Tolkien lived through WW2.
Which he used as inspiration for how the nations would react to a great catastrophe.
I think this, along with most of the comments in this thread, is oversimplistic and does Tolkien and his work a pretty serious disservice.
Tolkien was an academic, a student of myth. The reason his works are some of the best-selling books ever written, and that they still resonate with people so strongly seventy-five years later, is not because LOTR is a gritty take on the realities of trench warfare - it’s because Tolkien understood, possibly better than anyone else ever has, feelings, experiences, and tropes that are timeless, ideas that are innate to the human experience.
Everyone saying “Tolkien based LOTR on his experiences in WWI” is entirely missing the fact that Tolkien was attempting to create a mythology. Mythical stories across the world throughout history, from the Bible to Germanic sagas, to Finnish myth, to Greek myth, to middle-eastern myths, feature similar tropes of “not acting until it’s almost too late”, and I honestly think it’s insulting to ignore the fact that Tolkien was tapping into his vast understanding of myth to distill truths about the human experience that have nearly universal appeal, only to instead put him into a shallow box of “he wuz riting about Worl War I/II/nuclear bombs/whatevs lol”.
Did those experiences factor into his Middle Earth writings? Of course they did, but it’s still badly missing the point to claim that his works are allegorical as a result. That’s why Tolkien always reacted so strongly when people accused him of allegory - it’s, frankly, an insult, and a complete misunderstanding of the point of Tolkien’s work in the first place.
Goddamn, your comment inspired me to reread the trilogy. Well done!
I’m right in the middle of my yearly reread now as well. :)
Hey, me too! Rohan has just arrived to aid Gondor. God I love these books.
Arise now, arise, Riders of Théoden! Dire deeds awake: dark is it eastward. Let horse be bridled, horn be sounded! Forth, Eorlingas!
Arise, arise, Riders of Théoden! Fell deeds awake: fire and slaughter! Spear shall be shaken, shield be splintered, a sword-day, a red day, ere the sun rises! Ride now, ride now! Ride to Gondor!
One of my very favorite scenes in the story. Gives you chills





