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The Bright Sword

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A gifted young knight named Collum arrives at Camelot to compete for a spot on the Round Table, only to find he’s too late. The king died two weeks ago at the Battle of Camlann, leaving no heir, and only a handful of the knights of the Round Table survive.

They aren’t the heroes of legend, like Lancelot or Gawain. They’re the oddballs of the Round Tables, from the edges of the stories, like Sir Palomides, the Saracen Knight and Sir Dagonet, Arthur’s fool, who was knighted as a joke. They’re joined by Nimue, who was Merlin’s apprentice until she turned on him and buried him under a hill. Together this ragtag fellowship will set out to rebuild Camelot in a world that has lost its balance.

But Arthur’s death has revealed Britain’s fault lines. God has abandoned it, and the fairies and monsters and old gods are returning, led by Arthur’s half-sister Morgan le Fay. Kingdoms are turning on each other, warlords are laying siege to Camelot, and rival factions are forming around the disgraced Lancelot and the fallen Queen Guinevere. It is up to Collum and his companions to reclaim Excalibur, solve the mysteries of this ruined world and make it whole again. But before they can restore Camelot they’ll have to learn the truth of why the lonely, brilliant King Arthur fell and lay to rest the ghosts of his troubled family and of Britain’s dark past.

673 pages, Hardcover

First published July 16, 2024

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About the author

Lev Grossman

48 books9,769 followers
Hi! I'm the author of the #1 New York Times bestselling Magicians trilogy—The Magicians, The Magician King, and The Magician’s Land—which was adapted as a TV show that ran for five seasons on Syfy.



I've also written two novels for children: The Silver Arrow, which the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, People magazine, Apple and Amazon all put on their best-of-the-year lists, and its sequel The Golden Swift. I do some journalist and screenwriting too.



I grew up in Lexington, Massachusetts, the son of two English professors. My twin brother Austin is a writer and game designer, and my older sister Sheba is an artist. Sometimes I live in Brooklyn, New York, other times in Sydney, Australia, where my wife is from. I have three kids and a somehow steadily increasing number of cats.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,647 reviews
Profile Image for Asher.
203 reviews41 followers
January 3, 2024
The Bright Sword is to King Arthur what The Magicians was to Narnia/Harry Potter and A Game of Thrones was to The Lord Of The Rings: it's a thoroughly modern version of a story deeply embedded in the cultural consciousness that actively engages with the twisted implications of that story. Where The Magicians asked what it would be actually like to go to Hogwarts or Narnia, The Bright Sword asks what it takes to make a person want to go to Camelot and if that would fix things. I beta-read this book a couple times, but do still think I'm being objective when I give it five stars. It's thoughtful and fun and weird and exciting and beautiful and I loved it.

In the original mythology, Arthur is conceived by rape and has an incestuous son with his sister, and Merlin is a sexual predator and the son of the devil. This is not a book that shies away from that darkness or lets it get by unexamined, but that darkness and intensity is balanced by a whole lot of fun: there's cool magic and weird fae and detailed sword fighting. Grossman has been working on this book off and on since 2015, and it totally makes sense to me why. It's a sprawling epic hidden within a classic hero's journey, filled to bursting with ideas, and as could be expected, the whole thing is wrapped in Grossman's typical lyrical prose.

Collum, our protagonist, is a young man driven by the stories he has been told of the Knights of the Round Table and the story he tells himself about himself. He's travelling a land that is torn between the stories that are told of the civilised Christian Romans that have come and left and of the stories told of the wildness and fae that exist outside and through the land. When the audience meets the survivors of Camlann, we see that everybody is struggling with those same tensions as they figure out what their story is, and the interludes in which those stories are told are lovely and well-timed.

This is a book set around the edges of the King Arthur mythology, mostly focusing on the outsiders of Camelot, and mostly taking place after Arthur's death. It's a book that asks "what made them like that?" and "and then what happened?" of the classic myths, and gives us some nuanced answers to those questions. What would it have been like to be queer or to be clinically depressed or to reject the gender roles thrust upon you? What would it have been like to wrestle with a culture of Chivalry in a land that had been conquered in a brutal manner by the same people that had brought that supposed civilisation, to be Christian in a land where the old Pagan ways still very much existed? How can you deal with the sins of your fathers and feel the approval of the Father?

