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The Once and Future King, Including The Book of Merlyn

av T. H. White

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Serier: The Once and Future King (compilation 1-5)

MedlemmarRecensionerPopularitetGenomsnittligt betygOmnämnanden
1,3372114,005 (3.97)2
Classic Literature. Fiction. HTML:The complete box set of T.H. White's magnificent retelling of the Arthurian legend. The novel is made up of five parts: The Sword in the Stone, The Witch in the Wood, The Ill-Made Knight, The Candle in the Wind, and The Book of Merlyn. Humane, warmly funny and deeply touching, White's epic fantasy novel is a true classic.… (mer)
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» Se även 2 omnämnanden

engelska (15)  nederländska (3)  finska (1)  Alla språk (19)
Visa 1-5 av 19 (nästa | visa alla)
I suppose I was really young to tackle such a serious piece of literature, but The Once and Future King . . . I could barely get through it. Granted, I wasn't even in high school - but still. I think I've ruined a book I may have liked. I wouldn't recommend people who aren't exposed to classics, or exposed in a way that would make it a good experience. I had no experience of real literature (aside from Narnia), and I think that was a definite problem. Maybe I'll re-read it someday . . . but for now, I still loathe it. ( )
  dishchan | Aug 15, 2022 |
The Once and Future King by T. H. White is based upon the 1485 book Le Morte d’Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory. It is comprised of four short novels that were published from 1938 to 1940 with the collection being put together as one book in 1958. This complex work is considered the best re-telling of the Arthurian legend.

The first book, “The Sword in the Stone”, tells of Arthur’s, called Wart in this volume, upbringing by his foster father Sir Ector, his friendship with his foster brother Kay and his instructions by Merlyn, a wizard . Merlyn knows what Arthur’s future is to be and tries to teach him how to be a good king by turning him into animals, fish and birds with each transformation meant to teach Arthur a lesson to prepare him. This book ends with the death of the current King, and Arthur pulling the sword Excalibur from the stone and being recognized as the new king.

Next comes “The Queen of Air and Darkness” which is set during the early years of Arthur’s reign. He is fighting a number of wars against rebellious Knights and, with the help of Merlyn, comes up with the idea of the Round Table and an order of Knights of chivalry. This book also details his seduction by his half-sister Queen Morgause and the birth of their illegitimate son, Mordred.

Part three is “The Ill-Made Knight” which switches the focus to the love story between Queen Guinevere and Sir Lancelot, how they try to hide it from Arthur, although he knows of it through Merlyn. We also see how the Lady Elaine is affected by this affair as she also loves Lancelot and is the mother of his son, Galahad. I had a hard time sympathizing with either Lancelot or Guinevere as I felt they were so wrapped up in themselves, they had not consideration of others.

The last book, ‘The Candle in the Wind” brings the various pieces of the story together by telling of the downfall of Arthur, Guinevere and Lancelot and the last days of the Kingdom of Camelot.

I was surprised at how much I enjoyed this book as I have never been a fan of King Arthur stories, I was drawn in right away by the winsome ways of Arthur, the humor and magic of Merlyn and many of the other quirky characters that were introduced throughout the book. As the story goes on, it definitely gets darker and darker but by that time the reader is fully invested in Arthur and needs to see how everything will unfold. Although the books do not mesh together seamlessly, this is a powerful and at times disturbing story about the desperate struggles that mankind involve themselves in and the evil that is often brought out by conflict. The Once and Future King is a masterpiece of historical fantasy. ( )
  DeltaQueen50 | Sep 2, 2020 |
Pyöreän pöydän ritarit hauskasti ja viisaasti kerrottuna. Kirja koostuu viidestä teoksesta. Ensimmäinen ja kaksi viimeistä olivat todella hyviä. Kokonaisuutena hiukan ehkä pitkä eikä niin kauhean mukaansatempaava, joten en uskalla suositella ihan kaikille. Fantasian ystäville ehdoton pakko. ( )
  KirjaJussi | Aug 11, 2020 |
I'm still looking for a book that will give me the basics on Arthurian legend. This one did a good job on the Arthur's origins, and the Arthur>Gueneviere>Lancelot drama, but skims over a lot of adventures in between. ( )
  stormnyk | Aug 6, 2020 |
I feel like it would be quite unfair to judge all five books as a whole, even if they are bound this way, but "What, What?"

"See, some things turn out this way, see? Even classics, see?" What, What?

I honestly went through many changes while reading this work, but that may be entirely because I keep seeing how it has changed the world, our perceptions, and especially it's influence on so many of the cultural set pieces we enjoy across a wide, wide canvas.

