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Morgan le Fay #3

Storm Over Camelot

Not yet published
Expected 2 Apr 26
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The thrilling conclusion to the bestselling Morgan Le Fay series

Grieving over a devastating loss, Morgan has retreated to the sanctuary of Belle Garde behind a veil of fairy magic, after swearing vengeance upon King Arthur and Camelot.

Steeped in her rage, she becomes a storm of retribution, battling to avenge her brother’s wrongs while trying to undo a terrible tragedy. But with her resurrection skills elusive and Camelot growing in glory and strength, Morgan is failing, her freedom under threat in the wake of her chaos and treasonous reputation.

All appears futile, until her efforts bring news of scandal in the Royal Court, and Morgan is once again drawn inside Camelot’s golden walls. When an encounter with Arthur’s trusted knight, Sir Lancelot, sparks suspicions of Queen Guinevere’s adultery, Morgan falls deeper into obsession, the need to punish those who betrayed her driving her further away from her loved ones, and the woman she once wished to be.

As the Age of Camelot darkens, and the forces of love, fate and truth collide, she must choose between her thirst for vengeance and the power to heal what is broken, and decide who Morgan le Fay truly is, in her own future and for all time.

Kindle Edition

Expected publication April 2, 2026

105 people are currently reading
756 people want to read

About the author

Sophie Keetch

5 books721 followers
Sophie Keetch has a BA in English Literature from Cardiff University, which included the study of Arthurian legend. She is Welsh and lives with her husband and son in South Wales. For her debut novel, she was drawn to Morgan le Fay because of the progression of her character through time, becoming ever more villainous as she was written and rewritten in the words of men. But beneath the infamy, Sophie felt there was an unsung story and was compelled to seek out the woman behind the myth and give a voice to her contradictions.

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5 stars
144 (47%)
4 stars
103 (34%)
3 stars
47 (15%)
2 stars
8 (2%)
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0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 47 reviews
Profile Image for Marija B..
1 review1 follower
December 4, 2025
For those who can’t wait audiobook is already out from 2025 November 20 on audible!
Profile Image for Zsu.
203 reviews106 followers
Want to read
January 7, 2026
I scrambled to request this on Netgalley!! My most anticipated read of 2026 🤓
Cannot wait to pick this up and continue the magic
🗡️✨🍂
Profile Image for Nelly.
25 reviews
November 30, 2025
“I am no man’s weapon to wield”

After devouring the first two books, I was so happy and honestly shocked to find out the audiobook was already released, so I dived right in. With the second book ending so promisingly, the first half of this one felt a bit slow, maybe this was because of the fact that latter part of the legend takes some unpleasant turns as well. But overall, this series was brilliant and one of my best reads of the year. The feminist retelling of this particular legend is so precious. Thank you Sophie Keetch.
Profile Image for Mirta.
296 reviews107 followers
Want to read
September 2, 2025
April can’t come fast enough
Profile Image for Malin.
45 reviews
December 3, 2025
A truly fantastic finish for one of the best trilogies I’ve ever read.
Profile Image for Abby.
15 reviews
Want to read
October 11, 2025
This is my most anticipated book of 2026! I have been waiting (im)patiently for a year now
Profile Image for Liliana.
269 reviews5 followers
November 27, 2025
4.5⭐
I listened to the audiobook for this one and will say I enjoyed this much more than I thought I would. Ultimately because Morgan was a great character to read about.
Profile Image for Kirsty Mallalieu.
109 reviews1 follower
December 2, 2025
Spoilers if you haven’t read the first 2 books in this trilogy and you don’t know the story of King Arthur and Camelot.

I was a bit disappointed with this one. Le Fay ended with Morgan swearing to resurrect her dead lover and take vengeance on Arthur and Camelot. I expected a bit more action, particularly as this book is twice as long as the first two. Instead Morgan spends 90% of the book in her magic valley receiving news of the outside world via letters and visitors. Her vengeance consists of causing a nuisance with storms and flocks of birds, and later attempting unsuccessfully to expose Guinevere and Lancelot’s adultery. She gets her hands on the magic resurrection shroud but doesn’t attempt to bring Accelon back for several years. Half way through the book I felt like not much had happened.

