant of the “political correctness” of those literary critics who sneer at Tolkien’s achievement, that he has earned and commands the respect of all those who share his love for Middle-earth.

I feel grateful that I had the honour of meeting Shippey a few years ago. It was back in 2002 or 2003, during the exciting period when Peter Jackson’s movies of The Lord of the Rings were being released. He and I were both booked to speak at a Tolkien conference at Cleveland State University, part of the schedule of which was a non-stop continuous reading of the whole of Tolkien’s epic, with students taking it in turns, all through the night, to read for half an hour each.

Tom Shippey and I were aware of each other’s work and aware of our “religious differences” with regard to the critical reading of The Lord of the Rings. At the same time, Shippey seemed to be respectful of my work and certainly not dismissive, whereas my respect for his work was considerable, notwithstanding his failure to address the work theologically. I believe we attended each other’s talk (I certainly attended his) and a sort of Mexican stand-off ensued in which neither of us mentioned the obvious “religious differences”.

The silence was finally broken when we returned to the hotel at which we were both staying and decided, as two Englishmen in exile (Shippey was teaching at St Louis University and would return to England following his retirement in 2008), that we needed to break the ice over a pint of Guinness or two (or three) in the hotel bar. At first we played safe, talking about the Old Country and the things we missed. As the liquid loosened our loquaciousness, we proceeded to talk about rugby, for which he had a passion, and finally, and inevitably, The Lord of the Rings. I chastised him mildly and good-naturedly for his sidestepping of the religious issue in his talk and, to my surprise, he conceded readily that he did not fully understand the religious and theological aspects of the work but most certainly did not dismiss it or deride it.

After my first and sadly my only meeting with Tom Shippey, I was impressed with him as a man as much as I was impressed with him as a scholar. He had about him something of the robust masculinity of Hilaire Belloc and a disarming honesty and candour, which is all too rare in the academy.

Returning to the original question, I think highly of Tom Shippey’s work, as I think highly of Tom Shippey himself. I would recommend the man and his work to anyone.