Reviews

The King's Deryni by Katherine Kurtz

nataliejcase's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

I enjoyed this conclusion, though I don't think it ranks among the best of Kurtz's work. I have to wonder if the author knows a lot of children, based on a few of the things she writes in this trilogy. That aside, it was fun to read the back story of my favorite character, and I think you can really begin to see the man he will become, particularly in this book.

She also continues to set up the conflict with the Church and with the Queen very well, without being heavy handed about it. The bit between the Queen and Alaric was a bit rushed I think, and she didn't give us a very good sense of the Queen at all. She was almost thrown in as a last bit of conflict, and to allow for the birth of Kelson.

I am, however, drawn to re-read those first three books, which is where my love of Kurtz, her Deryni and Alaric Anthony Morgan began.

vaderbird's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

5 star - Perfect
4 star - i would recommend
3 star - good
2 star - struggled to complete
1 star - could not finish

morgandhu's review

Go to review page

4.0

I fell in love with Kurtz's world of Gwynedd, and with her magical, endangered Deryni with her first book, Deryni Rising, the beginning of the chronicles of King Kelson's reign, published in 1970, and have followed her writing ever since, waiting patiently for each new volume in the Deryni series. And it has been such a long wait for this, The King's Deryni, the last volume of Kurtz' Childe Morgan trilogy - eight years, in fact. With this volume, Alaric Morgan, the half-Deryni Duke and loyal servant of the Kings of Gwynedd finally comes into his own, and Kurtz' work comes full circle. This concluding volunr to the Childe Morgan trilogy has brought the story almost back to where it started, with Alaric and all the key characters of Kelson's reign in place and Kelson's birth one of the last events of the novel.

While I truly enjoyed The King's Deryni because it brought me back to a beloved world, I must acknowledge that it may not suit everyone's taste. While there are definitely some dramatic moments and key events, highs and lows, it is a slow-moving book, full of everyday details and family life. Kurtz devotes considerable time to the minutiae of Alaric's progress as a page and then a squire, to his training both for knighthood and for his coming adult responsibilities as Duke of Corwyn and Earl of Lendour. We see him in the midst of his family - father, aunts, uncle, sisters and half-sisters, cousins, the most important if all being the young Duncan - and we meet both the friends and enemies of his youth. We follow him on travels around Gwynedd, to his own lands (which come to him through his mother's lineage), his father's family seat, his ducal uncle's holdings, and on various journeys both within Gwynedd and to foreign kingdoms as part of King Brion's entourage - and in so doing, we see elements of the political and religious situation both at home and abroad that he and the kings he will serve must navigate. It's a book rich in worldbuilding, scene-setting, and character development rather than action and complex plotting.

I'd love to see more of Gwynedd. There's still much to be explored about Gwynedd during Alaric's time - the shadowy Council of Deryni who watch Alaric closely, the mysterious knight of the Anvil who serves as Alaric's teacher, the events that lie between the birth of Kelson and the death of his father King Brion - and the future of Gwynedd still to come. And there is still a gap between the early post-interregnum books and the beginning of Alaric's story. I have heard that Kurtz has plans to write more about her Deryni - time will tell what comes next.

andydcaf2d's review

Go to review page

4.0

A nice lead in to the King Kelson saga
More...