TOM SHIPPEY received his PhD from the University of Cambridge. In an academic teaching career lasting 43 years (1965-2008), he taught at six universities, including Oxford and Harvard. His first published article, more than fifty years ago, was "The Fairy-Tale Structure of Beowulf" (1969), while his first published book was Old English Verse (1972). Since then, he has published well over a hundred academic articles, and more than twenty monographs and edited collections, notably (with Andreas Haarder) The Critical Heritage: Beowulf (1998), and most recently, Beowulf and the North before the Vikings (2022). He also written more than 200 reviews on fantasy and science fiction for The Wall Street Journal, as well as many contributions, often on archaeology, to The London Review of Books. He is well known for books that have reached a wider community of readers outside academia, such as Laughing Shall I Die (2018) and his much-reprinted and often-translated books on Tolkien, The Road to Middle-earth (1981) and J.R.R. Tolkien: Author of the Century (2000).
LEONARD NEIDORF received his PhD from Harvard University. He has been Professor of English at Nanjing University since 2016. He is the author of two monographs on Beowulf: The Transmission of Beowulf (2017) and The Art and Thought of the Beowulf Poet (2022), both of which were published by Cornell University Press. He is the editor of The Dating of Beowulf: A Reassessment (2014), which was named an Outstanding Academic Title by CHOICE, and the co-editor (with Rafael J. Pascual and Tom Shippey) of Old English Philology: Studies in Honour of R.D. Fulk (2016). Neidorf has published more than 90 papers, which have appeared in a wide range of prominent journals, including ELH, Folklore, Traditio, Nature Human Behaviour, and Journal of Germanic Linguistics. For his research on Beowulf, Neidorf was awarded the Beatrice White Prize from the English Association in 2020.
还没人写过短评呢