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Merlin Creates Arthur: The Swithen First Trilogy Boxed Set Kindle Edition
Scott Telek (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
Three complete novels for one low price, plus bonus material for each book: a comparison of the novel to the actual legend, and an insightful author interview.
What epic events led up to the birth of Arthur, future king of Britain? The first three books of the acclaimed The Swithen series take us back to an unassuming small town in which Merlin is born, walk us through his remarkable movement to the side of kings, and finally display his incredible effort to create the child he will mold into the future King Arthur. Following as they do the real Arthurian legend, these novels are not so much sequels as one continuous story that climaxes in the birth of the future king.
“If the rest of them are as enjoyable as the three I have been fortunate enough to read thus far, it should be quite an impressive series… each successive book improves on what has gone before…” —MomKatReads, Amazon Review
The Swithen series is unique among Arthurian fiction as it remains faithful to the actual legend of King Arthur, laid down over 800 years ago. As you read, you will know that you are discovering the actual ancient legend of King Arthur, not some new, made-up story. And you will find it more mysterious, mystical, magical and entrancing than anything any modern author could make up.
In Book 1: Our Man on Earth, the devil impregnates a human woman in hopes of creating a man who will lead people into temptation. Her faith and fortitude resists him, and when she has the baby baptized, he is won to good, but allowed to keep his powers. This is Merlin, who then defends his mother at the trial for her life. This is a quiet, intimate novel of magic and surprising mother-son tenderness, a strikingly small beginning to the sprawling epic to come.
The scope widens considerably in Book 2: The Sons of Constance, in which Merlin leaves his mother’s side and takes to the company of kings. Called to assist tyrant king Vortiger, he witnesses a vicious battle between two dragons and watches as the throne passes to Pendragon, and later Uther, destined to become Arthur’s father. Magic and action come to the fore as we witness epic battles, macabre punishment for those who doubt the wizard’s abilities, the creation of the Round Table and the manipulation of kings, none of whom are sure if they’re really in command—or just pawns to the wiles of the cunning wizard.
Merlin’s plan comes to fruition in Book 3: The Void Place, a darkly engrossing psychological thriller suffused with lust, betrayal, deception, romance and court intrigue. In it, Uther loses himself in obsession over Igraine, the beautiful wife of one of his most loyal leigemen. His lust for her will drive the country into war, but give Merlin what he wants: a child born of nobility that he can mold into the future King Arthur.
“By the end, we have the baby Arthur, making all three books the lead-up to all that we know is to come. If you make it through this book, you will be hooked for the series. It leaves you in a spot where the story is poised to explode, which gives the exciting feeling that as gripping as this series has been, it’s just getting started.” —Judy K. J., Amazon review
Enter the world of The Swithen and have Arthurian kings, knights, ladies and one very special wizard brought to vivid life. These three books contain one momentous story, bringing us from nothing to the moment when King Arthur is born. Starting with the devil's creation of Merlin, it then movies through his transformation to good, and his incredible effort to bring the young Britain out of chaos through the creation of a king--the most incredible king the land will ever know.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication date10 February 2019
- Reading age14 - 18 years
- File size3984 KB
Product details
- ASIN : B07NLBMMHS
- Language : English
- File size : 3984 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 1490 pages
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Scott Telek is exactly the kind of guy you would imagine spending over a decade reading and studying the different versions of the Arthurian legend, then devoting the rest of his life to writing the longest and most detailed telling of the Medieval King Arthur legend in existence.
His series The Swithen is committed to staying faithful to the actual Arthurian legend as laid down between the years 1136 and 1485. Too many King Arthur stories stray so far from the original Medieval sources, they lose the magic and mystery that made this saga so enduring in the first place. Telek's rule, and the challenge he has set for himself as a writer, is that he cannot change anything from the ancient story, he can only add or enhance scenes and characters, but anything he does add has to slot seamlessly into the existing story. In this way, when you read The Swithen, you can know that you are discovering the actual Arthurian legend and not some made-up story.
Telek has been a professional writer for over 30 years. His degrees are in English Literature and Psychology, both of which he brings to bear on turning blank archetypes such as Merlin, Arthur and Morgan le Fay into fully fleshed out charcacters with relatable flaws and emotions. He has also maintained a film review website (some of which you can find in books here), created films of his own and studied oil painting. He was born in Michigan, lived in New York City, Chicago, and is now a permanent resident of Ontario, Canada.
Telek's love of nature and ongoing interest in legend and folklore led into his obsession with the Arthurian legend. Discovering that most of us actually don't know many of the stories it contains, and that any telling would need to be longer, not shorter, in order to fully deliver the epic scope and majesty the saga deserves, he plotted out 25 novels... No making it up as we go! Five of them are out now, taking us from the birth of Merlin to Arthur's coronation as king. The Swithen offers readers an ongoing fantasy saga they can grow with over the next 20 or so years. And it just happens to be one of the greatest stories ever told.
Customer reviews
Top reviews from other countries

But Meylinde and Merlin are only the start, (although perhaps my favourite of the books) as things grow progressively darker with the story of The Sons of Constance, although we have to dispose of the usurper Vorgigern before the aforesaid sons can kick of their own troubled reigns' In a series of three books filled with glories of character, landscape and the most carefully constructed of plots, always - if they at all can be - taken entirely from the sources and only further enhanced when there have been only a few lines for the author to play with - it is the incredibly moving and so memorably written sequence where the about-to-be beseiged Vortigern, disguises himself so that he can wander at will among first of all a few of his people and then the countryside which he clearly loves. The sequence is elegiac and tinged with the sadness that this flawed man was ready to understand the error of his ways. After his inevitable and appropriately glossed over end, it is the turn of the brothers Pendragon and Uther to bestride the stage, eager and ready for rule, with the more warrior like Uther happy to play second fiddle to his golden brother. But always behind the scenes there is Merlin, the brothers inherited curse and blessing, depending on your point of view, with that inability of his to feel empathy for humans. Only long after Pendragon has been laid to rest in a brilliantly conjured Stonehenge does this flaw in Merlin cause the greatest destruction - as we all know by now - to the weakening and besotted Uther and Igrayne of Cornwall, the woman who he loves yet may not have, unless --- Again Scott Telek evokes the awful madness, obsession and actual physical pain that is love and its predictably tragic end. Except that rarely does the author do that, or indeed ever behave in an unpredictable or expected way. - he's just far too good to sell you short.
I do have a small issue about the way he fronts it out at the beginning of the last book, The Void Place by apologising for the sexual assault to follow, because I do not think it is ever one in the way he himself portrays it and because he covers all that in the extra material at the end more than adequately. I've always thought that the jury is essentially out on just what you would call this magic haunted encounter, but with Merlin as unfeeling as he is here, his mother makes clear that the rape, if rape it is, is Merlin's more than it is the confused and unhappy Uther's, who does not enter into this deception happily.
There is also the question of Christianity, which is weighed up cleverly and balanced beautifully, where we can have redemption and penance, but wisely there is no mention of sin, as Arthur is a tale which for most of us must have none of that. And I suppose in conclusion, it's the way that Scott Telek has chosen to tell the tale that is most important in the end, for in choosing to do it in this way, he's given the story of Arthur, and of Merlin, Uther and Igrayne back to us - for which we already owe him a real debt of gratitude.

