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Mists of Avalon Abridged

Mists of Avalon Abridged

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A delightfully misty Avalon it is too
Review: I must say that having read fairly widely in the fiction that the Arthurian cycle has inspired over the last hundred years alone, I came to Marion Zimmer Bradley with a faint heart. Indeed, the book had been sitting handy for years before I took the plunge. Now I have to ask myself if it is not my favourite of all. It is such a good book, such an unusual one, that I shudder to think that I might have missed it. I thought Mary Stewart told a pretty good Arthurian tale, in which the good earth of the sixth century clung to Ambrosius' leather sandals and the ground was damp and musty behind the stone walls of the little hamlet where Arthur lay... and so on. Yes they were great books, well worth reading. I thought T.H. White magnificent; I loved Arthur being an ant or whatever he was at one stage in the "Once and Future King." I bought all of it and marveled at the spirit it invoked, of that faraway time. I enjoyed Chopra as well; thought it was excellent in fact. And many others...

But Bradley. Oh it is an outstanding book, in every sense. I am in Glastonbury, I am in faerie, I am in the Celtic lands for certain; and I do not want to come back. There is a woman's touch, no doubt, but I don't think it's a womanish book. It is a very human story, told with a women's gift, that of enhanced intuition, and without male bluntness perhaps. But why go on: just start reading. It is priceless.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: All the Gods are One God and all the Godesses are Marion !
Review: This book made me weep, made me smile, made me read it again, again and again. It is fantastic and Marion Zimmer Bradley enchanted me with all the magic of Avalon. Gwenhwyfar and Morgaine were wonderful, without forgeting Viviane, Igraine and Morgause.

It's beautiful; read it and worship it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my all-time favorites
Review: Zimmer Bradley's characters are multidimensional and the pace and plot are riveting. Not the typical Arthur story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A masterpiece beyond all comparison.
Review: I read The Mists of Avalon in six days. That is how powerful a book it is-it draws in the reader and enthralls him or her with the very mastery of its design. Igraine, Viviane, Morgause, Morgaine, Niniane, Elaine, Gwenhwyfar, and especially the precocious Nimue-how can I ever forget them? That's only to speak of the women-there is also Lancelet, Arthur, Arthur's son Gwydion, Lancelet's son Galahad, Cai, Gawaine, Gareth, Gaheris, Lot, Uriens, Gorlois, Uther Pendragon, Balan and Balin, Taliesin the Merlin, Kevin Harper...

From the very beginning, The Mists of Avalon is a potent carrier of fierce human emotions-Uther's longing for Igraine; Gorlois' deathly jealousy; Morgaine's taut, controlled passion; Morgause's scheming; Viviane's majesty; the tragedy of Niniane's senseless death; Elaine's naivety; and Nimue and Kevin's suicidal bond.

I read it for hours on end. I cried over it, thought over it, and learned over it. The Mists of Avalon even convinced me to follow the Mother Goddess. I am eternally grateful to Marion Zimmer Bradley for her timeless tale of love, devotion, religious zeal, and betrayal.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stupendous!
Review: Look at everyone else's reviews! 5...5...5...5! What can I say? This book is fascinating, thought-provoking....a good book to reread..a King Arthur story...a feminist book...a book that looks deep into philosophy and religion of ANY time.... ....If I had to recommend to a stranger one book in the whole world to read, it would be THE MISTS OF AVALON.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my favorite books.
Review: "Mists" was a wonderfully written account of the women in King Arthur's life. I enjoyed every minute of it and would read it for a third time! Although some of the characters got on my nerves, (Gwenhwyfar and Lancelet) I think that that's because the book was so well written that Marion Zimmer Bradley WANTED you to get that from the characters. It was obvious to me that she inteded them to be so. I would recommend this book to anyone who LOVES fantasy and/or King Arthur. It is unlike any other Arthurian Fantasy book I have ever read. Five stars doesn't do it justice.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Reviews of Avalon
Review: The Mists of Avalon is a fascinating novel about the women behind the Arthurian legend; Igraine, Arthur's mother,Vivane and Morgause, his aunts, Morgaine, his half-sister, and Gwenhwyfar, his wife. The epic tells of Arthur's birth, the deaths of Vivane, Igraine, and Uther Pendragon, the life story of Morgaine, and the powerful struggle between Christianity and The Old Faith. I would say that this book is as good as any of the reviews for it. At 874 pages, it makes a good read.... for a couple of months. You have to excercise some maturity because of several rather graphic scenes. The book is extremely well-written, and I think that it was genius to write about the Arthurian legend from the women's point of view. I give this book five stars, and would reccomend it to any mature adults

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A romantic's romance
Review: This book I read and re-read when I was a 20-something romantic. It is a feminist re-telling of the Arthurian legend, from the point of view mainly of the women, who in the 'traditional' tellings are either subsidiary or 'distaff', as in sinister or evil-doing beings. As a librarian I found high school girls were the main audience for this book, and budding pagan feminists. If I had reviewed it 20 years ago I would have said it was my favourite book at that time. It is still on my shelves, but I have read better since, hence the 4 stars.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent
Review: This was one of the best books I have ever read. It contains all the great characters from the Arthurian legend and provides us with an in-depth characterization. I loved the plot-line and the wonderful descriptions. I have recommended this to friends and they have read it and loved it. This is a slightly long book, but the intensity at which it was written makes the pages turn quickly.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Entrancing! You'll want to be a born-again pagan.
Review: A brilliant reinterpretation of the Arthurian Legend as told from the perspective of the women arround him. More than just the story of Arthur's kingship; it is the story of what went out of their world forever when christianity (male) supplanted wicca (female). Contrary to their usual portrayal, Arthur and Lancelet are not heroes and Gwynyfar is far from perfect (in fact, she's despicable). All the characters are tragic, but Morgaine is so finely and beautifully drawn, that I have read the book several times over the years.


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