Monday

Guest Post: Virginia Chandler

The Maze of the Arthuriad... 

I suppose it could be said that indeed all my roads to Arthur have led to my novel, The Green Knight's Apprentice. I read Malory when I was very young and my first reading left me with very vivid images that haunt me still: white stags, headless damsels, horns hanging from tree limbs, and giants. Oh yes, I had the usual sword in the stone, lady of the lake, and Holy Grail images, too, I assure you.

But what really, really grabbed my imagination were the more gruesome and dark images, I do confess. Once I discovered Robin Hood and the medieval poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, I realized that I felt a very deep calling to the Wild forest, the deep forest, the Wood that holds the Deep Mysteries and where the Wild Hunt is run. I saw the Sidhe elements in the Arthuriad, and I felt the deep rhythm of Robin Hood, the Green Knight...the Hooded Man. I am passionate about the Arthuriad, and I have spent my entire life seeking the Round Table, the Holy Grail, and the Wisdom of Merlin. But my root, or at least one of my deepest roots, lies within the wild forest of the Lord of the Forest and his Court.

The Green Knight's Apprentice was first called The Winter King's Dance, and it was, and still is, intended to be tale of Gawain's year and a day in training as the Green Knight. We follow Sir Gawain through the eyes of his Steward and friend, Rhowbyn, who is a Bard from Orkney. We travel with Gawain and Rhowbyn through the Wheel of the Year and experience the magickal training of each man by observing the Sabbats with songs, chants, battles, and festivals.

If this novel attempts to "do" anything, it is to tell the story of what happened to Sir Gawain after the three strokes of the Green Knight's axe and before he returns to Camelot. The reader's experience, and mine as the writer, is through Rhowbyn the Bard because Rhowbyn is our guide and expert. The reader has the same questions as Gawain, and both learn the answers through Rhowbyn's narration and experiences. Rhowbyn's questions are usually answered by Lady Morgan and some other Arthurian Wise Ones: Mabon, Bors, Lady Birtilak, Ganeida, to name a few.

The roots of The Green Knight's Apprentice do go to some obscure chapters of the Arthuriad. I include Arthur's sons, Amr and Llachau, in my tale, and the Welsh figure of Mabon is quite integral to Rhowbyn's personal mysteries. Merlin's Tower makes a few appearances, but it is the deep roots and tall windows that we experience, not the expected innards of a wizard's tower like potions, scrolls, and candles. The novel has eight chapters that are set the Sabbats, with a prologue and epilogue that serve to turn the Wheel, so to speak, of the tale. It is my hope that once the last page is read, the reader will already realize that the tale, in fact, never stops. There will always be another Green Knight and his Apprentice.

Why did I feel compelled to write this particular story? Where does Virginia Chandler reside within it? When I was a child, I always imagined myself as a participant somehow in the tales that captured my heart. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight was no different. I knew that Gawain had experienced so much more during this adventure, and so I spent many years visualizing those "missing pages". That is my part in the tale; sharing those missing pages with those who wish to read them.


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Friday

Blog Tour: Metamorphosis by Devon Ashley

30 Days of Books: Day Three and Four

01 – A book series you wish had gone on longer OR a book series you wish would just freaking end already (or both!) 

02 - A Book or Series you wish more people were reading and talking about.


30 Days of Books

One of Our Thursdays Is Missing
The Well of Lost Plots
First Among Sequels
Lost in a Good Book
Something Rotten
The Woman Who Died a Lot
While I Live
Trickster's Queen
Tricksters
The Eyre Affair
The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making
Trickster's Choice
Cybele's Secret
Wildwood Dancing
Daughter Of The Forest

Day 03 – The best book you’ve read in the last 12 months

I have no words for just how effervescent this novel is. I went in expecting to like it, but I wound up loving it. The whole story has a fairytale-like quality that captures your imagination and runs away with it. Valente doesn't waste time trying to simplify her novel for children, but understood that even young children can appreciate a well written story.
The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making by Catherynne M. Valente

Gather up your courage and your wishes; grab a little pinch of luck - and prepare to be swept away, in a ship of your own making, to a land unlike any other. September is a twelve-year-old girl, Somewhat Grown and Somewhat Heartless, and she longs for adventure. So when a Green Wind and a Leopard of Little Breezes invite her to Fairyland - well, of course, she accepts (mightn't you?).When she gets there, she finds a land in crisis and confusion - crushed by the iron rule of a villainous Marquess - she soon discovers that she alone holds the key to restoring order. Having read enough books to know what a girl with a quest must do, September sets out to Fix Things.As September forges her way through Fairyland, with a book-loving dragon and a partly human boy named Saturday by her side, she makes many friends and mistakes; loses her shadow, her shoes and her way. But she finds adventure, courage, a rather special Spoon, and a lot more besides . 

Day 04 – Your favorite book or series ever

Daughter of the Forest by Juliet MarillierTo reclaim the lives of her brothers, Sorcha leaves the only safe place she has ever known and embarks on a journey filled with pain, loss and terror. When she is kidnapped by enemy forces and taken to a foreign land, it seems that there will be no way for Sorcha to break the spell that condemns all that she loves. But magic knows no boundaries, and Sorcha will have to choose between the life she has always known and a love that comes only once.Check out my review here
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