There is no "best book in the world". The evaluation of a book is dependent on the readers tastes, age, experience, literary experiences and such. The Tolkien books may seem overly involved with the minutia of language and customs and derivative of various folk stories to some readers. Readers used to adventure stories may find the detail covering parts of the journey to be overly involve. Then again folks who have seen only the movies and never read the actual book have a slanted view of the story telling capacity of the author.
The sequel to The Hobbit is The Lord of the Rings.
'The World of the Rings: Language, Religion, and Adventure in Tolkien' is a book written by Jared Lobdell as a commentary on 'The Lord of the Rings' and the entire legendarium of J.R.R. Tolkien. .
everybody knows the answer is yes
The Silmarillian was edited and published by Tolkien's son, Christopher.
J.R.R. Tolkien primarily wrote in the fantasy genre, with his most famous works being "The Hobbit" and "The Lord of the Rings" series. His writing often includes themes of heroism, friendship, and the battle between good and evil in a richly imagined world.
J.R Tolkien
J.R.R. Tolkien wrote a story called "Roverandom" for his children. It is a fantasy novel about a dog who gets turned into a toy by a wizard and embarks on a series of adventures. Tolkien created this story to entertain his children after one of their toys was lost at the beach.
His writings are well loved. For a time it was the second most read book.
It seems C. S. Lewis had a conversation with J. R. R. Tolkien about dehumanizing trends in science fiction, and he decided to write Out of the Silent Planet as a result of that conversation. He agreed to write a book about space travel, and Tolkien one about time travel. Tolkien never finished his.
JRR Tolkien is not in The Hobbit, he is the author of the book. He does a bit of narration in some places, a sort of aside. Tolkien is English and was born in South Africa.
Stephenie Meyer did write a book name Eclipse it's part of the Twilight Saga, book three.
Most likely The Lord Of The Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien because of the many similarities. Such as: The Ra'Zac are similar to Tolkien's Ring Wraiths. Also, Tolkien created languages whole languages for his world of Middle Earth like Christopher Paolini did.