The modern mythology of King Arthur is an amalgam of a rose-tinted view of historic heraldry and of ideas of what it is to be British, but if Arthur existed at all, he lived in British Isles that were suffering so much from the departure of the Romans that they wouldn't even be able to mint their own coins for centuries, let alone make glorious suits of armour for their knights. It would have been a world of crumbling Roman ruins, filled with the echoes of a slaughtered Pagan past and a very religious form of Christianity. The myths were first written at a time when knights and chivalry were A Thing, so of course they imagined a noble history for their ways. In the last century, writers seem to have leaned into the anachronism and magic (The Once and Future King) or cut it out entirely (The Winter King); The Bright Sword cuts a middle path, with magic and knights in suits of armour, but also sub-Roman regional politics and pre-Anglo-Saxon languages. Yes, Palomides the Saracen should have lived several hundred years later once Islam had actually gotten a following, but by including him Grossman gets to make references to the golden age of Baghdad.

This book ends up serving, I think, as a really excellent complement to the original mythology. It examines and deconstructs it without losing track of what makes it so enduring. In that way, Grossman has his cake and eats it too, critiquing the idea of a knight's tale while also giving us a hugely fun example of exactly that.
Profile Image for Sabina.
193 reviews1 follower
November 29, 2023
It’s hard to write a review for this book because of the sheer amount of five-star emotion filling me, but at the same time I feel like I must tell SOMEONE all my feelings about it or I’ll die. At a certain moment near the end of this book I literally yelled ‘YES’ and then jumped out of my seat and ran around my kitchen like an idiot, which is something I’ve never done because of a book before, and thankfully something I did when no one else was home. I adored The Magicians but I am in Palomides-esque love with The Bright Sword.

Lev Grossman checks all of the usual boxes—the characters, the magic system, and worldbuilding and the writing are all there and gorgeous, but he also does more. He writes emotion unlike any other author that I’ve ever read. He brings all the dark, depressing parts of his character’s lives to the surface of their being and then, as he relentlessly whales on them and has them fail over and over and cuts off their fingers, he somehow manages to etch hope into every facet of his stories. Everything sucks in Camelot, he tells us, but there are still adventures and miracles to be had.

And re-the usual boxes: I’m obsessed with the characters, I’m obsessed with Collum, I’m obsessed with Arthur and Bedivere and Dinadan, and I’m going to marry Nimue. I am going to kill Merlin. I would live in Camelot even though I would 100% die a horrible terrible death. I would vacation in the Otherworld even though I would die an even worse death there. I’m going to go back through the book when I have a physical copy in my hands and highlight the shit out of it, then sleep with it under my pillow like I used to do with Crush so I can perhaps absorb some of Lev Grossman’s genius.

There’s too much to say. I loved this book, obviously. I feel like Lev Grossman personally wrote the gay and trans characters in this book for me, specifically, and I will be grateful forever to him for that one. Everyone please read this one as soon as it’s out and then come to my house so we can talk about it and I will be sooooo normal about it I promise. My favorite book of the year by far!!!! And will probably be my favorite book of 2024 as well once it’s actually out!!

ARC acquired on edelweiss :) thank you edelweiss <3
Profile Image for Chantal.
864 reviews795 followers
August 17, 2024
I really wanted to love this book! Even though the whole Camelot/Arthur/round table thing isn’t usually my cup of tea, I gave it a shot. Collum’s journey hooked me right from the start—he’s trying so hard to reach Camelot and become one of Arthur’s knights. But once he gets there, a big twist throws everything off course. The story just drags after that. I enjoyed the knights' banter and how they stuck together, but some parts felt like they went on forever. Overall, I liked it, didn’t love it, but I definitely didn’t hate it either.
Profile Image for nastya .
400 reviews435 followers
August 6, 2024
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.

The story of King Arthur and Camelot, once again updated for our current times, is full of anachronisms, much like T.H. White's story, which reflected the tumultuous first half of the 20th century. Grossman explores queerness, religion, mental illness, and, of course, immigration. There is no "make Britain great again" sentiment here; time marches on, and the new way is not necessarily worse.

But make no mistake, this is not a heavy book. It's a meandering fantasy adventure, just as the story of Camelot should be. I can’t remember the last time I had so much fun reading a fantasy adventure book. This is what I wanted when I picked up something like the Fourth Wing. Fresh, exciting, and full of action: check. Another world of old mystical Britain looming just around the corner: check. A young, idealistic, naive, scrappy, honorable young man you instantly want to root for: check.

The prose style is anachronistic, like in T.H. White’s The Once and Future King, yet this book is less misanthropic, less obsessed with Freudian psychoanalysis awkwardly tacked onto the story, and features a bunch of great, very different women. And Lev’s writing is just so effortless in comparison.

