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BORN OF THE SUN
Reprinted
from Publishers Weekly - June 16, 1989.
In this beautifully executed continuation of The
Road to Avalon, her earlier depiction of sixth-century
Britain, Wolf tells the story of Niniane, a Celtic princess,
and Ceawlin, bastard son of the King of the West Saxons. Eighty
years after the death of Arthur, the Celts are disorganized,
drifting away from the cities built by the Romans. The vigorous
Saxons, on the other hand, have settled down and become civilized,
creating in many ways a more viable culture. Niniane and Ceawlin
escape from Winchester, the West Saxon stronghold, after he
kills his brother in a fight and is disinherited. With help
from the Celts and some dissatisfied Saxon thanes, Ceawlin fights
for and claims the Saxon crown. Throughout the years, the couple’s
family and love grow, as does the Saxon kingdom, more Celts
realizing that Saxon rule provides stability in a dangerous
age. Ceawlin also must the fight treachery of his father’s
wife, of his trusted adviser, his best friend and most perilously,
of his Celtic brother- in-law. Wolf’s vivid picture of
life among the Saxons and Celts is well imagined—so little
is known about the time—and given an air of authenticity
with its attention to detail and acute psychological portrayals.
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