Amazon's limited-time buy one, get one 50% off promotion features the stunning hardcover Lord of the Rings Illustrated Edition for just $47.49—a 47% discount. This collector's volume combines all three novels into a single tome, enriched with original illustrations by J.R.R. Tolkien himself. The striking red-edged pages make this oversized edition a bookshelf centerpiece, complete with a protective slipcover, two fold-out maps by Christopher Tolkien, and replicas of Book of Mazarbul pages.
The promotion includes hundreds of popular titles and box sets for extra savings, though this remains the only Lord of the Rings illustrated edition in the sale.
Save 50% on The Lord of the Rings Illustrated Edition

Lord of the Rings Illustrated Edition
Was $90.00 Now 47% off$47.49 at Amazon
Completing Tolkien's illustrated trilogy are equally breathtaking editions of The Hobbit and The Silmarillion, featuring green and blue slipcases with dozens of the author's original sketches and maps. Note that The Silmarillion edition doesn't qualify for the current BOGO promotion.
Premium deluxe versions of all three fantasy masterpieces are also available—though not part of the sale—currently at their 2025 price lows. These collector's items boast gold-edged pages, quarterbound leather spines, and exclusive content missing from standard editions. Normally priced up to $250, now's an exceptional opportunity to acquire these luxurious sets at discounted rates.
Complete Your Tolkien Collection Today

The Hobbit Illustrated Edition
0$75.00 save 45%$41.14 at Amazon
The Silmarillion Illustrated Edition
0See it at Amazon
Lord of the Rings Deluxe Illustrated Edition
0$250.00 save 59%$103.18 at Amazon
The Hobbit Deluxe Illustrated Edition
0$195.00 save 31%$135.27 at Amazon
The Silmarillion Deluxe Illustrated Edition
0$195.00 save 35%$126.49 at AmazonFor more Middle-earth content, read our review of Prime Video's The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power Season 2 before Season 3 premieres. We awarded it a 6/10, noting it "delivers epic battles and emotional depth, though suffers from narrative bloat and redundant subplots."