The Knights here are struggling; they are outcasts, from the margins of the legends, having no place in the world after the fall of Camelot, trying to find some hope, a reason to keep going, perhaps redemption? This makes them very human. That’s why I, at least, read fiction.

I enjoyed my time spent with this book.
Profile Image for Maxwell.
1,319 reviews10.8k followers
July 16, 2024
An Arthurian retelling for the modern era. Lev Grossman's follow-up to his dynamic Magicians trilogy takes on the Knights of the Round table with a 21st century sentiment, exploring how a ragtag group of civil servants fight to keep their country from falling to ruins in the wake of tragedy.

Collum of the Out Isles is a 17 year old aspiring knight on his way to Camelot to seek a spot at King Arthur's court. The only problem is Arthur is dead. He died two weeks prior fighting at Camlann fighting Mordred, and all that's left of Arthur's retinue are those who managed to not die fighting from either skill or luck.

There's Bedivere, Arthur's best friend and advisor who also happens to be secretly in love with him. Dinadan, a noble knight hiding a very personal secret about their identity. Palomides the out of place Muslim knight from what is now modern day Iraq. Dagonet, the fool who Arthur jokingly knighted one day. And Nimue, Merlin's apprentice who, in an act of rebellion and self-preservation, has trapped the infamous wizard under a hill while she takes over his role.

Collum meets these and many other characters along his journey to Camelot, and out into the wilds of Britain on adventures as the team attempts to find the next King to sit the throne. But that adventure isn't easy and often comes with a price, and Collum must decide what's worth saving and what requires letting go of in order to find peace, security and hope in a world ravaged by enemies—some even within their ranks.

I really enjoyed how Grossman told this tale. I'm not even particularly a huge fan of Arthur content, but I was utterly enthralled by this story. Maybe because it's more about Collum and his band of brothers (and Nimue), the lesser known and unlikely heroes of the Round Table. I found them charming, and the way that Grossman sprinkled in chapters for all of their backstories between the main narrative was effective. It never took away from the central storyline for me, but rather deepened the characters so that when things occurred in the present they had more heft to them.

This is a fun story balanced with sobering moments of realization as the characters face the end of an era. They must reckon with the fall of their hero and king, Arthur, and uncertainty around what is next for them and their country. Grossman's exploration of these themes feel relevant to current political conversations across the globe while never feeling heavy-handed.

I found myself attached to Collum by the end and wishing the best for him. That made the stakes of the final 20% feel really high and had me turning the pages. I will say a few times in the middle 1/3 it did drag a tiny bit, and some characters get more screen time than others, so the pacing was just slightly off for me. But truly never felt like abandoning this and was always eager to see what adventure they'd get up to next. It's told in what feels like episodes but it all adds up to one grand tale. If you like Arthur and want to read a version for our times, I'd highly recommend this! I think fans of Grossman's work will appreciate how he continues to explore and subvert classic tales and themes in a new, fresh and exciting way.
Profile Image for Sarah (menace mode).
496 reviews20 followers
July 11, 2024
Rarely when books market themselves as "a mythological retelling for today's generation" do they actually feel like they're FOR us, and not just a modernized or subversive retelling. The Bright Sword is for us. Lev Grossman takes the tale of King Arthur and flips it over, exposing all the parts we missed as kids: a group of men drunk on their own mythology, a nation pulled apart by religious fanaticism, and a king burdened with great power and great imposter complex. The knights at THIS round table aren't your average Lancelots. They're depressed, they're in denial of their own trauma and they've been told by the world that they'll never be better than their circumstances. Honestly who better to do this too, the way Grossman writes beautifully miserable losers is LITERALLY it's own art form (re: Quentin my love). Reading him write about mental illness, repressed sexuality or the loss of innocence makes me feel like a disciple at the feet of Jesus, just absolutely consuming every word this man has to say. In my Lev Grossman religion era fr. I read some criticism that this book reads very episodic, but I counter that with ... have you consumed ANY King Arthur content? Episodic as fuck! They go on an adventure, they come home, they spend 10 years looking for the Holy Grail, they come home, rinse and repeat etc etc. This book stays true to your favorite King Arthur legends, but pulls out the dark thread running through them all: if we choose to live within our past, we'll be doomed to spend the rest of our lives in the same cycles chasing the same ends and never truly be happy with what we have and who we are. The Bright Sword says choose your OWN adventure! Follow your own Holy Grail! The path is never easy and nothing is ever given but in the one lifetime we have we have to try, both for each other and ourselves. Big fucking banger.
Profile Image for Sean Gibson.
Author 6 books6,023 followers
September 12, 2024
And thus concludes my Hot King Arthur Summer, which included a triptych of incredible Arthurian-inflected books, each of which I loved immensely. It began with Robin Sloan’s buoyantly imaginative Moonbound, segued into Signe Pike’s introspective and rivetingly historical The Shadowed Land, and concluded with Mr. Grossman’s latest opus, which is a delightful riff and twist on Arthurian lore from many different sources.

