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Prince of Annwn

(Book #1 in the Mabinogion Tetralogy Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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$6.99
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Book Overview

From the back cover: Evangeline Walton is the author of Prince of Annwnm The Children of Llyr, The Song of Rhiannon and The Island of the Mighty - each a branch of the epic Welsh book of mythology,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Neglected masterpieces

I am reading Patrick Ford's excellent new translation of the Mabinogi concurrently with Walton's series. How sad, that these fantasy masterpieces are neglected. Walton brings the stories to a kind of life not in the originals, a spirit of true, subversive paganizm neither strident nor compromising. Her additions to the story of Pwyll (Prince of Annwn) are so authentic in tone that they blend seamlessly into direct paraphrase of the original story. Her characters are as alive as your neighbor, and as real as your hand. Do not miss these books. If you can't find them secondhand, go to the library, or order the Mabinogian Tetralogy, a complete set still in print (but rumored to be flawed with terrible editing). Read these books. You will see the world differently when you are done. Tolkien had a sister in Arizona.

Lively, emotional re-telling of Welsh mythology

Like many, I imagine, I stumbled on Evangeline Walton's four-part adaptation of the Welsh national epic, the Mabinogion, when it came out in paperback in the 1970s. It was immediately obvious that these books were something special, a level above some of the derivative Authurian "fiction" that even then was flooding the market. Not being an antiquities scholar or linguist, I have nothing to say about how authentic the author was to the original piece. I am excited to see that the "quartet" is being re-issued and I can buy it for my son...not sure if I can dig the paperbacks out of the basement. They did have excellent cover art.The author emphasizes the magical elements of the myths, and the emotional reactions of the characters, placing them in a half-real sort of dream-time. The language is sparse and understated, however, counterbalancing the less-than-believable events, and lending a patina of antiquity. As I recall, however, there is a (pseudo)-psychoanalytic slant to things, lending a decidedly 20th-century slant. The stories are old, but re-told for today. Not too much sex or graphic violence either...perfect for the teenager ready for something a bit deeper and modern in outlook than The Once and Future King, more complex than Lloyd Alexander's quintet (Black Cauldron, etc.) by a quite a bit (these books are probably inappropriate for pre-teens), but not quite as cutely "radical" as Mists of Avalon. Maybe its just nostalgia for how great they seemed when I was a lot younger, but I thought they were great and intend to order the re-issue.

the prince of annwn

this book really helped me in the understanding of welsh myth. i have been looking for a good series of books on this subject and these are the best that i have found.
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