The Lost Road itself was the result of a joint decision by Tolkien and
C. S. Lewis to make attempts at writing science fiction. Lewis ended up writing a story about space travel, which eventually became
The Space Trilogy, and Tolkien tried to write something about
time travel, but never completed it.
The Lost Road is a fragmentary beginning of a tale, with a rough outline and several pieces of narrative, including four chapters dealing with modern England and Númenor, from which the entire story may be glimpsed. The scheme was for time travel by means of "vision" or being mentally inserted into what had been so as to experience that which had happened. In this way the tale links the 20th century first to the
Saxon England of
Alfred the Great, then to the
Lombard king
Alboin of
St Benedict's time, the
Baltic Sea during the
Viking Age, Ireland at the time of the
Tuatha Dé Danann's coming (600 years after
Noah's Flood), the prehistoric North in the
Ice Age, a "Galdor story" of Middle-earth in the
Third Age, and finally the Fall of
Gil-galad, before recounting the prime legend of the Downfall of Númenor and the Bending of the World. The story starts with Alboin, a child in 20th century
Britain who has strange visions referencing the
First and
Second Ages of
Middle-earth after talking to his father Oswin about his 6th century namesake, where he sees the clouds coming westwards over the
Atlantic as resembling the great eagles of
Manwë traveling to
Númenor. Many years later as an adult, the dreams return to him as he starts to realize that they are actual memories from his ancestors, which he wishes he could see for himself. Fulfilling this wish,
Elendil appears to him in another one of his dreams, offering to take him and his son Audoin to some time from the 3260s to the 3310s of the Second Age, which he accepts. The view of the distant past begins a conversation on the shores of Númenor about the state of the kingdom. Elendil tells his son Herendil that he is a member of the faithful who still support the
Valar, trying to convince him of
Sauron's corruption and negative influence over the king Tarkalion (Ar-Pharazôn). Herendil argues that Sauron has enlightened the Númenorians after his imprisonment and ascension to being the king's advisor, portraying the Valar as villains for keeping immortality from the species of men. Elendil tells him the true history of
Arda up until that point where mortality was a gift rather than a curse, and discusses how militaristic Númenor is becoming, despite not having any enemies, to foreshadow the attempted invasion of
Aman. Herendil agrees to join the rebellion against Sauron in the safety of their house. The story breaks off at the end of the fourth chapter. The novel explores the theme of the "
Straight Road" into the West, now open only in memory because the world has become round. Tolkien reworked and expanded some of the time travel ideas from
The Lost Road in
The Notion Club Papers, which was also left unfinished. == Reception ==