Yeah, I wouldn't call Tolkien a middle-aged bloomer. His books were extensions of what he had already been doing that entire time, AFAIK: the stories were part stories for his kids and part riffs off his philology work.
I guess you could point at his ambition to create an English mythology as his middle-aged success, but I'm not sure he was actually successful at that.
I guess you could point at his ambition to create an English mythology as his middle-aged success, but I'm not sure he was actually successful at that.