Editorial —Janet Brennan Croft
“Deep Lies the Sea-Longing”: Inklings of Home —Charles A. Huttar
The Centre of the Inklings: Lewis? Williams? Barfield? Tolkien? —Diana Pavlac Glyer
“Good, Not Safe”: Structure vs. Chaos in Narnia and the Writing Workshop —Ethan Campbell and Robert Jackson
Letters to Malcolm and the Trouble with Narnia: C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Their 1949 Crisis —Eric Seddon
Sacral Kingship: Aragorn as the Rightful and Sacrificial King in The Lord of the Rings —Karen Simpson Nikakis
Archaeology and the Sense of History in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth —Deborah Sabo
The Enigma of Radagast: Revision, Melodrama, and Depth —Nicholas Birns
Tolkien as a Child of The Green Fairy Book —Ruth Berman
Imitative Desire in Tolkien’s Mythology: A Girardian Perspective —Hayden Head
Maldon and Moria: On Byrhtnoth, Gandalf, and Heroism in The Lord of the Rings —Alexander M. Bruce
At Home and Abroad: Éowyn’s Two-fold Figuring as War Bride in The Lord of the Rings —Melissa Smith
Pagan Beliefs in The Serpent’s Tooth —Joe R. Christopher
Nazis, Mythology, and Totalitarian Minds in Kurt Vonnegut’s Mother Night —Gilbert McInnis
(Books reviewed: Milton, Spenser, and the Chronicles of Narnia: Literary Sources for C.S. Lewis’s Novels by Elizabeth Baird Hardy; C.S. Lewis: Life, Works, and Legacy, edited by Bruce L. Edwards; The Company They Keep: C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien as Writers in Community by Diana Pavlac Glyer; and Roots and Branches: Selected Papers on Tolkien by Tom Shippey.)