We also have the following books:
Roverandom (a fantasy about a dog -- published in 1998)
Mr Bliss (a guy in a tall hat that drives a car around, illustrated by Tolkien -- published in 1983)
The Letters of JRR Tolkien, edited by Humphrey Carpenter -- published in 1981 (edit: didn't see this or Father Christmas Letters on Fr. Adam's list first time around -- slipped by my notice I guess)
The Father Christmas Letters, illustrated by Tolkien -- published in 1976
Pictures by JRR Tolkien, collected drawings, edited by Christopher Tolkien -- published in 1979
The Road Goes Ever On, A Song Cycle -- poems and songs of Tolkien, music by Donald Swann -- originally published in 1962 or 1967 (hard to tell -- words 1962 and music 1967 but there is no publishing date that we can see). We also have a second copy (different cover) that says it is third printing (but can't find a publishing date either)
About Tolkien:
Guide to Middle Earth (second printing 1971, with wonderful slip cover illustration by Tim Kirk, my favourite illustrator)
Complete Guide to Middle Earth (1978 -- so it includes entries for The Silmarillion which the one above did not since S had not come out yet)
The Languages of Middle Earth, by Ruth S. Noel, published in 1980.
Tolkien, A Look Behind The Lord of the Rings, by Lyn Carter, third printing published in 1970 (with on of the nifty Ballantine Adult Fantasy covers)
We also have various special editions of H and LotR -- the "Redbook of Westmarch" (as I like to refer to it) version of LotR with the single volume red leather cover. I have the original hardbound "black" cover sets with the wonderful orange, red, and purple Eye of Mordor engraved on the covers (with slipcovers and box!). I horribly lament having lent out my large paperback three volume set with the white covers and the circular image on the front -- they have disappeared but I have good memories of them.
We also have the "companion to the redbook" (as I refer to it) special edition version of the Hobbit with green leather cover. And the version illustarated by Michael Hague, and the British edition that I ordered from Blackwells back in the 70's (third printing, 5th impression 1970). I always remember getting nice handwritten replies from them addressed to Stanley Anderson, esq. Just like in 84 Charing Cross Road!:-). We also have a "graphic novel" of the Hobbit which though not the complete text, has a very good portion of it and is fairly impressive in its extent and illustration.
I also have various records of Tolkien reading poems and excerpts from LotR, Christopher Tolkien reading from Silmarillion and LotR, the Donald Swann recordings of the songs from the book The Road Goes Ever On.
I also terribly lament that long ago I had a full poster-size map of Middle Earth with all the place names written in Elvish, but alas, I don't know where it is now.
And finally (I think, other things may pop into my memory) I have virtually the complete set (up to a certain date when I stopped subscribing -- late 90's I think, not sure) going back to 1968 of Tolkien Journal, Mythlore and its associated newsletter "Mythprint" (publication of the Mythopoeic Society focussing on Tolkien, Lewis, and Charles Williams), and various side publications like Parma Eldalamberon (Quenya for "Book of the Elven-tongues") which is a journal of linguistic studies of Tolkien's languages, Mythic Circle (publication of fictional works from members -- Angelee had a couple things in there, as well as my own "Humano-Arboreal Transmogrification" short story) and various journals of collections of papers presented at Mythcons over the years.
What I cherish most in these journals is the collection of drawings by Tim Kirk, as I mentioned above, my favourite illustrator. That includes his map of Narnia and also a map of Edgstow and the surrounding areas from That Hideous Strength. I have meant for some time to scan more of his images but here are two (they are Lewis related, but Tim Kirk has many wonderful Tolkien illustrations too). The first is Jadis showing the children Charn, and the second is Tashbaan (the place the images are stored has monthly bandwidth limits -- if you can't see them at some point, I can try putting them somewhere else). I saw these (and other) Kirk illustrations before I had read the books and they are some of my strongest and earliest examples of Lewis' Joy -- I didn't know what the books were like but seeing the images created that intense, almost painful, longing and I simply HAD to find out what books the images were from, especially the one of Charn. Anyway here are the two I have available :
--Stanley
…on a night of rain Frodo smelled a sweet fragrance on the air and heard the sound of singing that came over the water. And then it seemed to him that as in his dream in the house of Bombadil, the grey rain-curtain turned all to silver glass and was rolled back, and he beheld white shores and beyond them a fair green country under a swift sunrise.