Thanks to NetGalley and Ballantine Books for the ARC. It hasn’t affected the contents of my review.
The realm is in peril, and the knights of the round table have been called back to duty once again, waking up from under the earth to fight . . . climate change. Among other things. Here’s a little bit of the blurb:
“An immortal Knight of the Round Table faces his greatest challenge yet—saving the politically polarized, rapidly warming world from itself—in this slyly funny contemporary take on Arthurian legend.
Legends don’t always live up to reality.
Being reborn as an immortal defender of the realm gets awfully tiring over the years—or at least that’s what Sir Kay’s thinking as he claws his way up from beneath the earth yet again.
Mariam’s spent her life fighting what’s wrong with her country. But she’s just one ordinary person, up against a hopelessly broken system. So when she meets Kay, she dares to hope that the world has finally found the savior it needs.
Yet as the two travel through this bizarre and dangerous land, they discover that a magical plot of apocalyptic proportions is underway. And Kay’s too busy hunting dragons—and exchanging blows with his old enemy Lancelot—to figure out what to do about it.
In perilous times like these, the realm doesn’t just need a knight. It needs a true leader.
Luckily, Excalibur lies within reach.
But who will be fit to wield it? “
This was a little too long, a little repetitive (scenes back to back accomplishing the same things), and the author doesn’t really wield a subtle pen (which is fine! especially since this is in part a satire, but some of the moments in this could have benefitted, I think, while others were perfect). But this author has quite the imagination and sense of humor, so I will definitely be picking up future books from him. I ended up doing the audiobook from my library after I biffed it with my e-ARC (this book was published in May) and I really liked the narrator. Ended up finishing it in a couple of days.
On a side note, this book has a very creative and amusing cure for knocking the racism out of racists, and while implausible, it made me laugh. Perhaps we, too, should consider squirrelification.
For those of you like me who need a hopeful ending, this book delivers, if that was something you were worried about (I was.)