The Bright Sword brilliantly mixes the high and the low, simultaneously offering high fantasy wonderment alongside deep-in-the-muck gut punches. It’s funny and sad, classic but modern, respectful but cheeky.

Those in search of a historical Arthur should look elsewhere, as should those who want prose that hews to the style of Sir Thomas Mallory. Those who want legends and lore that feel as fresh as they do timeless, however, and those who want humor and heart in equal measures should revel in every bit of this wonderful tome.
Profile Image for Gmancam.
91 reviews1 follower
August 8, 2024
I deserve an Olympic gold medal for persisting with this terribly boring book.
Profile Image for Sara the Librarian.
812 reviews706 followers
July 23, 2024
I wanted so badly to love this. Lev Grossman reinvented fantasy for me with his astounding "Magician's" trilogy and I was poised to offer him similar aclaim for Arthurian legend.

I think if you're a fan of Arthur and the many, many, many, soooo many tales of his round table you will find much to love here. But for casual fantasy fans who've seen "The Sword in the Stone" or love the musical "Camelot" this may simply be too dense and too long, as it was for me.

Grossman's writing remains as witty, wonderfully descriptive, and whimsically sarcastic as ever but I struggled to find a character to hang my hat on. While much of the narrative centers on young Camelot hopeful Callum considerable time is also given to the last of Arthur's knights, those happy few who survived his last war with Mordred, his widowed Queen Guenivere, Merlins' erstwhile lady love Nimue and Morgan Lafey, queen of the faeries. All of their stories are wonderful and frankly deserving of their own books or at least novella's but its so much to pack into one volume. I kept losing track of the story.

It was also hard to ever get a sense of where I was being taken on this epic journey. And while I recognize that the journey is often the point its hard to go along with that when the central question is "what do we do now that Arthur's gone?" It is truly wonderful the way Grossman has pulled from such a vast array of sources (I even detected some Monty Python more than once), his respect for the sheer volume of stories, poems, theatrical pieces, songs etc. about Arthur that have been spun for literally hundreds of years is evident and I'm sure in years to come this book will be right up there with all the others.
Profile Image for Jordan (Jordy’s Book Club).
405 reviews26.5k followers
December 14, 2023
QUICK TAKE: Grossman manages to refresh the fantasy genre and King Arthur legends in a really fun and exciting and contemporary way. Loved the backstories on the characters, and the story really picks up once they begin their quest. Highly recommend!!
August 27, 2024
Here’s a tale of what happens in Britain in the several years after King Arthur falls in battle. For many sections a 2 is begrudgingly generous, but others deserve a 3.

This book got a SPECTACULAR review by the NYTimes (“enviable ideas and execution”) and I liked the first book of his Magicians series (but not the follow-ups), so promising. ... But, this overblown, meandering, rambling, packed to the gills with everything in the attic just never (ever) hits. Every bit of folk lore from the British Isles is scattered somewhere here – maybe the author did the work and wanted us to know, maybe he made it up (who cares), or maybe he just cribbed all the faeries from Emily Wilde’s Encyclopedia.

There are some good characters, but they march from one useless, uninteresting quest to another. 2 steps forward, 1 step back. (Scipio and Palomides are good though!) The battles are endless – one where the brave knights battle a host of fairies went on for nearly 10 pages (would have seemed like 100 but, yeah, I skipped a lot). I listened to a little of it (thanks Spotify Prime) but it didn’t help.

And in an attempt to be contemporary (or to say that the past is just like the present), there are alternative life-styles, even transgender knights. And congress of course between the Otherworld and this world, but none of it even vaguely sexy. And Merlin is, alas, a rapist and almost as bad a villain as – fergoddsakes – Lancelot.

It’s not just me – my husband also slogged through it. He says it’s random and will never end.

Sorry to be such a stick in the mud, I’m sure some people will love it. In fact, if you loved American Gods, you’ll probably like this.
Profile Image for Booksblabbering || Cait❣️.
1,329 reviews367 followers
June 29, 2024
One of my favourite king Arthur retellings?!

Collum was a common bastard who had no business showing up at Camelot looking for a place at the Round Table. Just a big boy with a sword, from a nowhere island at the edge of the world.
Yet he arrives to find King Arthur is dead and Britain is dying. All that is left is the dregs of the Round Table.

