From Publishers Weekly
The third and final installment in Miles's feminist-inflected Guenevere trilogy set in Camelot boasts characters whose practice to deceive creates a tangled web indeed. Queen Guenevere is poised to be the good-hearted, long-suffering heroine, but she is more like a star-crossed black widow spider. Her beauty entraps both King Arthur and her knight, Sir Lancelot; once bitten, they are doomed to betray and be betrayed by Guenevere. Long ago, King Arthur fathered a son, Mordred, with his witch sister, Morgan Le Fay. After he and Guenevere reunite, an angry Morgan sends an adult Mordred to his father's court to gain admittance to the Knights of the Round Table and steal the crown from his aging father. As he is a living symbol of the affair, Guenevere is understandably cold toward Arthur's son, and finds comfort in cuckolding her husband with Lancelot. But even her most trusted knight is not without sin. Years ago, while escorting the sacred Hallows of the Goddess, or Holy Grail, Lancelot spent a night at the creepy Castle Corbenic. His hosts, the evil King Pelles, the king's beautiful, abused daughter Elaine, and the odd, elderly Dame Brisein, seemed all too eager for his company. When a new knight, 12-year-old Galahad, arrives to rival Mordred for a seat at the Round Table, Lancelot has a lot of explaining to do. Predictable melodrama and an overlarge cast of characters mar the tale, but fans of the series will yearn to know Guenevere and Camelot's fate. (July)Forecast: As the last volume in a popular trilogy, this book will be eagerly awaited, advertised by a teaser chapter in the paperback edition of The Knight of the Sacred Lake and by a colorful jacket matching those of the previous two volumes.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
After the somewhat lackluster second volume in her "Guenevere" trilogy, Knight of the Sacred Lake, Miles returns to Camelot with a vengeance. Both Arthur and Guenevere are older and sadder, though no wiser. Much to the dismay of his queen, Arthur is falling further under the influence of the Christians, but the kingdom doesn't truly begin to disintegrate until Mordred, Arthur's son by the embittered Morgan Le Fay, is accepted at court and acknowledged as Arthur's heir to the throne. Into this tense atmosphere comes young Galahad, the son of Lancelot conceived through the evil machinations of Morgan Le Fay. The presence of Galahad and the destruction of the Round Table spur the older knights to go on a pilgrimage in search of the Holy Grail, leaving Camelot and Arthur alone with Mordred and his followers. Treachery ensues. Like the first two novels in this trilogy, this is destined to be a best seller and certainly adds a new and entertaining perspective to the massive quantity of Arthurian legends already in existence. Jane Baird, Z.J. Loussac P.L., Anchorage, AK
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.