Marion Zimmer Bradley's complex Arthurian fantasy told from the point of view of Morgan le Fey, King Arthur's sister. Includes lots of Celtic mythology and Ban-Droi background (that's a female druid to you neophytes) This story is continued in the subsequent The Forest House.

fascinating and complex version of the arthur legends that really is a piece of genius.

this piece very skillfully smoothes over and clarifies questions and some inconsistancies from typical legend, like "why in the *world* would morgan sleep with her *half brother*?" and "what *was* going on with lancelot and guenevere?".

The book's strength is in its deep deep character development and interaction. The people seem *real*, alive. And it's impossible, this way, to find a "bad guy". Traditional lore paints morgan as *evil* and wicked. Here, she and arthur and every other major player are simply shown as *human* and mortal each with their own set of morals and values and weaknesses and aspirations and desires and ambitions. No one's "wrong" or "devil-spawn" or "wicked". Just human. and thus prone to human confusion and human flaw.

the difference in the frame of reference is beatuifully done in this work. It paints the dichotomy between christianity and paganism and the old ways that actaully *was* growing in the time that arthur may have ruled. It is the difference in religion and perspective that causes so so many of the complex issues that are not explained elsewhere. this interplay is complex and elaborate and really quite beautifully crafted. it lets you see the situation from an entirely different set of eyes.

the book is also quite accurate in representing various representations of priestess, celtic, pagan, and magickal ways.

very much a fine piece of art and of storytelling and of intricacy

Atmospheric like Mallory but not as fatalistic. A reminder of a brief moment in time when almost all beliefs held the same weight. Spiritual only to the degree to which the word 'prayer' was written otherwise it was more handing down remedial s and prescriptive. Ambitious portrayal of the great outdoors and it succeeded greatly. A portrayal of a very industrious group of people.

Log in or register to write something here or to contact authors.