Told from Collum’s point of view in the present and past flashbacks of the remaining knights, the leftovers, Grossman builds a picture of what life was like from Arthur pulling out the sword from the stone to all the quests the knights embarked on and Arthur’s downfall and the consequences.

”We're not the heroes, we're the odd ones out. The losers. But did you ever think that might be why we've lived so long? Losing makes you tough."

Grossman cleverly tells the story of the lesser known knights. The cripple. The fool. The foreigner. The hated Morgan Le Fay. And he throws in subversive twists to consider through a modern lens such as trans identity, homosexuality, imperialism, and abuse.

Of course you think you know it all already, or most of it, but you have probably managed to avoid thinking about the story too closely, the truth hastened past with a certain squeamishness, a dark thread in the otherwise golden tapestry of Camelot. Incest, neglect, prejudice, rape, revenge, and plunder.

Grossman reimagines Arthur as a footnote in his own story, the misbegotten by-product of a rape. A king who never should've been. But one who was honourable and beloved and made the best of his position.

This was delightful! Yes, it delves into the weird and magical, but if you are put off or intimidated after reading The Magicians - don’t be.
The writing isn’t quite as lyrical or profound, making it more accessible, propelling, and the bizarreness never becomes overbearing.

Why would the future be simpler than the past? Stories never really ended, they just rolled one into the next. The past was never wholly lost, and the future was never quite found. We wander forever in a pathless forest, dropping with weariness, as home draws us back, and the grail draws us on, and we never arrive, and the quest never ends.

Thank you to Viking Books for sending me the physical arc in exchange for a review!
High four stars!🌟

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Profile Image for Andrew (BritBookBoy).
94 reviews240 followers
June 29, 2024
This started well, but overall it was way too long. The disjointed structure and constant flashbacks also killed the momentum of the main storyline.
Profile Image for Tony.
468 reviews9 followers
November 10, 2024
This could have been a great book.  All the elements are there--knights, magic, as well as an interesting and original premise--what happens to Camelot and Britain after Arthur's death?  Unfortunately, Grossman decided to use the King Arthur story as a mere facade for a sermon on modern social issues such as immigration, gender identity, the rights of indigenous peoples, and sexual harassment in the workplace.  Suffice it to say that, in The Bright Sword, only 4 knights of the round table remain alive.  One of these is gay and slightly disabled, another is transgender, the third is an immigrant, and the fourth has serious mental issues.  I do not necessarily disagree with Grossman's positions.  However, I see no place for his proselytizing in a King Arthur story.  Not everything should be about "politics."
Profile Image for myo ⋆。˚ ❀ *.
1,187 reviews8,178 followers
September 13, 2024
i really wanted to love this as much as everyone else but i just didn’t, i think maybe it’s because im not familiar with king arthur lore but then again idk because this book makes it easy for you to understand? it almost put me into a reading slump 😭 it’s still good but just nothing happens from 20% and i just feel like if it was shorter i would’ve enjoyed it more but once i got 400 pages im just like “what am i doing here” i enjoyed the setting and the vibes were set so well, not sure if i would continue.
Profile Image for Eryn.
34 reviews2 followers
July 27, 2024
As someone who loves anything Athurian, I must say this book was a major disappointment. The characters were boring and uninteresting. The plot was kind of there but not really. This didn’t really feel like a reimagining of Athurian legend-it felt more like a bastardization. In the end all it did was make me want to reread The Road to Avalon, The Crystal Cave, or The Once and Future King.
Profile Image for Maurice Africh.
173 reviews44 followers
September 16, 2024
I'll be the first to say I'm not a stickler for historical accuracy, especially when it comes to the medieval European variety. I'm also not too familiar with Arthurian legends. I know the story of Arthur enough. I saw the old movie when I was a kid. The newer movie when I was a teenager. And I've seen bits and babbles about it since. So, you can disqualify my opinion if you're looking for an expert.

That said, I read a lot of fantasy books, and this one was solid. I didn't know what to expect from Lev Grossman. I've only ever read The Magicians trilogy, which I loved, and this is nothing like that. And I think that's a good thing.

We get fun characters in a rich and magical world. There are sword fights and trippy adventures and interesting magic. There's a lot that happens in this book, but at the heart is a grand sense of adventure and a deep respect for fantasy.

