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Fantasy Fiction, Literary Styles & Movements - Fiction, Character Types - Fiction
The Wolf and the Crown by A. A. Attanasio — book cover

The Wolf and the Crown

by A. A. Attanasio
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Overview

The Warrior King

Arthor, Eagle of Thor, has triumphed through war. Now Britain—and destiny—are his to claim. Already rolling on the roads from Tintagel to Camelot is the great wheel that will become the Round Table.

But the perilous order promised by Arthor's victory is threatened by forces beyond human ken. For Merlin has descended into Hell, to fend with the Fire Lords who give the Universe its shimmering form. And for the young king himself, there is a sacred Graal, and an Earthly love, to seek...

A. A. Attanasio's epic retelling of humankind's most beloved legend weaves into one magnificent tapestry the hallowed warp of Arthurian lore, the shaggy woof of Druidic myth, and the shimmering strands of quantum science.

Author Biography: A. A. Attanasio is the author of The Wolf and the Crown, The Eagle and the Sword, The Dragon and the Unicorn, Solis, Kingdom of the Grail, Hunting the Ghost Dancer, Wyvern, Radix, and The Moon's Wife. He lives in Hawaii.

About the Author, A. A. Attanasio

A novelist obsessed with the power of fiction to impart strangeness, hermetic wisdom and, above all, wonder, I’ve published 22 novels and two short story collections. I love fantasy fiction. I love the courage of the human spirit to invest with real emotion experiences we know are entirely imaginary. And I love all of what ‘fantasy’ means to poetic thinkers.

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Editorials

Isaac Asimov's Magazine

A. A. Attanasio, he of the mystical insights and capacious world-hoard...proves that old myths never die, as long as they have brilliant bards to reinvent them.

Locus

Strikingly unconventional...passionate... a remarkable work-in-progress!

A truly amazing, original, towering talent!

By far the most lyrically written of the recent Arthurian books...Fresh and engaging.

VOYA - Rachelle Bilz

The Wolf and the Crown continues Attanasio's Arthurian fantasy begun in The Dragon and the Unicorn (HarperPrism, 1996/VOYA February 1997) and The Eagle and the Sword (HarperPrism, 1997/VOYA December 1997). Once again, the reader is taken back to ancient Britain and the tumult and strife of a land in chaos. Warring factions threaten the very existence of Britain's people; they need a leader who will protect them. Enter Arthor, who extracts the sword Excalibur from the stone in the opening scene of the novel. Attanasio takes the reader through the first year of Arthor's tenuous reign as king. Arthor's foster father Kyner, foster brother Cei, Merlin, Lot, and Bedevere stand behind the young ruler as he seeks allies to fight the Foe-deratus, an alliance of the north tribes. Bloody battles provide the backdrop for Merlin's magic, Morgeu the Fey's traitorous deeds, and Ygrane's devotion to both her son Arthor and the Holy Graal. The dwarf Dagonet and his familiar, Lord Monkey, provide an additional story line. The author's historical knowledge and adept character development bring Arthor's world to life. Especially effective are Arthor's prayers to Mother Mary through which we see his doubt and pain as well as his strong moral, ethical code for life. Morgeu's evil plans are chillingly delineated as well. The dichotomies of good and evil, Christian and pagan, and reality and magic sustain an element of suspense in this tale. Although part of a series, The Wolf and the Crown can be read and enjoyed on its own by those familiar with the Arthurian legends. VOYA Codes: 4Q 2P S (Better than most, marred only by occasional lapses, For the YA with a special interest in the subject, Senior High-defined as grades 10 to 12).

Though he possesses the legendary sword Excalibur, the boy-king "Arthor" discovers that he must earn the respect of the warring lords of Britain before he can truly claim his place at their head. The third volume in Attanasio's epic re-creation of the Arthurian cycle follows young "Arthor" through his first difficult year of kingship. Drawing liberally from both Norse and Celtic mythologies, the author adds his own cosmic embellishments to a story that spans not only the island of Britain but the lands of faerie, the Otherworld, and the spaces between the stars as well. Along with the other series titles, The Dragon and the Unicorn (HarperCollins, 1996) and The Eagle and the Sword (LJ 6/15/97)

Haunting and hilarious ... Attanasio blends cosmic dramas with moral/spiritual ones as both Arthor and Merlin must make supremely difficult decisions before book's end. This retelling of a tale we thought familiar brings in both surprising new resonances of things modern, and elements as timeless as faith, love hope - and the beauties of Spring on planet Earth.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 1998
Publisher
HarperPerennial
Pages
410
Format
Paperbound
ISBN
9780061057762

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