Reviews

The Once and Future King by T.H. White

loritian's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I have a soft spot for this book as it was the first book that I couldn't put down. I recall sitting on my beanbag chair and eating a box of my junior high fundraiser chocolate bars because I didn't want to go downstairs and interrupt my reading to eat real food. I was 11 years old in 7th grade and it was an otherwise dreary winter break from school. I so wanted to meet my Merlyn. Still waiting for that teacher.

*****this book meant so much to me in my tween and teen years that I have been afraid to revisit it in adulthood. So glad I finally did. This time with the Book of Merlyn included (1-5). I had read that upon its publication when I was in high school. I could only appreciate the iceberg's tip with that first reading. So glad I overcame my fears.wish I had much earlier.

dna_heligrace's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Hmmmm. it was okay. A bit tough to read for a sixth grader (that is the age i was when i read it) but overall, a fascinating adventure of love, magic, treachery, and plus, it's pretty funny too!

great_wide_library's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Represents a very human picture of Arthur, but the women seemed fairly 1 dimensional, which is a shame as there was some great opportunities for creating some seriously awesome female characters. The jumping back and forth between time period was a little jarring.

tonisut's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This edition included all 5 books, including the posthumously-published Book of Merlin. 5 stars for the first 4 books, but 1 or 2 stars for the long, boring book 5.

littlemightyone's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I so did not want to finish this.
Once it was finished, it was over.
I especially loved it all. Every lick.

dougk's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Everything by TH White is worth reading, but this is probably his masterpiece. Flawed and eccentric, yes, but still better than any hundred other Arthurian retellings.

The first book is unabashed fun. After that it descends into sadness, and occasional incompletely-digested stodge from Mallory: but there are passages of great beauty throughout.

I can't read it anymore though. When I was young and strong the sadness was tolerable.

gbweeks's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

T.H. White's The Once & Future King was one of a number of books I have owned for years and always meant to read but hadn't. In fact, toward the beginning of the novel an old movie ticket fell out that obviously I had used as a bookmark when I started it one time. The ticket was for the Shattuck Cinemas in Berkeley in April 1992, my senior year in college (the movie was Shadows & Fog, of which I have no memory).

Then 28 years later, a UNC Charlotte student mentioned the book in a graduation message, and I learned it was one of my dean's favorite novels, so I finally read it. There were two things in particular I did not know about this book. First, it is remarkably modern and funny for something mostly written in 1938-1940 and then published as a whole in 1958. It is loaded with sex, violence, and sarcasm. Second, I did not know its core message was about mid-20th century international politics.

The arc of the book is from light to dark, starting with Arthur's story of pulling the sword out of the stone and trying to forge a sense of right and wrong to replace the mindless pursuit of battle, then moving to a lot of deceit and death. There are references to communism (Merlyn turned him into an ant early on to see what it was like, and they're communists with no individuality) and fascism, with Mordred compared directly to Hitler, complete with anti-Semitic public speeches. Among the many tragedies of the narrative is that Mordred forces Arthur into enforcing alliances with violence, thus spreading the misery that Arthur had originally tried to quell. Doing so also meant Arthur allowed his belief in using force to compel justice to supersede his personal wishes.

As the novel goes on, Arthur becomes more serious and more despondent. He can't think of any way to avoid war and to live in harmony. He goes round and round in his mind, knowing that all of his best efforts had the opposite effect he wanted. He used might to end might, and everything just got worse. White clearly despaired at humankind's inability to learn anything over time.

Throughout, though, there is wry humor. Early on, Arthur (then called Wart) speaks to a badger, who wanted to read him his dissertation: "He got few chances of reading his treatises to anybody, so he could not bear to let the opportunity slip by" (181). It gets Monty Pythonesque. Lancelot goes into a pavilion, falls asleep, and then "It was moonlight when he woke, and a naked man was sitting on his left foot, trimming his finger-nails" (337). They fight briefly and the man screams "You have cut open my liver" but then decides the wound is nothing, "a bit of a chip." Or, near the very end in a moment of high drama: "Gawaine was trying to think, an effort not made easy to him by practice" (609). These little asides are sprinkled everywhere. They lighten up a tale you know will end in nothing good, I suppose not unlike international politics at any given time.

From http://weeksnotice.blogspot.com/2020/05/review-of-th-whites-once-future-king.html

bjwing's review against another edition

Go to review page

emotional inspiring reflective medium-paced

5.0

stinebrunson's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous medium-paced

5.0

isiloaranel's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

I wish I had had more time to really devour this book. It's not written in a style that makes it easy for me to read for long periods of time, but I enjoyed the first 20 pages I did read. I just currently need something that I can easily pick up and put back down because of my schedule. But, I will definitely be returning to this book to properly finish it.