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Theo Pendragon Proctor
Theo Pendragon Proctor
The Pendragon (which I like) is a nod to 'Pending'. A friend misheard it as 'Pendragon' and my son's middle name is Arthur, so it's rather a nice fit.
Can anyone recommend a good modern collection of the Arthurian stories? I'd like to get Oswin that for Xmas. (She's 10, but reads at a higher level)
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https://www.amazon.co.uk/King-Arthur-Trilogy-Circle-Camlann/product-reviews/0099401649/
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Very poetical and yet simple in style, as one would expect from Sutcliff... and now that I think of it, one of those books was responsible for what must have been some of my earliest attempts at fanfiction, but what I thought of at the time as 'continued conversations': trying to come up with what might have been said between the characters.
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But that one really is out of print now, alas.
It's a slightly unusual retelling in that it starts, not with the outlaw's origin story, but with the tale of Robin Hood and the Poor Knight told from the knight's point of view, thus introducing us to the whole scenario from the perspective of an outsider who has never even heard of Robin Hood before. And many of the familiar tales, such as the fight between Robin Hood and Friar Tuck across the stream, are recounted 'around the campfire' as being events that occurred before the start of the book; Maid Marian doesn't appear until near the end (possibly because she was a late addition to the legendarium and is hard to fit in as being present for most of the stories!)
But looking back on the book with adult eyes, I can see both how it was adapted to fit children, and how cleverly it was done; we learn in the first pages, for example, in the customary understated way of historical novels of the era, that a 'lorimer' is a man who mends horses' harness. The writing is both lyrical and cosily fairy-tale by turns:
(As an adult, I'm also interested to observe that Carola Oman gives the knight's horse the name 'White Surrey'; a private reference for her own benefit, like my nod to a couple of my favourite authors in giving d'Artois the personal name of Gervais de Sessignes?)
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