Deze serie parodieert op humoristische wijze klassieke fantasy-elementen, gesitueerd in een wereld vol absurde avonturen en eigenaardige personages. Volg een onwillige held die, samen met een bonte verzameling metgezellen, aan een schijnbaar eenvoudige, maar chaotische schattenjacht begint. Elke stap zit vol onverwachte wendingen, bizarre ontmoetingen met wezens en magische artefacten die meer problemen dan hulp opleveren. Bereid je voor op lachen en verrassingen in deze satirische kijk op het genre.
Following "Bored of the Rings" comes the equally irreverent parody of Tolkien's other masterwork, "The Hobbit". Bingo Sac Grabbins is asked by the coughing wizard Gandef and some oddly Welsh dwarves to help them relieve the great dragon Smug of his gold.
Bingo Grabbins is a soddit who enjoys a comfortable life (apart from his feet, of course). But his contentment is disturbed when the wizard, Gandef, and a company of bizarrely Welsh dwarves drag him away on an adventure. They have a plot to raid the treasure hoard (or so they say) guarded by Smug, a large and very tedious dragon. Bingo is reluctant to take part in this insane venture, but a dwarven dagger held to his throat soon surprises even himself and off the companions go on a quest that seems truly epic (well, until you read about what later happened to Bingo's cousin, at any rate). Oh, and Bingo finds this ring thing...
THE SELLAMILLION is NOT a parody of Tolkien's THE SILMARILLION. That would be pointless because although all Tolkien fans have a copy, only three of them have read past page 40. It is, however, a parody of all that Tolkien created as he worked on LORD OF THE RINGS. The history of the elderly days. Early missing drafts of LORD OF THE RINGS. A correspondence between the author and publisher on whether it should be a Bellybutton Stud of Doom rather than a Ring of Power. An experimental version of LOTR as if written by Dr Seuss. That sort of thing. It'll be funny. Possibly hilarious. The author's told us it will be. Promised even. And he did write THE SODDIT. And that was quite funny.
Sometimes childish, sometimes rude, always clever and always very, very funny this book has delighted most, and outraged a few, Tolkien fans in the US for nearly 30 years. Pulling in references to popular culture and fantasy literature as a whole this is a killingly effective parody of Lord of the Rings. From the dreary Goddamn (Gollum), to the feckless Arrowroot (Aragorn), the bungling Goodgulf (Gandalf) to the timid, meanminded boggies Frito (Frodo) and Dildo (Bilbo) no character is safe. Fleeing the Nozdrul, bored by acid-casualty Tim Benzedrine and harrassed throughout by the minions of Sorhed the fellowship move through a Middle Earth like no other. Short, sharp and very much to the point even Tolkien would be hard-pressed to surpress a giggle at Bored of the Rings.
Eine Suche, ein Krieg, ein Ring – allein das sind Gründe, jede Hochzeit abzublasen. Und ein König ohne Königreich. Doch ein kleiner, haariger Held namens Frito ist bereit. Zumindest vorbereitet von Gutgolf, dem unglaubwürdigen Zauberer. Bereit zur einzig wahren Mission, die allein Niedermittelerde und die Boggies noch retten könnte. Denn die Horden von fiesen Narks und Trollen haben sich arg vermehrt, und Sauertopf ist nicht tot. Herr Dildo Windbeutel von Beutelsend meint, der Ring muss weg.