Sunday, January 29, 2012

It's that time of year again....to pick up my favorite book

This time of year, I tend to re-read my favorite book - The Mists of Avalon - written by Marion Zimmer-Bradley in 1981



Last year, I bought myself the hard cover edition because I had lost my soft cover book I had read in college. If you ever have the chance to read this book, I suggest that you do. It is a wonderful version of a story we all know so well - King Arthur. Only this time, it's told from the point of view of Morgaine La Fey.

(This is my favorite picture of her. I think it's perfect with her coming out of the mists on the boat from Avalon.)
 
 A Brief over view of the book - 
Mists of Avalon is a generations-spanning retelling of the Arthurian legend, but bringing it back to its Brythonic roots (see Matter of Britain). Its protagonist is Morgaine, who witnesses the rise of Uther Pendragon to the throne of Camelot. As a child, she is taken to Avalon by High Priestess Viviane, her maternal aunt, to become a priestess of the Mother Goddess and witnesses the rising tension between the old Pagan and the new Christian religions. At one point, she is given in a fertility ritual to a young man she will later learn is Arthur, her half-brother. Unbeknownst to Arthur, Morgaine conceives a child, Gwydion, later called Mordred, as a result of the ritual.
After Uther dies, his son Arthur claims the throne. Morgaine and Viviane give him the magic sword Excalibur, and with the combined force of Avalon and Camelot, Arthur drives the invasion of the Saxons away. But when his wife Gwenhwyfar fails to produce a child, she is convinced that it is a punishment of God: firstly for the presence of pagan elements (a stance which Morgaine deeply resents), and secondly, for her forbidden love for Arthur's finest knight Lancelet. She increasingly becomes a religious fanatic, and relationships between Avalon and Camelot (i.e. Morgaine and herself) become hostile.
When the knights of the Round Table of Camelot leave to search for the Holy Grail, Mordred seeks to usurp the throne. In a climactic battle, Arthur's and Mordred's armies square off, and in the end Avalon and Arthur are magically removed from the circles of the world. It is Morgaine alone who lives to tell the tale of Camelot. (Taken from Wikipedia) 

A few words from Marion Zimmer-Bradley herself -  (Taken from Wikipedia)
 
About the time I began work on the Morgan Le Fay story that later became Mists, a religious search of many years culminated in my accepting ordination in one of the Gnostic Catholic churches as a priest. Since the appearance of the novel, many women have consulted me about this, feeling that the awareness of the Goddess has expanded their own religious consciousness, and ask me if it can be reconciled with Christianity. I do feel very strongly, not only that it can, but that it must... So when women today insist on speaking of Goddess rather than God, they are simply rejecting the old man with the white beard, who commanded the Hebrews to commit genocide on the Philistines and required his worshipers daily to thank God that He had not made them women... And, I suppose, a little, the purpose of the book was to express my dismay at the way in which religion lets itself become the slave of politics and the state. (Malory's problem ... that God may not be on the side of the right, but that organized religion always professes itself to be on the side of the bigger guns.) ... I think the neo-pagan movement offers a very viable alternative for people, especially for women, who have been turned off by the abuses of Judeo-Christian organized religions.[2]

(This is my second favorite picture of Morgaine Le Fey. I find her striking as she stands in the circle at the ring of sacred stones in Avalon. She is the picture of pure serenity as she accepts the goddess into herself.)
 
 
I may be a bit bias when I say that this is the best book of the Arthurian myths - but I am a bit of a feminist and I think that anything written from a woman's point of view is amazing, especially because the majority of the legends surrounding King Arthur are told from a male perspective. 
 
I leave you all with a little bit of advice - even if you don't think that The Mists of Avalon isn't for you - pick up something different. Find something out of your norm and see if maybe, you find a book that turns out to be your favorite. 
 
Happy Reading! 
~Anastasia