The Lord of the Rings
| The Lord of the Rings | |
|---|---|
| First reference: | The Trip, Part 1 |
The Lord of the Rings is a wildly popular fantasy trilogy, written by J.R.R. Tolkein. Heroes sometimes makes reference to the series.
About
The Lord of the Rings concerns the inhabitants of Middle Earth, including Hobbits Frodo, Sam, and Bilbo, Wizard Gandalf, Dwarf Gimli, Elves Legolas and Galadriel, and the Man Aragorn. The bulk of the story involves Frodo's journey and quest to destroy the One Ring in the land of Mordor, as the evil Sauron attempts to destroy him and reclaim the Ring as his own.
The three books in the trilogy are The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return of the King. Tolkein wrote other works (such as The Hobbit, and The Silmarillion) which take place in the same universe as The Lord of the Rings. Beginning in 2001, filmmaker Peter Jackson famously and ambitiously released The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, based on Tolkein's books.
References
Graphic Novel:The Trip, Part 1
After having his brain "scrambled" into "fanboy soup", Hiro vows to conquer his enemy, even if it is Sauron. Later, Hiro sees, in his imagination, Frodo crawling along a cliff to reach a ring.
Close to You
Hiro, whose "brain is [still] scrambled", says, "We must away". This is a line from the farewell song of Merry and Pippin from Book One of The Fellowship of the Ring.
Graphic Novel:The Trip, Part 2
Hiro imagines he sees a Nazgûl or Ringwraith, in his scrambled brain. Later, he comes across a giant tree which be imagines to be alive, similar to the "Ents" in Lord of the Rings.
See Also
For other uses of ring, see ring (disambig).