"To seek better company"
you have gandalf, you have the 2 blue wizards, the white wizard (i forgot his name :/) and you have the brown wizard (forgot his name too :/) Thats what gandalf says when the hobbit asks him. the blue wizard's names are Alatar and Pallando, the brown wizard is Radagast, and the white wizard is Saruman
In the book "The Hobbit" by Tolkien, Bilbo doesn't find the dwarfs, the dwarfs find him! (With the help of the wizard) It is a wonderful book and I strongly recommend reading it!
Radagast was a wizard that was mentioned in the books. He was given a larger part in the movies, but he was actually modeled more from the book character named Tom Bombadil.
'The Hobbit' of course!
Tolkien's vast imagination.
The prequel to "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy is "The Hobbit," written by J.R.R. Tolkien. It follows the journey of Bilbo Baggins, a hobbit who is reluctantly drawn into an adventure with a group of dwarves and the wizard Gandalf to reclaim treasure from the dragon Smaug. The events of "The Hobbit" set the stage for the epic tales that unfold in "The Lord of the Rings."
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
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).
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.