Their first request was to let them go through to the mountain, but that was not allowed. At the end, Dain took control of the treasure and re-established the dwarven kingdom Under the Mountain.
That would be the men of Laketown and the Army of the Elven King. They have taken over the area to prevent the dwarves from getting out to get food. It also prevents Dain's men from joining the group under the mountain.
Dain only has a small part in the book, but from what we see, he seems honorable. He made peace with the elves, shows respect to his departed cousin, became king, and went through with the previous deal to share treasure with Bard and the elves.
'The Hobbit' of course!
Tolkien's vast imagination.
no
No, The Hobbit was not a Newbery book. Tolkien was not an American and did not live in the United States, so was not qualified to win.
He forgives Bilbo for stealing the Arkenstone, and then tells Bilbo that everyone should be like the hobbits: more concerned with comfort than with treasure. Then Thorin dies. He is buried with the Arkenstone, and Dain, Thorin's cousin, is proclaimed the new king.
read the book
No, The Hobbit is an adventure novel, with war sequences towards the end.
The hobbit is the main character in the book The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien.The word hobbit may come from the Old English word holbytla, which means hole-dweller.
The HobbitThe Fellowship of the Ring, Book IThe Fellowship of the Ring, Book IIThe Two Towers, Book IThe Two Towers, Book IIThe Return of the King, Book IThe Return of the King, Book IIThe Silmarillion is another book that Tolkien also set in Middle-earth thousands of years before the first of the Hobbit books, but it is a history of the Elves and does not concern itself with Hobbits (except briefly in its final chapter where it reviews the events of the end of the Third Age from the point of view of the Elves, which differs slightly from the point of view of the Hobbits).
JRR Tolkien's book The Hobbit starts with that line.