On the plus side it is beautifully written and Gemma Whelan off of Game of Thrones is an excellent narrator. The ending was really sad but most of it was expected because I know how the Arthurian legend ends and it stays true to that.

3.5 stormy stars 🌟🌟🌟💫

Some spoilers below:
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I was gutted she didn’t get Accelon back properly. If he was freed from the lake why not have him arrive at Avalon at the end? I choose to believe that’s what happened instead of him disappearing into the rain. And she eventually got both her sons back. That’s all.
Profile Image for Dani Cox.
133 reviews4 followers
January 2, 2026
This has been one of my most anticipated books of 2026 and I was beyond thrilled to receive a proof copy courtesy of Oneworld Publications.

And boy this did not disappoint. I love Arthurian Legend, particularly Morgan le Fay, and devour every retelling, and this series is up there as one of the best.

I have loved every book in this series so far (Morgan Is My Name, Le Fay) and Storm Over Camelot is a worthy finale. It has everything I loved about the previous books and has just added in depth, character exploration, world-building, excitement, intrigue.

This was a thrilling read, heartbreaking and joyous in equal measure, full of Arthurian legend and lore but brimming with Sophie’s own unique interpretation. It was brilliant following the story you know, or think you know, and trying to piece together where Sophie was taking it.

This book, and this series, has solidified my passion for Morgan Le Fay, and it is a worthy retelling of her story, from her side. It opens readers up to the widely misunderstood figure she is in legend, making her human to us in all her flaws (just kidding she has no flaws i love her). She is such a complicated character, and Sophie has truly brought her to life in this series. Her joy is yours, her heartbreak is yours, every win and success, every setback, every YAS MORGAN moment is shared.

I loved it. 10/10 no notes.

Pre-order - you won’t want to miss this.
Profile Image for Alicia Brewer.
401 reviews16 followers
December 8, 2025
Nicki and I dropped everything to read this release that doesn't come out until April 2026!

What a fantastic conclusion! The ending was the very opposite of what I expected, but I think it was good.

Reading this series as someone who knew nothing at all about Arthurian lore, everything was new and exciting. I could see if someone was a hardcover expert, they may not enjoy this as much since it does take lots of creative liberties. However, I think the author did a good job balancing traditional lore with her creative work, and her writing is excellent. I listened to the audio and highly suggest that route since the narrator was superb.

Definitely not something I would have picked up on my own, but thoroughly enjoyed this trilogy! I recommend this to anyone who wants a well written tale that includes some swoony moments, emotional turmoil, and characters who never give up.

FYI - this is NOT a romance. This is very much a fantasy read.

4.5 stars
Profile Image for Lupick.
89 reviews2 followers
Review of advance copy
December 12, 2025
I listened to the Audible versions of all three books in this trilogy. I loved the first two—absolutely loved them—and I really enjoyed this one as well. The narration was excellent and it kept me completely hooked.

That said, the ending left me frustrated. There were so many loose ends, and several important characters seemed to simply drift out of the story with no resolution. No consequences, no justice, no real closure. After investing so much in the journey, I was left missing the sense of vindication the main character felt so clearly due. Instead, everything just faded away.
Profile Image for Shallow Boy Review.
56 reviews
Review of advance copy
December 29, 2025
It pains me to still stand by my three-point rating for the final book of The Morgan Trilogy: Storm Over Camelot. The storytelling and prose are, once again, masterful. Keetch has an undeniable gift for bringing Morgan le Fay to life on the page — her depth, her volatility, her wild, aching emotions feel vivid and real throughout.

And yet.

Call me immature if you like, but I longed to see Morgan truly destroy Camelot — to see it crumble under the weight of her rage and power. That outcome would have felt more honest to the journey we were promised. Instead, we are given a Morgan who is largely lost, carried away by her emotions, swearing vengeance that never truly comes. Her arc ultimately bends toward growth, forgiveness, and something almost saint-like, which felt at odds with the ferocity built up across the previous books.

The introduction of a bizarre new antagonist in Sir Lancelot only added to my frustration. Keetch leans heavily on repetition: the knight is kidnapped twice, Morgan cycles through the same mistakes again and again, and even her favourite curse — “may the devil take you” — begins to feel emblematic of a story stuck in a loop. At times, the narrative felt circular rather than escalating.

