It's a HUGE WORLD-SHAKING APOCALYPSE...on a shoe-string budget, with a cocktail waitress and a trainee, trying to prevent it. So it's basically the Costco version of doom.
'Lessons'
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
It's a HUGE WORLD-SHAKING APOCALYPSE...on a shoe-string budget, with a cocktail waitress and a trainee, trying to prevent it. So it's basically the Costco version of doom.
That makes perfect sense, but I would never have figured it out.
Any recommendations for spinning of the Arthurian legends? I'm in the mood to maybe pick up a couple beyond Mallory and White.
Any recommendations for spinning of the Arthurian legends?
Mists of Avalon? The Hollow Hills/The Crystal Cave?
I've wanted to give Mists of Avalon a shot for a while.
I like the John Steinbeck, but ISTR it's unfinished. Eta: yep [link]
This guy has some recommendations, though more in the way of references than novels. And I like his webcomic well enough.
Rosemary Sutcliff's Sword at Sunset
Any recommendations for spinning of the Arthurian legends?
I've been meaning to try the Bernard Cornwell series The Warlord Chronicles, but it is a ways down my TBR list.
For a very different take on Arthuran legend Parke Godwin Firelord. I suggest skipping the sequel Beloved Exile. The Last Rainbow, the third in the series is first rate, but only peripherally Arthuran - about St. Patrick, but ties him to Arthuran legend. The series has what may be the best take ever on "Faerie" . Beloved Exile is weakened by losing that focus, and also by taking rape lightly (IMO).
Any recommendations for spinning of the Arthurian legends?
Ginger got in first. Rosemary Sutcliff has a series of novels set in Roman Britain, starting with Eagle of the Ninth (yes, that one). The Lantern Bearers is very good, and leads right into Sword at Sunset, which is gorgeously-written, well-researched (for the time, anyway), and totally heartbreaking. It's my ur-text for Arthur, and one of the reasons why most adaptations (written or filmed) don't do it for me.