I was thrown, willy-nilly, into a purely Disney Sword In Stone cartoon for the first book. Hell, no matter how I wanted to pry myself from that version, I couldn't. Wart., I.E., Arthur, and the doddering old English fool, Merlin, were perfect caricatures of themselves even as they turned into all the birds in the sky and the fish in the sea and taught valuable lessons of what it would be to be a Knight. What, what?

Okay, I WAS thrown off my game a little bit with the introduction of the Encyclopedia Britannica and at LEAST two references to Guy Fawkes, until I finally decided to turn off my brain and let this belated realization of a kid's story have its nefarious way with me. What, what?

I quickly realized, by style and attempted humor, that a certain author by the name Terry Pratchett took all the specialized elements of this book and made something with a much more comprehensive world and better timing on the comedy and odd juxtapositions. He owed a debt to this old YA classic, absolutely, and the borrowed style is as plain as day. I wound up liking it just fine once I managed my expectations, but I still prefer Mr. Pratchett. :) But what the hell was up with Robin Hood and Tuck, What, What?

Things got slightly better by book two, with the darker "M" themes, with witchcraft and Fae, adventure and even a bit of knightly heroism. I got into it, but let me be perfectly honest: I've been spoiled by these characters through [b:The Mists of Avalon|402045|The Mists of Avalon (Avalon, #1)|Marion Zimmer Bradley|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1388857089s/402045.jpg|806813], so it's hard to want less depth, less straight comprehensibility.

But, like the previous book, I took a lesser critical view, and with book three and book four, I was utterly delighted to find out that most of our modern shiny knights in clean halls, bursting with honor, utter fair play, and utter moral christian virtue came from T. H. White. I wondered where the hell it all went wrong, or why such amazing and widespread departures from reality and history got introduced into our public mind like the great whitewashing of our time, and now I know.

Yes, yes, I know that the Arthurian legend has always been the sock puppet for each culture that re-appropriated it, but I'll always be partial to the popular incarnation of this from the times of the crusades. (I don't care which you choose. Early, middle or late, they're all charming.) Worse, I'm truly upset with the loss of the hidden messages wrapped in metaphors and anagrams. Hell, I would have given anything for just a HINT of a Rosicrucian chemical wedding. But no, this modern incarnation is all about modern social mores, being a good christian, and bringing out the great club of politics, as was seen MOST PERFECTLY in book five.

I can't say I disagree with some of his sentiments. I hate war, too. I probably would have done everything in my power to be a pacifist, too, which is quite fun to pull out INSIDE a book ostensibly about war, domination, civil-war, and enough personal strife and tragedy to choke a war-horse.

Instead, I come away with the shiniest patina of High Nobility, hell paved with good intentions, and impossibly wise Englishmen who don't really know what the hell they're talking about. Book five. OMG. Were you expecting an old Arthur getting it on as a goose and being subject to a political treatise on capitalism and communism? Or a truly unfair slight against ants?

Yeah. Me either.

What I took away from this? Monty Python and the Search For The Holy Grail. Book three, especially. That movie is an almost perfect counterpoint to book three. I think I'm gonna pop my dvd in my player right now.

Do I sound like I don't like this work? No. Or at least, I don't dislike it. It's clear and bright and it fairly pipes the British Anthem on every page. I've never been much for patriotism, but I'm almost propagandized into the tradition.

Oh, and yeah, deep sea diving is an almost perfect way to explain to the reader the difficulties of wearing armor. And Merlin was a poor boy in modern England. What, what? See? See?

I recommend to you, dear reader, if you like your legends light and Disney, full of talking animals and lots of anachronistic conversations. Contains all of the most popular modern imaginings of the Arthurian legend, sans the deep discourses, the deeper understanding of the Holy Blood and the secrets therein.

But of course, there's always the many maidens trying to take the pure knight's virginity. That never gets old, what, what? ( )
  bradleyhorner | Jun 1, 2020 |
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On Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays it was Court Hand and Summulae Logicales, while the rest of the week it was the Organon, Repetition and Astrology.
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These editions of The Once and Future King DO contain the Book of Merlyn. Please do not combine with the editions that do NOT contain the Book of Merlyn.
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Classic Literature. Fiction. HTML:The complete box set of T.H. White's magnificent retelling of the Arthurian legend. The novel is made up of five parts: The Sword in the Stone, The Witch in the Wood, The Ill-Made Knight, The Candle in the Wind, and The Book of Merlyn. Humane, warmly funny and deeply touching, White's epic fantasy novel is a true classic.

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