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  • coming up to halfway through the 3rd book in the Lord of the Rings series....wondering what that as the ring had been 'destroyed" what was going to happen next......when it turns out the rest of the book is the Appendix! Has anyone read all of the Appendix?

  • Yes (the Appendices, though). However, if you want to get into Middle-earth more fully, I'd recommend taking a break from the LotR here and turning to the 'Silmarillion' (if you haven't read that yet). The Appendices were intended by Tolkien to give some background to the LotR so people could understand how deeply-rooted in history the story was, and they were also, frankly, a gathering-place for some ancillary material that Tolkien didn't have a story for. The 'Silmarillion' has flaws (well-documented by Christopher Tolkien in the History of Middle-earth series), but is probably a better place to continue than the Appendices, which give tantalising glimpses at the Silmarillion material. I'd recommend reading the 'Silmarillion' together with 'The Atlas of Middle-earth' by Karen Wynn Fonstad (good maps that make what happens a lot clearer).

    Alternatively, you could try getting on with some of the recent editions by Christopher Tolkien of the Great Tales of the First Age--'The Fall of Gondolin', 'The Children of Húrin', 'Beren and Lúthien'. These are not fully-formed books but compiled from drafts wholly or partially published before, but re-edited. 'The Children of Húrin' is Tolkien's second-best dramatic idea, after LotR, I think (as I said, not fully-written, but comprehensible with a bit of thought).

    Obviously, if you don't want to get into it that heavily, feel free to read the Appendices next. The above recommendations are really just for a different order, as the Appendices came out before a lot of other material that I think it is best to read first.

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