What disappointed me most was how narrowly Morgan’s vengeance was framed. Her rage is reduced almost entirely to the loss of her lover, while some of the most agonising moments of the earlier books — the theft of her son by Merlin, the impossible moral bind Guinevere forced her into — feel strangely secondary. These betrayals shaped Morgan at her core, and yet their emotional and narrative weight is never fully reckoned with.

As Morgan’s power grows, I also struggled to understand her inaction. Why does she never attempt to break the supposedly unbreakable charm cast by the Lady of the Lake — especially when she later acquires a ring capable of nullifying magic and even breaks her own unbreakable protections around her home? That betrayal by the Lady of the Lake, repeated more than once, feels enormous in significance and yet remains largely unaddressed.

The resurrection of Accolon similarly felt unnecessary, even detrimental, cheapening the emotional impact of what came before. While it is admirable to see how lovingly Keetch treats her characters and the complexity she grants them, I found myself craving harder justice — something beyond conjured storms and the disruption of festivities. After so much betrayal, particularly from the lake fairy Morgan once trusted, restraint felt less like growth and more like avoidance.

It is thrilling to witness Morgan’s power expand, to hear her acknowledge that she could burn soldiers to ash if she wished. But she never truly wields her magic with that level of consequence. The promise of devastation remains just that — a promise never fulfilled.

Don’t get me wrong: I did love this book. I just longed for more. More action, more reckoning, more consequence — something beyond dwelling in rage only to dissolve it into forgiveness. After everything Morgan endured, I wanted a storm that truly broke the world.
Profile Image for Angela Ayson.
59 reviews
Review of advance copy
December 11, 2025
4.25 ⭐️ (early access via Audible)

This book brought a beautiful ending to the story. It has been so wonderful viewing the Arthurian legend behind the POV of Morgan Le Fey. Such a complex character of battling views between love and revenge, loyalty and independence, politics and magic. Her evolution to the Morgan she became was so beautiful.

My only concern was that it was a bit too long. I felt it could have been edited more so that we didnt stay in one scene or thought for too long. I understand and appreciated the plot as sooooo much happened, but there were times where a scene felt too dragged. Or perhaps, I felt too much of her emotions that I didnt want to be sad anymore?

Irregardless, I would definitely recommend this trilogy. The story is beautiful and you feel the emotions with her.

I still want more though! I want to know what happens in Avalon, Lancelot, and her and Accolons child. Hopefully theres another complimentary book in the future!

I listened to this entire series on Audible and would recommend. The narrator did a wonderful job and conveyed the emotions and accents very well. I definitely want to purchase these books physically.
Profile Image for Stacey.
391 reviews53 followers
Review of advance copy
December 12, 2025


King Arthur and Morgan Le Fay, fierce and furious, formidable and clever, revered and reviled, light and dark, once and future, brother and sister. We would always be here.

In this final installment of The Morgan Trilogy, Morgan le Fay is grieving the loss of her beloved knight (Accolon), killed by the hand of King Arthur. With the determination for retribution, she becomes the storm over Camelot seeking vengeance for all that she has lost. Meanwhile, chaos stirs within the walls of Camelot as a new enemy is lying in the shadows. Morgan must seek out Camelot's most trusted knight (Lancelot) to discover her new role in this tale.

