~Storyteller Knight
SamoaPhoenix and I have just swapped our reviews of the book and she has just finished reading my take on the book.
Warning for Spoilers
| Title: The Wicked Day Author: Mary Stewart Publisher: William Morrow and Co Pages: 447 Synopsis: (from the publisher) The Wicked Day is the gripping story of Mordred, bastard son of King Arthur by incest with his half-sister Morgause, witch-queen of Lothian and Orkney. Morgause sent the child to the Orkney islands to be reared there in secret, in the hope that one day he would become, as Merlin the Enchanter had prophecied, the doom of her hated half-brother.
When Mordred is taken from
his rude life as a fisherboy in the islands and suddenly thrust into the full
panoply of the High King Arthur’s court, he learns of his true parentage and
rises to a position of trust in his father’s kingdom. But, as the plots and
counterplots of the last part of Arthur’s reign unfold, Mordred is drawn into a
tangled web of tragedy that is the climactic drama of Arthurian legend.
The Wicked Day
breathtakingly displays Mary Stewart’s extraordinary gift for bringing the
obscure past to life. Her characters are unforgettable: the young Mordred,
whose close bond with his father arouses dire jealousies in the High Court at
Camelot; his malevolent mother; her four unruly sons by King Lot; King Arthur
himself, his Queen, Guinevere, his trusted friend Bedwyr; and the warring
factions that seek to bring down the bastions of Arthur’s new confederation of
Britain.
As she did in her earlier
Arthurian novels, Mary Stewart challenges the accepted legends in this stirring
and danger-ridden tale. Was Mordred in truth a traitor—or the victim of
implacable fate? Mary Stewart’s view brings tremendous emotions impact to the
drama, as Merlin’s prophecy hangs broodingly over each moment and the action
plays itself out inexorably to the final, wicked day…
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| Title: Wicked Day Author: Mary Stewart Publisher: Hodder and Stoughton Pages: 350 Synopsis: (from the publisher) The Wicked Day tells the story of Mordred, Arthur's bastard son by incest with his half-sister Morgause, witch-queen or Lothian and Orkney. Morgause sent the child to the Orkney islands, to be reared there in secret, in the hope that one day he would become, as Merlin had prophesied, the doom of her hated half-brother How Mrdred fought to deny that destiny, hoe he rose at length to a position of trust in his father's kingdom, becoming Arthur's regent and eventually his heir, is the substance of this story. That he did so is not denied even by the romancers who make Mordred the 'black treacherous villain' or the Arthurian legend. The Wicked Day does not make Mordred into a 'hero', but it does show him as a real human being, fallible rather than evil, a powerful and ambitious man whose actions are reasonable, not (as in legends) inconsistent and often foolish. The Wicked Day comes as a postscript to Mary Stewart's Merlin Trilogy, and in it, as before, a dark age of history is brought to vivid life, and a tangled mass of legend made plausible. The story of the hidden prince, the witch's curse, the wild doings of the Orkney princes, the plots and counter-plots of the last part of Arthur's reign, is a colorful and exciting one, moving inexorably towards the climax of the last battle, where 'Arthur and Medraut fell'. But even this unavoidable ending, as it is handled here, leaves the reader with a sense, not of tragedy, but of tranquil leave-taking. For thousands of readers who enjoyed Mary Stewart's Merlin trilogy The Wicked Day is a magnificent storytelling bonus, a novel of passions and purposes told with the clarity of detail of an illuminated page from a medieval Book of the Hours. A marvelous book from an enchantress of an author. |