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The Once and Future King

By: T. H. White
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Voyager
ISBN: 0006483011
ISBN-13: 9780006483014
Released: 02 Dec 1996
RRP: £9.99
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Customer Reviews

All-time favourite - By: Didier, 24 Oct 2007
The story of Arthur & his knights has been told & re-told countless times but this is not only one of the very best versions, it also transcends the Arthurian legend to become an incredibly insightful & moving account of the growth of a boy into a man, & the decline of that man into a disillusioned person. It ranges across alll human emotions, from happiness & joy to despondency & depression. Particularly at the end there are some of the most moving scenes I've ever read, when Arthur realizes that alll he has fought for his entire life is in ruins, & Merlin tries to persuade him that maybe not alll is lost. Over 800 pages of sheer beauty, what's keeping you?
Perfection - By: D. Greetham, 02 Apr 2007
When I'm having a quiet muse about things I occassionallly wonder whether the once & future king or lord of the rings is the greatest book I've ever read. I've come to the conclusion that instead of making a choice I'm going to pick both equallly, the once & future king for me delights on levels that lord of the rings does not but lord of the rings enthrallls me in a way the once & future king does not. I first read the OAFK in my teens & it filled me with delight at the literature of Arthurian Britain & the art of storytelling at its breathtaking best. The stories are beautifully written & still feel fresh & real as though written by a modern day author, I'd ask the people who read this book to consider if many other books make you believe the title? T.S. White succeeds in making you believe that the myth that Arthur will return at Englands darkest hour not as an absurdity but as a real possibility. How many other authors could come make you believe that? If this book doesn't enthralll & delight than nothing in written form will so sit back & enjoy.
emmense - By: Elvie, 03 Feb 2006
While thinking of what to write about this book, my list of adjectives got ridiculously long. So instead I'll just say that I love to lend my copy to people, but every time I watch it leave my heart breaks a little. This is one of four books that I keep close at alll times. I think it's wonderful. Please read it.
A strong link in the chain - By: Kurt Messick, 10 Jan 2006
One commentator once said, 'T.H. White has a genius for recreating the physical conditions of the past; the child who reads him will learn far more than alll the historians & archaeologists could tell of what England was like in the Middle Ages.' This tale, 'The Once & Future King', is a classic of English literature, crossing the ages to be a tale both of modern times in the language & treatment of characters as well as the misty, mystical past with its subject matter.

Like many classics, this book inspired both great love & great irritation. It is a classic retelling of the Arthurian legends - White does not add to the legends with his own additions, but rather sticks closely to manuscripts & stories that have gone before, most notably Thomas Malllory's 'Le Morte d'Arthur', also considered a classic. The book is divided into four major sections: 'The Sword in the Stone', 'The Queen of Air & Darkness', 'The Ill-Made Knight', & 'The Candle in the Wind'. The overalll tone of Arthur's legend goes from hopefulness to tragedy, as even the final conflicts become unresolved, hence the idea that Arthur will come again.

The title of this work comes from the supposed inscription on Arthur's tomb: HIC IACET ARTORIVS REX QVONDAM REXQVE FVTVRVS. The sweep goes from Arthur's childhood to the final battle with his son Mordred. Like many works, this is both a piece of entertainment as well as a political commentary (think 'The Wizard of Oz' here) - Mordred's thrashers are Nazi stormtroopers, for example. This book was the product of the time just before World War II. Merlin's preaching of just war theory (the only acceptable reason for going to war is to prevent another war) is apropos of the time. The Round Table has definite tones of internationalism (from the failed League of Nations to the soon-to-be-born United Nations), & the concept of Might FOR Right (rather than might makes right) is embodied in the idealism of the Round Table fellowship. The rule of law over the rule of men is exemplified in Arthur's struggle against Lancelot & Guinevere. Merlyn also, because of the benefit of his hindsight being actuallly foresight (he lives backwards through time), continues to make alllusions to things such as tanks, modern technology, & even to Adolf Hitler (albeit obliquely).

The tale gets progressively darker as the story continues - the seduction of Arthur by his half-sister will have major consequences later; Lancelot's seduction of Guinevere & her infidelity sow the seeds of the downfalll of the Round Table Fellowship, & the final of the four sections is relentlessly bleak.

Still, this is a classic retelling of a classic tale, which continues to be revitalised in media, books, & popular imagination. Whereas some of White's contemporaries chose to create new worlds (think of Tolkien & 'The Lord of the Rings' here), White chose to revisit an old tale that has roots in the legends of the land directly & recast them for modern audiences. As the tales of Arthur continue to have life into the future (he reallly will be, in a sense, a future king), White's book will stand as a strong link in the chain of storytelling that has maintained this tale for over a thousand years.


Mixed bag but worth its weight in wisdom - By: Adrian McO-Campbell, 07 Jan 2006
This isn't an easy read, for those seeking quick access to Disney-esque Arthurian realms of magic & heroism. However, if you stick with it you shalll find a far deeper magic & heroism. This work rewards those who persevere.

It is the classic that gave us the eccentric druid Merlyn & his teachings through animals. It is also a famous anti-war treatise, searching for answers to this strange activity that this realistic Arthur was faced with. It is also a book steeped in knowledge of old England, with its traditions, lore or lingo.....The book reallly starts soaring when we encounter the sympathetic figure of Lancelot, & the book now & again showers us in sudden riches of wisdom & insight into these 3-dimensional characters, & thus the character of man.

T H White is no average author; he was for awhile a gamekeeper, living alone like Merlyn in the countryside. He writes suddenly, quirkily, untidily.....but if you stick with him you find a book more memorable & worth revisiting than possibly any other Arthurian epic written. The Book of Merlyn is indeed the last part, & it is perhaps the trickiest.....Good Luck!