**With a brilliant hand, the author weaves a final story to this Arthurian trilogy. Although the print copy is not available until April 2026, the author released the audiobook version through Audible. It is 20 hours and 26 minutes long, but I could have listened to 20 hours more. It's really that good! Narrated by Gemma Whelan, I highly, highly recommend! 👌
Profile Image for Lochness.
16 reviews4 followers
Review of advance copy
December 27, 2025
I got to listen to this because the audiobook was released back in Nov, and I was so happy to witness the magic again. The first two in this series were great and I was so excited for the final installment. As a long fan of Arthurian legends (my cats are named Merlin and Arthur) I enjoyed this retelling from Morgan’s perspective. I had a feeling, knowing how Arthur’s story ends, that this would not be as action-packed as the previous books in this series were. It felt a bit anti-climactic for me, and I hoped the Guinevere and Lancelot affair would have more of an impact on the story, as well as see more from the siege at Benwick. Overall, a solid ending to a trilogy that stayed true to the original legends while offering a fresh spin.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Tatyana.
158 reviews10 followers
December 8, 2025
As good as the previous two series (Morgan is my name and Morgan Le Fey), though a little milder in action. The author does an incredible job showing the depths of characters' personalities and character. Just when I thought I got to know Morgan as much as possible from the first two books, author shows even more sides of her on her journey to solve the predicaments of herself, loved ones, and the Kingdom. I loved the beautiful balance between fury and care, pride and love, safety and duty, strength and pain.
I know it's a trilogy, but the way it ended, it makes me think there will be another book (I really hope so).
Profile Image for Michelle.
128 reviews
Review of advance copy
January 5, 2026
3.5/5 Loved Morgan’s character arc and I’ve rounded up .5 because it made me feel. But, I felt like we were being told all the action through other characters while Morgan stayed at her home. I also expected Morgan’s revenge to be more cunning and detrimental than what it was. There were loose ends that I was hoping to have tied up and I’m going to be real honest the whole situation with Lancelot even though it was explained gave me the ick. I did really enjoy the narration and am happy I was able to listen to this book early on Audible.
14 reviews
Review of advance copy
December 17, 2025
I could not wait for the book so I listened via audible.
This is a beautifully written and read tale that had me glued to it for 2 days.
I never tire of stories about Morgan, Arthur, Camelot and all the characters within.
Although I’ve read many versions I still found this a unique version.
This story and the two before moved me in ways not many books have.
I cannot rate this trilogy enough. No one book was better or words than the other they were all amazing.
Profile Image for Marissa Adams.
8 reviews
Review of advance copy
December 21, 2025
Read on Audible. Glad this series is finished. I enjoyed it. I still prefer Marion Zimmer Bradley’s retelling better. I wish they dove more into Morgan coming into her power. It just felt like it developed off screen. I liked the Avalon series better where you see her grow and see all the hurtful things done to her that caused her to be perceived as evil. She seemed childish to almost the very end of this series.
Profile Image for carah.
13 reviews4 followers
December 29, 2025
This entire series captivated me completely. It was beautifully written, and this conclusion was no exception.

I listened to the audiobook (which is already out, by the way 😊). My only minor complaint was that, although all the books were great, each one had a different narrator. That’s a pet peeve I have with some audiobook series, but it’s a small nitpick that doesn’t diminish the fact that I thoroughly enjoyed this series!
17 reviews
December 5, 2025
Tooooo long. I found this volume a bit boring. On e minute Morgan felt one way, then another, then back again. It seemed to take 15 min to cover a thought that could have taken about 5. Too much vacillating between one position & then the exact opposite. That said, the story between the endless soul searching was quite good
Profile Image for Jas Bird.
255 reviews
December 31, 2025
… Hello trauma my old friend. I wish there was an emoji that conveyed “Sophie Keetch has ripped out my heart slowly over the course of two years and three books, stomped on it repeatedly, and then when she was finished given it a little shine and polish and put it in her display case of broken dreams” 🥲
Profile Image for Alyssa.
91 reviews
January 9, 2026
This series scratches every single itch. Truly. What a ride. Morgan is the only character whose relentless pettiness I not only tolerate but fully endorse. A queen, actually. The setting is another highlight. Magical, enchanting, steeped in whimsy, mystery, and intrigue. Delectable. I would abandon my current life plans to step into these books without hesitation
Profile Image for Dahlia (ofpagesandprint).
540 reviews15 followers
December 1, 2025
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️.75/5

Storm Over Camelot is the emotional, thrilling conclusion to the Morgan le Fay trilogy.

I loved this one. From the first page, the story swept me away with its incredibly immersive atmosphere. I felt like I was right there with Morgan and the other characters throughout the story. The world-building was lush, well-researched, and captivating. The love story was beautifully developed and achingly tender. The characters were spectacular and vivid, and the dialogue was *chef’s kiss. The plot was gripping, and the ending was satisfying and emotional. The pacing fit the story wonderfully. Sophie Keetch’s prose was lyrical and propulsive. I highly recommend this brilliant series!
Profile Image for Fern.
1,326 reviews17 followers
Review of advance copy
December 28, 2025
Satisfying conclusion. Like the focus on sibling relationships and the changing dynamics between characters. Fun take on arthurian legend. Happy to have read this and Bright Sword this year. Interesting bookends
Displaying 1 - 30 of 47 reviews

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