Highly recommend. 5 big ole stars!
Profile Image for Aaron McKinney.
484 reviews10 followers
July 23, 2024
DNF at 40%

I have been so Incredibly bored listening to this. The first chapter was probably the most entertaining part. Since then it's basically just been every character complaining about every "politically correct" hot button topic you can think of.
Profile Image for Matt Quann.
735 reviews427 followers
September 18, 2024
For me, a quintessential summer reading experience is the thick fantasy novel. Imagine my pleasure to discover that this summer would not only see the release of an Arthurian tome, but that my dude Lev Grossman was going to be the man bringing it to life. I've long been a fan of Grossman since reading The Magicians trilogy a good decade ago and have been eagerly anticipating whatever he came up with next. Luckily, The Bright Sword is both a welcome departure from what has come before and a healthy dose of Grossman's irreverent style.

I enjoyed Grossman's twist on the classic King Arthur tale: by the time our novel starts Arthur has left behind this mortal coil. Instead of all of the heroes and knights you've come to know and love through other retellings, Grossman shines the spotlight on the lesser known and less popular knights. Each of them is given one, or many, chapters to bring us up to speed on their upbringing and integration into Arthur's court. In fact, the novel alternates between the protagonist's present and the Round Table's past in a way that keeps the pages turning.

While it may not be a classic "page turner," The Bright Sword moves with a steady and firm pace. There's never a time when I found it a chore to pick up the book as Grossman deftly moves from one set piece to another. The Bright Sword feels like a return to a classic quest and court tale that is both timeless and modern. Indeed, intertwined with the magical and courtly is Grossman's sharp and hilarious dialogue that is decidedly not old fashioned.

Indeed, I loved Grossman's style applied to novel that would typically be filled with flowery and ancient sounding language. Instead, the knights all speak like regular old folks without it ever feeling bizarre in context. It maybe takes the first chapter to get used to it, but it makes for pleasant and not too challenging reading throughout.

I really liked this one! I'm hovering in my mind between four and five stars, but take this from the review: this is good fun and even the sort of fantasy novel that skeptics might enjoy.

[4.5 Stars]
November 8, 2024
omg I feel so bad for not loving this 😭 it sounded so perfect! i’m dnfing at 38% and giving it three stars for now. it’s honestly really well written, some parts are funny, I absolutely love the descriptions of nature and traveling on forest roads, the audiobook narrator is fantastic… somehow I just haven’t been able to get into it.

there is a lot of back and forth between the main timeline and various characters’ backstories + a ton of Arthurian lore explained through Callum’s thoughts. it is done well and the writing style is very clean and polished, I might just not be a retelling type person.

the story has kind of a dense vibe the way it’s convoluted with summaries of the lore and actual history, I wound up not being able to connect with the main character enough to really care. I’ll give it another try in a few weeks tho and update accordingly.

EDIT (3 months later):

ok, I gave it my best shot. it takes a lot for me to put a book down. I made it from my initial 38% to 54% before it lost me completely. it’s a bunch of disjointed Arthurian stories retold by Grossman, it’s dry and way too long. at this point, I don’t even know if there is a cohesive plot at all, let alone what it is. thanks to that, while it’s very well written technically, you never quite feel like you’re part of the story. it’s just become my first (and hopefully last since it’s already November) DNF of 2024. this is the most boring thing I’ve read in years.

changing my rating from 3 to 2 since I don’t vibe with it at all.
Profile Image for Karine.
418 reviews19 followers
October 14, 2024
Having thoroughly enjoyed The Magicians trilogy, I eagerly awaited The Bright Sword and . . . was very disappointed. While this modern, melancholic retelling of the King Arthur tale has some exciting moments, it is overall more annoying than enjoyable. The main story of a young, insecure knight joining what remains of the round table after the death of King Arthur is full of adventure and self-discovery. However, it is constantly interrupted by backstories of the lesser known knights and the retelling of prior quests and lore. It's like having an entire collection of short stories regularly breaking the narrative. In addition, it's one of those audiobooks where if you get distracted for even a second you might not follow what's happening. Lastly, while Grossman goes out of his way to incorporate progressive values and issues, it's just too much to have a beloved figure like Merlin turned into Harvey Weinstein.
Profile Image for Angie.
536 reviews39 followers
June 20, 2024
This was the only book I read in the midst of a month-long reading slump, and I'm not sure if it was the cause of the slump or if my mood affected my thoughts on this one. The Magicians is very polarizing among my reading friends: I have a couple who loved it and a couple who really did not (I have not read it or watched the series). I also haven't read a lot of Arthurian fantasy so came in with the broad strokes of these characters and storylines but not the finer details.

