The Merriest Knight: The Collected Arthurian Tales of Theodore Goodridge Roberts explained

The Merriest Knight: The Collected Arthurian Tales of Theodore Goodridge Roberts is a 2001 book edited by Mike Ashley and published by Green Knight Publishing.

Contents

The Merriest Knight is a collection of the writings of Theodore Goodridge Roberts.

Publication history

Roberts began to write Arthurian fiction in the 1920s; most of these stories, though, were published in the late 1940s and early 1950s in the fiction magazine Blue Book. Roberts planned to publish them as a collection, but died in 1953 before he could do so.[1] In 2001 Mike Ashley, editor of the Mammoth publishing group, brought them out under his Green Knight imprint.[2]

Reception

A review for SF Site called the collection's writing "polished," "erudite," and "eminently readable," but "somewhat tame": "literature for the afternoon tea and crumpets crowd – in a word 'polite' Arthurian fiction." Still, it concluded, "if you're looking for something a bit more upbeat, some Arthuriana-lite, The Merriest Knight is just the book for you."[1]

Reviews

Notes and References

  1. Web site: George T. . Dodds . SF Site Reviews: The Merriest Knight . SFSite.com . 2002.
  2. Web site: The Merriest Knight: The Collected Arthurian Tales of Theodore Goodridge Roberts . Amazon.ca . May 12, 2011.
  3. https://www.blackgate.com/2013/03/10/new-treasures-the-merriest-knight-the-collected-arthurian-tales-of-theodore-goodridge-roberts/
  4. https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?858192