Rules for a knight The last letter of Sir Thomas Lemuel Hawke

Ethan Hawke, 1970-

Book - 2015

"It is 1483, and Sir Thomas Lemuel Hawke, a Cornish knight, is about to ride into battle. On the eve of his departure, he composes a letter to his four young children, consisting of twenty virtues that provide instruction on how to live a noble life, and on all the lessons, large and small, that he might have imparted to them himself were he not expecting to die on the battlefield. "Why am I alive? Where was I before I was born? What will happen to me when I die? Whatever well our lives are drawn from, it is deep, wild, mysterious, and unknowable..."Rules for a Knight is many things: a code of ethics; an intimate record of a lifelong quest; a careful recounting of a knight's hardest won lessons, deepest aspirations, and... most richly instructive failures; and an artifact, a relic of a father's exquisite love. Drawing on the ancient teachings of Eastern and Western philosophy and religion, on literature, and poetry, and on the great spiritual and political writings of our time, Ethan Hawke has written a parable that--in the story of a young man's journey toward a life of authenticity and meaning--captures the instinctive movement of the heart toward truth and beauty. Rules for a Knight has the appeal of Arthurian legend; the economy of Aesop; and the vitality, intelligence, and risk-taking that could only emanate from Ethan Hawke"--

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Subjects
Genres
Allegories
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Ethan Hawke, 1970- (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
172 pages : illustrations ; 16 cm
ISBN
9780307962331
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Film star Hawke's first novel since Ash Wednesday (2003) is a meditative fable about fatherhood and honor as told by a Cornish knight. Preparing to march into a deadly battle, Sir Thomas Lemuel Hawke pens a letter to his four young children, imparting wisdom he obtained while under his grandfather's tutelage. Now presented as a family document that Ethan Hawke has pieced together, adapted, and reconstructed, the rules offer sage interpretations of 20 topics, including friendship, humility, honesty, courage, patience, discipline, and love. Regarding death, knights are unafraid, for the work one knight begins, others may finish. Each rule is illustrated and followed by object lessons. In Discipline, Thomas' Uncle Ferris offers local knights expensive gifts, which only Thomas and his grandfather decline, so he can build an indebted army for an unjust battle. In Forgiveness, Thomas chides his wife for aiding a petulant young ruler, but she notes that he unquestioningly assists their demanding children every day. Although it can be read in a sitting, Hawke's book of wisdom declaring life to be a gift should be pondered.--Fullmer, Jonathan Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Actor and author Hawke (Ash Wednesday) pens a heartwarming, medieval tale on ethics. Written in an epistolary form, Hawke writes from the perspective of his imagined ancestor Sir Thomas Lemuel Hawke, a knight who knows he is about to die in war. Sir Thomas teaches his children the 20 rules of knighthood, using examples from his own life to prove their validity. Each chapter begins with a drawing by Hawke's wife, Ryan, and a short aphorism. Sir Thomas states that "luck is the residue of design" to explain the importance of dedication. To explain courage, he asserts that "anything that gives light must endure burning." In addition to the more obvious notions one might instill in a child, Hawke touches upon subjects less-often addressed, such as speech, solitude, and death-"in silence we can sense eternity sleeping inside us." Hawke's joust against injustice and fear is an easy and endearing read, perfect for young and old children alike. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

If you don't have a woeful countenance already, this knight's tale will slap one on you right quick. It's 1483, and down in Cornwall, a knight is writing a farewell to his children against the possibility that he may fall in battle in a war against the Thane of Cawdor. Not the one whose title King Macbeth usurped 400 years earlier, it would seemthough, given the anachronistic nature of this book, anything's possible. Take, for instance, a moment just a few pages in, when our seasoned and grown-up knight, settling into his yarn, recalls that the knight to whom he apprenticed as a young man began his tutelage with a nice cuppa. That's all very well and good, except that tea was unknown in the Middle Ages; a stickler will tell you that it first turns up a century and a half after the events actor/novelist Hawke (Ash Wednesday, 2002, etc.) recounts. That's either magical realism or sloppiness, both of which this latest effort abounds in. Take the nostrum that Good Sir Knight Senior imparts to Junior: "You are better than no one, and no one is better than you." All very nicely egalitarian, that, but a bit out of step with the elaborate hierarchy of medieval equerry and nobility. And more: "The simple joys are the great ones. Pleasure is not complicated." Tell it to Abelard and Heloise, oh Obi-Wan. Elsewhere Hawke merrily (and again anachronistically) stuffs in a well-known Buddhist tale, the punch line to which is, "I set that boy down hours ago, but I see you are still carrying him." Ah, well. By all appearances, Hawke aspires to write a modern Siddhartha, but what we wind up with is more along the lines of watered-down Mitch Albomand that's a very weak cup of tea indeed. Just the thing for those who want their New Age nostrums wrapped in medieval kit. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.