Tom Loback
From Tolkien Gateway
Tom Loback (1949 — 5 March 2015[1]) was a linguist and artist from New York. His artwork has been published in Beyond Bree, Vinyar Tengwar, Mythlore, Parma Eldalamberon, Little Gwaihir and several other journals.[2] He also had work in the Halls of the Elven-king, a supplement in the MERP series.
His relevant artwork features tengwar-inscriptions in Quenya and Sindarin.[2]
Bibliography, selected[edit | edit source]
Articles[edit | edit source]
- 1988: Vinyar Tengwar 1
- "Chart of Body Parts in Quenya"
- 1989: Parma Eldalamberon 8
- "Pronouns in Noldorin and Sindarin"
- "Orc Military Organization and Language"
- 1989: Vinyar Tengwar 3
- "Orc Talk"
- 1989: Vinyar Tengwar 4
- "Essitalmar: The Roots of Middle-earth Names and Places" (column, ed.)
- 1989: Vinyar Tengwar 5
- "Essitalmar" (column, ed.)
- 1989: Vinyar Tengwar 6
- "Essitalmar: Context, Context, Context ..." (column, ed.)
- 1989: Vinyar Tengwar 7
- "Essitalmar: 'What's In a Name?'" (column, ed.)
- 1989: Vinyar Tengwar 8
- "Essitalmar: Place-names of Beleriand" (column, with fold-out map, ed.)
- 1990: Parma Eldalamberon 9
- "To -E or -NE? On the Quenya Past Tense"
- "The Wedding of Tuor and Idril"
- 1990: Vinyar Tengwar 10
- "Essitalmar: Finduilas, a fair name for a fair maid" (column, ed.)
- 1990: Vinyar Tengwar 11
- "Essitalmar: The Longswordsman" (column, ed.)
- 1990: Vinyar Tengwar 13
- "Essitalmar: Star-struck" (column, ed.)
- 1991: Vinyar Tengwar 15
- "Thus Spake Feanor"
- 1991: Vinyar Tengwar 17
- "Essitalmar: Quenya Rag" (column, ed.)
- 1991: Vinyar Tengwar 18
- "Essitalmar: The Horror, the Horror..." (column, ed.)
- 1991: Vinyar Tengwar 20
- "Essitalmar: Dor Gyrth i Chuinar" (column, ed.)
- 1992: Vinyar Tengwar 22
- "Essitalmar: Open Sesame!" (column, ed.)
- 1992: Vinyar Tengwar 26
- "Essitalmar: Thufferin' Thucotash!" (column, ed.)
RPG supplements[edit | edit source]
See also[edit | edit source]
External links[edit | edit source]
References
- ↑ ""Tom Loback RIP" Topic", theminiaturespage.com (accessed 6 March 2015)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Tom Loback", The Elvish Linguistic Fellowship (accessed 6 March 2015)