
The Hobbit, the Fellowship of the Ring, and The Return of the King are all pieces of the same saga. What other book might you compare The Two Towers to and why? I am delighted to finally find these books performed in an unabridged manner on Audible! Rob Inglis did a wonderful job on the narration, and I found myself once again transported to the wilds of Middle Earth on a great exploration.

LOTR TWO TOWERS AUDIOBOOK SERIES
The Tolkien series is one of my favorite reads and to narrow down any one piece would be impossible to do. What did you love best about The Two Towers? This book ends with characters in dire peril! Better have The Return of the King ready. New characters add to the weaving of this tale. Each character is tested to their limits. Distressing because new foes are introduced and must be routed or defeated. The story is advanced in a pleasing/distressing way. The characters are rich and worth getting to know.

Can Aragorn and his friends aid them against the evil armies of Isengard? This book is a fast mover. The people of Rohan are in trouble because of the treachery of Sauruman, the wizard. Can they rescue the hobbits? What awaits them in Fanghorn Forest? Who or what will they meet there? In the plains of Rohan they meet Eomer, a captain of that country. Will he be a help or a hindrance? Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli decide to race after Merry and Pippen who were captured by Urak-hai orcs. Who or what will they meet on the way? Faramir, a captain of Gondor, and younger brother of Boromir finds them in the forests of Ithilien. Together they struggle towards what seems an impossible goal: getting into Mordor without being caught or seen. Frodo pities Gollum as Bilbo did and hopes he can be redeemed. Frodo and Sam head for Mordor, followed and eventually lead by Gollum.

The fellowship has been split apart by which direction to take the ring. I will go out on a limb and say I think he was talking about the alliance between Isengard and Bara-dur. There has been a lot of speculation about which two towers Tolkien meant.
