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Arthurian Triptych #2

Lancelots Rache

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Camelot. Britanniens goldenes Zeitalter. Weise reagiert von König Artus und seiner Gemahlin Guinevere. Aber ihre Ehe muss keusch bleiben; es ist die brüchige Verbindung zwischen dem Menschenreich und seinem neuen christlichen Gott und der magischen Anderwelt der alten Götter des Landes. In Benwick wird Lancelot geboren, aber nach der Eroberung seines Königsreichs durch Invasoren wird er im magischen Avalon zum Ritter erzogen. Als er an König Artus' Hof kommt, entbrennt er in Liebe zur Königin. Und während Lancelot zum größten Ritter Camelots aufsteigt, die heilige Lanze und den Gral findet und dem Feenland und seiner Königin Guinevere zu neuer Macht verhilft, kämpft er gegen sein Begehren an, denn er weiß, dass es alles zerstören könnte. Das ist nun die Fortsetzung zu Merlins Fluch. Die verbotene Liebe von Lancelot und Guinevere. Das hätte ein ödes Melodram werden können, glücklicherweise kann davon keine Rede sein...

415 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2001

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J. Robert King

78 books108 followers

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5 stars
61 (27%)
4 stars
63 (28%)
3 stars
68 (30%)
2 stars
18 (8%)
1 star
12 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Lindsey Sablowski.
Author 5 books7 followers
July 27, 2011
This book I absolutely adored. I have read many stories about Lancelot and the knights of the Round Table. Many of us probably know what the original story goes as. Though in the original legend, Lancelot is the knight who betrays King Arthur and is ultimately the reason for the ending of Camelot, I believe this novel showed another side.
The story is told from Lancelot's eyes; it starts at the very beginning when Lancelot is born. We become so involved in his dreams to be a knight --to be something more than another man living in Avalon--that we nearly forget he is the man we have always hated in other stories. Lancelot is brought to life in Lancelot du Lethe. Romance, magic, mystery... All of the elements are there. This isn't one of those books that ruins the original story we've come to know and love. This book gives us hope, gives us new feelings for Lancelot, and allows us to wonder.

Maybe Lancelot wasn't the man we thought we knew... Read this book; you'd be surprised.
I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys the stories of Camelot and to all who enjoy a good fantasy book. This is a must read!
Profile Image for Linda Malcor.
Author 13 books14 followers
May 14, 2021
I am extremely glad I have a Ph.D. in Folklore and Mythology or I would not have been able to follow a third of this book. In addition to the British fairy folk, it tosses around names from other cultures (particularly German) as if everyone has a world-class dictionary at hand.

In all fairness I did read this second book in the series without reading the first one (which I think is called Mad Merlin). The way it scrambles different traditions, though, is more annoying than enlightening. The internal setting is not at one with itself, let us say.

Characters are well drawn after you get about a third of the way into it. That's about the same time it becomes engaging. The narratorial voice is enchanting, which is well-suited to the story. I'm still looking for the humor that other reviewers laud. Perhaps I'm simply the world's best straight man.
Profile Image for Joy.
1,868 reviews25 followers
January 22, 2011
While looking at new books by authors I've read I had to mark this old read as worth remembering. A new take on an old story. Arthurian rewrites are a favorite of mine and I've read some very good new takes, this being one of them.
263 reviews
May 27, 2020
I’ve always been drawn to the Arthurian/Camelot legend and “Lancelot Du Lethe” is a splendidly-done composite of numerous interpretations. It’s told in modern English; no “forsooths” or “gadzooks” here. This is the second in a series of three related novels.
Profile Image for Christie.
537 reviews45 followers
February 20, 2019
I was really hoping this book would do something new with the story of Lancelot. I stopped reading when I realized that no new ground at all was going to be broken. This is a competent but thoroughly uninspired retelling that makes one yearn for T.H. White.
Profile Image for Jaimie.
1,779 reviews26 followers
March 24, 2016
Another one of my long-time agopurchases re-read for potential weeding, but this time around it’s going to be kept! This retelling of the Arthur-Guinevere-Lancelot story won’t dethrone Rosalind Miles’ version as my favourite, but I really enjoyed King’s supernatural explanation of events. Instead of Guinevere and Lancelot being cast as simply people who cheated on their respective husband and sovereign, King explains their attraction to each other through the lens of the Fey. He imagines that they were both faerie-offspring of the royal houses who were betrothed to each other at birth before becoming changelings in the mortal realm and taking their places as the Power of the Land and the heir to Benwick’s crown. Guinevere has often been seen as more than a mortal woman - a priestess of the old faith most often, but she is also often given supernatural powers that are tied to Avalon and Goddess worship more than a simple priestess deserves - so King’s reading of her is actually quite close to tradition, but his interpretation of Lancelot being a faerie changeling gives credence to the youth’s training on Avalon (hence Lancelot du Lac, of the Lake) after the death of his parents. Why else would the denizens of Avalon give aid to a mortal child, even if he is a royal orphan? This also raises his status, and therefore his complicity, in the betrayal against Arthur to be equal to Guinevere’s own, which with King’s stipulation that Guinevere’s marriage to Arthur is chaste makes their standing much more equal than other author’s interpretations. I’ll have to go back and read King’s other Arthurian novels now, since apparently I missed them!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Nikki Chi.
142 reviews1 follower
May 19, 2008
A facepalm take on the Arthur mythos that removes ALL the interesting character dynamics. Guinevere is the perfect lady in white, her marriage with Arthur is symbolic and chaste, she and Lancelot are destined to be together, etc.

Extremely disappointing, and one would be better off with Nancy McKenzie (for the romance) or Bradley (for the magic).
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for car(l).
22 reviews8 followers
November 29, 2010
Re-read this book recently, and it was my absolute favorite thing in high school, but now...not so much. Still a lovely story, a different twist than the usual Arthur/Gwen/Lancelot story, but it all just feels...rushed. As though it were a summary written about an entire series of books.
Profile Image for Catty.
217 reviews4 followers
October 9, 2011
This is not in the category of "goodreads", but "badreads". I stopped at page 150 and cannot bring myself to read any further. The writing style is bad, the very interesting story is told in the worst way possible.

What a waste of time!
368 reviews
August 30, 2016
still enjoying this approach to the whole Arthurian legend that draws all the tales/fantasies together ... enjoyable -- heading for the third title now
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews