An Unofficial 'The Rest Is History' Reading List

The Lord of the Rings

Author: J.R.R. Tolkien

Referenced in 21 episodes

Buy from Amazon #CommissionsEarned

Episodes Referencing This Book

September 21, 2025

Context:

Used as a comparison to explain the relationship between Homer's Iliad and Hesiod's Theogony - the Iliad is compared to Lord of the Rings as a close-up epic adventure.

September 05, 2025

Context:

Mentioned in comparison to The Hobbit in the bonus content, discussing how it was written later when the Nazi threat was more immediate.

May 14, 2025

Context:

Dominic briefly quotes from The Lord of the Rings when describing Peter the Great's retribution against those who might join Mazepa, saying 'Peter's wrath will be terrible, his retribution swift, to quote the Lord of the Rings.'

March 20, 2025

Context:

Referenced as a comparison when describing the Danish royal seat at Yelling, with its ancient graves, gold-ringed warriors, and great halls being described as 'like something out of Lord of the Rings'

March 17, 2025

Context:

Mentioned in the context that Tolkien wanted to write Lord of the Rings 'to give the English back the mythology that he thought they had lost as a result of the conquest.'

December 19, 2024

Context:

Referenced when discussing the 717 siege of Constantinople by Umayyad forces, noting this siege was 'one of the models for Tolkien's portrayal of the siege of Minas Tirith'

September 27, 2023

Context:

Mentioned in passing when discussing the sense of brotherhood from the trenches, comparing it to 'Frodo and Sam' in Tolkien's work.

July 30, 2023

Context:

Referenced as a comparison when describing the mushroom cloud crowned by fire from Vesuvius, likening it to the explosion of Mount Doom

May 15, 2023

Context:

Mentioned in comparison to King Solomon's Mines - Tolkien was described as 'a massive fan of Haggard' and similarities in quest structure noted

September 01, 2022

Context:

Discussed extensively as the sequel to The Hobbit, commissioned by publisher Stanley Unwin in 1937, taking 17 years to write

August 29, 2022

Context:

Described as 'the single best-selling English language book of the 20th century' and main subject of discussion

July 22, 2022

Context:

Mentioned as Tolkien's later work that also embodies the same idealized rural England vision that Metroland was selling to suburban homebuyers.

May 16, 2022

Context:

Referenced via Gollum as another example of mid-century literature exploring inner evil

March 01, 2022

Context:

Referenced when discussing the siege of Constantinople, noting it was 'one of the kind of inspirations for Tolkien's portrayal of the siege of Minas Tirith.'

January 03, 2022

Context:

Extensively discussed as the main subject of the second half of the podcast, described as 'the best-selling novel of the 20th century' and analyzed for its themes about industrialization, Christianity, and the horrors of the 20th century.

September 21, 2021

Context:

Tom compares the excitement of the Persian Wars story to reading Tolkien: 'I found it thrilling in the way that I found Lord of the Rings thrilling.'

July 30, 2021

Context:

Referenced as an analogy for how their Olympic podcast series expanded from one planned episode to multiple parts, comparing it to how Tolkien's book grew from one short book into three.

July 06, 2021

Context:

Referenced when discussing how the hall of Herot in Beowulf provided the model for Tolkien's Hall of Theoden (Meduseld) in Lord of the Rings

May 17, 2021

Context:

Mentioned multiple times as a comparison to Game of Thrones, discussing how Tolkien 'basically invents high fantasy' and comparing the two works' approaches to religion, violence, and the medieval world

January 11, 2021

Context:

Mentioned as a more creative response to early medieval history than rigorous historical fiction

December 21, 2020

Context:

Referenced when discussing the significance of March 25th - Tom notes that Tolkien had Mordor collapse and the ring destroyed on March 25th because he knew it was considered the date of Christ's death