The Bright Sword mostly takes place after the death of Arthur, with only a few of the lesser-known and minor Knights of the Round Table remaining. Into their midst comes Collum, an outcast himself who has dreamed of Camelot as his ideal and redemption, only to arrive after the glory has gone. There is a somewhat interesting story here about the future of Britain, about the tensions between the gods of the past and Christianity, about chosen ones and legacies. I wish it would have leaned into one of those themes harder instead of trying to touch on them all while also having these episodic adventure/quest sequences, and giving all of the knights modern backstories. (The backstories of the characters were some of my favorite parts, but they weren't integrated into the main story very well).

Because we are focused on the remaining knights and particularly Collum's perspective, some major events like the whole Arthur/Guinevere/Lancelot storyline are told at a remove, missing a lot of details and perspective that would have rounded out those stories. This one felt both overstuffed and underdeveloped.
Profile Image for Alex Young.
417 reviews3 followers
August 7, 2024
I almost bought this book, but I’m glad I didn’t. I got it from the library right when it released, so I knew I had to read it quickly or it would be months before I would get it back.

I already knew going in that my and Grossman’s worldviews are vastly different, but I greatly enjoyed The Magicians with its relatable, well-written characters. I hoped The Bright Sword would be more of the same, but alas.

All the characters were extremely flat, all mad at/distrustful of God in a boring, predictable way, and even when we got backstory on them, it completely shattered the flow of the book and usually didn’t contribute to the continuing story. Not that there was much of that either. The characters move slowly from plot point to plot point, often not even having any agency on that movement. Stuff just kind of happens.

And what’s the message? That things aren’t always what they’re cracked up to be? That’s why most “deconstruction” stories suck, because they don’t leave you with anything of value at the end. The Magicians was deeper than this book, even when I disagreed with it. Maybe if you like these types of “deconstruction” stories, you should pick up The Bright Sword, but if you at all like Arthur retellings, I would skip this one.
Profile Image for Hanah Roberts.
110 reviews16 followers
July 19, 2024
I’ve never read so many pages of the characters doing things that didn’t end up mattering in the end. This story was very much geared toward internal struggle and the external struggles fell flat at times. The shock value was there, the world was quite magical and the author put a lot of effort into world building and history research. The twist and ending felt rushed to me and I would have much rather we spent more time in the dark moment (because it was very interesting) and resolution over the very detailed backstories we got. I really like Grossman’s take on the round table, Merlin, etc. but I definitely was expecting something a bit faster paced and I struggled to get through this.
Profile Image for Panda .
553 reviews16 followers
August 15, 2024
Audiobook (23 long long hours) narrated by:
Nicholas Guy Smith, and the author
Lev Grossman

The narration was OK. Some of the chosen voices were weird, like Sir Lancelot's voice.
The audio was good, without distortion, erroneous noise, or obvious edits.

🐉👸🧙‍♂️🛡️🗡️👑King Arthur. 👑🗡️🛡️🧙‍♂️👸🐉

Way back in the the 16th centuries, stories of the great King Arthur and the knights of the round table rose. Passed on through time and space, some things changed while others remained constant.

🪨🗡️The Sword in the Stone 🗡️🪨

Stories of the sword in the stone and the evasive lady in the lake💧🧎‍♀️ are just as famous apart from Arthurian tales, so much so that this story has become it's own entity.

I am one of many who love Arthurian stories. I have read many books, poems, short stories, watched many movies and series, and enjoyed the stunning artist works of many an artist from crayon drawings to expert sketches, paintings, and sculptures.

When I saw that this book was being written with a bit of a different slant, about the characters in the shadows. I was intrigued. As I started reading, the first little bit was slow but then we got into a creative telling of the sword in the stone that had me grinning at how this story seemed realistic and likely. Then the story slowed down, and again there was a spark of something interesting, then slogging, then a spark emerges, and drats, quicksand.

The pages turned slowly. ⏳

No matter how fast I read, it seemed that I had more pages in front of me than behind, even beyond the halfway mark. Has Merlin somehow cursed this book? ⌛🧙‍♂️⌛

I kept on as I savored the bits and pieces of tasty tales 📜 littered sporadically throughout this maddening maze. ₪😵₪

There seemed to be no escape. 🏃🏻‍♀️💨🔚

I trudged on. 🦶🏽

and on 🚶‍♀️

and on🚶🏻‍♀️‍➡️

and on🔜👣

Alas, as I neared towards the finish line🏁🏃🏻‍♀️, I saw what I thought was a treasure at the end🌈

The glorious chest 💼💎💲 was not what it appeared to be ⚰️💀but the story has ended⛔⌛

🪦

Note: Although this book seemed endless 🔄🥴🔄, I rated it 2 stars as I did manage to finish.✔️
Why? 🤨
🤷‍♀️🙄
Profile Image for Laura.
4,051 reviews93 followers
June 23, 2024
Oh how I wish this had been a different book. Set just after Camelot has fallen, the Round Table is down to only a few Knights, and Britain's enemies are starting to pick over the bones of What Was, this could have been a great And Then... book. However, instead, we spend far too much time on the backstories of the Knights that remain to the detriment of the current day story.

