Gandalf
In the book the Hobbit they do speak.
Before they reached Rivendale, the pony carrying their food fell into a stream. Going over the mountian, the ponies and all their belongings were taken by the goblins. In Mirkwood they ate it all.
'The Hobbit' of course!
The wolves are gathering to meet up with the goblins. They had been working together for some time. This night they were getting ready for a big raid down into the valley against the settlers there to kill and wipe them out.
Tolkien's vast imagination.
The arrival of the eagles was a major turning point in the Battle of the Five Armies. They threw down the goblins from the heights. However, even with the Eagles the battle would have gone ill. The actual saving grace of the three armies was the arrival of Beorn in his bear form. The book describes him as tossing orcs and wargs aside like straw. He also killed Bolg and his bodyguard. With this loss, the goblins were toast.
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.
No, The Hobbit is an adventure novel, with war sequences towards the end.
read the book
Enid Blyton
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).