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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars You'll Love Ordelle Hill's "Looking Westward", June 16, 2009
By 
Dorothy M. Sutton (Richmond, Kentucky, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Looking Westward: Poetry, Landscape, and Politics in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (Hardcover)
I'm SO impressed with "Looking Westward," Ordell Hill's book about some of the influences on the writing of "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight."

Author Hill looks westward to Wales, the westernmost part of England at that time, and to the middle land between, called the "Welch March" to find influences on the story of Sir Gawain.

I appreciate the well written and interesting text - and the incredible amount of hardworking scholarship that went into making of this book. I think it will have a wide readership, both people who are familiar with the Authurian legends (you'll recognize characters such as Morgan le Fey), and those who would like to know more about him and the knights of his round table.

Most of you probably read about Sir Gawain of King Arthur's knights in your English lit class in high school. Go back and enjoy it once again, and then read this book to see where so many of those ideas probably came from. And for those who want more details, there are extremely helpful appendices and footnotes (such as a "Beheading Chart" of 13th and 14th century beheadings!)

Especially fascinating (and jolting) are the connections of beheading in the Gawain story and the large number of early Welch leaders who had been beheaded. (My favorite illustration is that of Thomas Lancaster's beheading with the two failed gashes on his neck).

Hill points out good writing in the poem, such as the way the fox-hunting scene so closely parallels the seduction in the lady's bed chamber. If you like apt metaphors, closely related to the text, you'll like this book: "The historical context, like the illustrated margins on a medieval book, provides an enlarged frame for the poet's Arthurian tale. . . ."

My advice? Buy, read, enjoy!
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Looking Westward: Poetry, Landscape, and Politics in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
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