May the Moon Shine Upon Camlann
A downloadable novella
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21st century. Salisbury. It is common knowledge that magic does not exist. King Arthur never roamed those lands. There are no werewolves waiting in the dead of the night. Fairy circles are not to be feared.
Ilana Meir would find it easier to believe in common knowledge if she didn't regularly interact with an immortal whose main hobby involves hunting gods down.
The story of a florist, a knight, and the thing they find in the ruins of Camlann.
Status | Released |
Category | Book |
Rating | Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars (4 total ratings) |
Author | versegm |
Tags | arthuriana, arthurian-myths, carolingian-myths, Fantasy, LGBT, LGBTQIA, Mystery, mythology, Queer, Transgender |
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May-the-Moon-Shine-Upon-Camlann-Verse-Atoui.mobi 107 kB
May-the-Moon-Shine-Upon-Camlann-Verse-Atoui.epub 464 kB
May the Moon Shine Upon Camlann - Verse Atoui.pdf 496 kB
Comments
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This work investigates a bag of teeth, or a knight in a lake, or a werewolf, as told by a florist, Ilana, who regularly encounters the god-slaying knight Estout (or Astolpho, or Bedivere, or both, or neither). God-slaying is less an act of deicide, more an exorcism of narrative imposition on the soul. Translation of imbued text carries the potential of magical physiotrauma, from which are borne wild gods (though not all wild gods arise from this process). A phenominal exploration of grief over what is lost, grief over causing past harm, and the interplay of stories and consciousness. I do not tend to describe stories by listing basic components of the characters, but the following sentence has been stuck in my head in a delightful way: "Magic-purged Jewish trans woman and her friend, a nonbinary immortal gestalt godhood-stripping knight, meet the re-knitting corpse of a Welsh berserker knight." The language used in describing the scenes of body horror are evocative and visceral - enjoyable throughout, and very warm.
This book was really good, a fun read