When we are in the main timeline, however, the story picks up and presents some interesting explanations for the Arthurian Age's problems and why it ended (no spoilers!). Here, though, the author seems to be trying to hit all the tropes, all the stories that have come before, weaving them into one narrative. It doesn't quite work, sadly.

eARC provided by publisher via Edelweiss.
Profile Image for Gabby.
428 reviews4 followers
July 31, 2024
A mythological retelling of King Arthur for our generation in short but this book was SO much more. The pathetic yet overpowered MC and don’t even get me started on Sir Bedivere and Dinadin😭 absolute certified fire AF banger level 3000
Profile Image for Pavle.
467 reviews173 followers
October 14, 2024
Bio sam veliki poštovalac onoga što je Grosman radio sa svojom poterovskom dekonstrukcijom u mađioničarima – deo toga je definitivno vezan za to da sam čitao romane u svojim ranim dvadesetim (rip), ali čak i s tim na umu mogu da tvrdim da je u pitanju jedno dobro, zabavno, tzv „ozbiljno“ štivo. Kad sam čuo da je sledeća dekonstrukcija arturijanska mitologija, postao sam veoma veoma uzbuđen, jerbo moje detinjstvo je u mnogome bilo ukrašeno vitezovima kako u crtaćima tako u mnogim romanima na temu.

E sad, važno je napomenuti da Grosmanova dekonstrukcija nije kao ono kad ja ne uspem da savijem burito pa kažem da je pirinač i pasulj i komad tortilje što štrči „dekonstruisani burito“. Grosman se više bavi modernim temama uvučenim u tradicionalno ruho – bilo to dečija književnost i potreba za begom kao u Mađioničarima, ili ovde mitomanija jedne nacije (Britanije) kroz veličanstvenost heroizma i sudbonosnosti. Ovde Grosman definitivno podvlači tu modernost – kroz vinjete o (odbačenim) junacima okruglog stola koji su ovde protagonisti, tu su komentari o represiji homoseksualaca, transrodnosti, migracije stanovništva. To su možda i najslabiji delovi romana – iz prostog razloga što Grosman daje veoma vanila komentar na temu, ništa što ranije nije viđeno. Ono gde roman briljira, međutim, ovidi se u čitljivosti, stilu, i pametnim komentarima na religiju.

Grosmanov stil je interesantan. Umesto da kaže Palomides je palimpsest, on kaže Palimpsest su stare knjige preškrabane. Palomides, bagdadski princ, postao je prepisan kao hrišćanin. Nije u pitanju to samo prosto bacanje slova na papir. Ima tu i zanimljivog, elegantnog toka misli, koji u momentima postaje snolik, u situacijama gde nasumičnost bajki (Artur na posletku nije ništa više nego bajka) proguta tok romana i zavuče čitaoca u Alisine kutke. Komentari na boga i religiju nisu ništa manje jedinstveni – bog je tu kao kraj priče koji nikad ne dođe. Jer bajke se završe sa protagonistima koji nastavljaju da žive, nakon razrešetka jedne svojevrsne drame.

Da nije nepotrebne dužine romana (često ovo kažem, ali lagano jedno dvesta stranica je moglo da se uštedi), bila bi ovo čista petica. Ovako je ovo veliko osveženje arturijanskog kanona i prijatno čitanje, te od mene svaka preporuka.

4
Profile Image for Emily St. James.
168 reviews264 followers
Read
September 26, 2024
One of those books I wanted to read much faster than I actually did. It's an odd book to get into the rhythms of because the early passages are so episodic in nature, reflecting their roots in old legends that functioned as short stories more than a cohesive narrative. Yet in the second half, all of these threads start to come together in a way that is incredibly satisfying. I found the last few chapters intensely moving, particularly the visit to Avalon.

Really great book. Highly recommend.

Also: solid trans character. Could have done without a moment of cruelty toward said character late in the book (it didn't seem additive in any real way), but it didn't even come close to breaking the book for me. Despite this decent trans rep, I was still most drawn to the traumatized abuse survivor teen girl wizard because of course I was.

Also also: Grossman uses sexual abuse of boys as a plot point surprisingly frequently in his work, usually in a way that is raw and moving. It's interesting.
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