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Our discussion begins right after I sent my review to SamoaPhoenix and she finished reading it. I had already read her review earlier in the day to prep it for posting.
Warning for Spoilers
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Title: The Crystal Cave Author: Mary Stewart Publisher: William & Morrow Pages: 527 Synopsis: (from the publisher) Almost everyone knows Merlin as the dark, brooding figure mysteriously associated with Camelot and King Arthur’s court.
But who, really, was
Merlin? Was he the enchanter of fairy tales, the magician of the black robe and
pointed hat and wand? Or was he the king and prophet of old legends of Brittany
and Wales? How did a man reputed to be the bastard son of the Prince of
Darkness, and condemned to death as a child of the Devil, become the chief
architect of the first united Britain?
Mary Stewart’s answers to
these provocative questions form a spell-binding novel that catapults the
reader into fifth-century Britain—a land uncertainly divided by conflicting
loyalties, political and spiritual; a land riddled with rumor real and planted,
and spear-alert with superstitious fear.
Into this strange world
was born Merlin, bastard son of Niniane, daughter of the King of South Wales,
and an unknown father. The novel opens in Wales when Merlin is seven, and
closes in Cornwall, at Tintagel, with the begetting of Arthur.
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Title: The Crystal Cave Author: Mary Stewart Publisher: Fawcett Crest Pages: 385 Synopsis: (from the publisher) Who was Merlin? Was the famed magician of Camelot and King Arthur's court really a sinister, all-powerful being from another world? Was he truly a prince of Darkness? Or was he a man with the passions of other mortals? A man with unique intelligence and unusual gifts? Why was he so feared? How did he come by his occult powers? Why was the crystal cave so important to him? Mary Stewart's novel brings to vibrant life one of the world's great legends and sheds a fascinating new light on the turbulence and mystery of 5th-century Britain. In This enthralling work, Mary Steward once more shows her own great wizardry. Again she reveals those qualities of suspense and romantic adventure which have made her one of the world's most widely read novelists. |