Archive for June, 2010

The Wolf and the Crown by A. A. Attanasio

This was written in 1998 – I’m consolidating book reviews. For a bibliography of Attanasio’s work, see http://prissears.com/aaa/

The third book in AA Attanasio’s fabulous telling of the King Arthor myths, the Wolf and the Crown follows the young king through the first year of his reign. He must prove to his subjects that he is a worthy king, and must prove to himself that he is a good man even though he fell prey to his witchy half sister’s seductions. This book, as all of Attanasio’s, is very different from its predecessors. The chapters are short, perfect two-page cliff hangers that whirl the reader between the various characters and situations. In some ways, this book is much more horrific than the ones that came before, but it is leavened with great humor. It focuses on Arthor’s humanity, but has the elements of the strange and magical we’ve come to expect from Mr. Attanasio. Gods old and new, ghosts, witches, demons, angels, vampires, dwarfs, a monkey, elves, stolen and misplaced souls, the hell that is our present day, the fabulous world tree that is the magnetic field surrounding the earth, the hollow hills above the dragon at the heart of the earth, heroic adventure, and selfless sacrifice, it is all there weaving a tapestry of magic and realism. Attanasio is not bound by any of the old tellings of this myth, he takes the characters and elements and makes them uniquely believable, uniquely his own. As in many of Attanasio’s books, such as his fantastic first novel Radix and the rare The Moon’s Wife, the heroes are flawed by their own humanity and must take on painful journeys of self-discovery and change. Don’t miss this book, I can’t wait for the next ones. I hope he follows the King to Avalon and on, to that far future day of need that is predicted for the King’s return.

30

06 2010