Perilous times A novel

Thomas D. Lee

Book - 2023

"An immortal Knight of the Round Table faces his greatest challenge yet-saving the politically polarized, rapidly warming world from itself. Being reborn as an immortal defender of the realm gets awfully damn 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. Kay fought at Hastings, and at Waterloo, and in both World Wars. After a thousand years, he thought he was used to dealing with a crisis. But now he finds himself in a strange new world where oceans have risen, armies have been privatized, and half of Britain's been sold to the Chinese. The dragon that's running amok, that he can handle. The rest? He's not so sure. Luckily, Excalibur ...lies within reach--and Kay's starting to suspect that the hero fit to carry it is close at hand"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Thomas D. Lee (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Item Description
A contemporary take on Arthurian legend set in the near future.
Originally published: United Kingdom : Orbit, an imprint of Little Brown Book Group, 2023.
Physical Description
486 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780593499016
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Full of dark humor and insights into the ills of the twenty-first century, Lee's latest hits close to home by asking readers to reflect on how King Arthur would save modern-day England if it were plagued by rampant racism and political infighting as well as the devastating effects of climate change. When Kay, a longdead Knight of the Round Table, reincarnates unexpectedly, he knows that he must vanquish a dragon terrorizing the countryside. His quest to find it leads Kay to a resourceful social activist named Mariam and a reanimated Lancelot, who has a mission of his own. The three story lines intermingle, weaving in old magic, ferocious knights, a certain lady of the lake, plus other fan favorites like Merlin, Morgana, and King Arthur himself, brought back to save the world. The gravitas of the classic Arthurian Legend is thankfully absent in Lee's narrative, offering a fresh, irreverent perspective on the well-known myth and allowing readers to form their own opinions on the efficacy of a long-dead king and his sword combating what ails our modern age.

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

Debut novelist Lee takes a side-eyed look at both chivalric legends and contemporary eco-warriors in this hopeful eco-fantasy that asks whether Excalibur might be able to slay climate change. After blowing up a fracking facility and accidentally unleashing a dragon, young activist Mariam escapes the chaos with the aid of a recently resurrected Sir Kay, knight of the Round Table and foster brother of King Arthur. Given repeated lives by Merlin, Kay is used to being revived for military missions but he's less prepared to handle the more abstract foe that is the collapse of Britain's ecology. He knows, however, that the resurrected Arthur's plan to "make Britain great again" is not the right tactic. Instead, Excalibur needs a new and better wielder. Lee does not skimp on the bleakness of the environmental crisis nor on naming its villains, but he maintains a steady faith in humanity's ability to bring itself back from the brink; swords can do more than cleave if they become rallying symbols for folks who do not recognize their own heroism. Readers with a love of Arthurian romance and ecological optimism will appreciate Mariam and Kay's struggles and triumphs. Agent: Sam Morgan, Lotts Agency. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

DEBUT In this reimagining of King Arthur and his round table, the knights made bargains with old wizards and even older gods in order to return whenever Britain was in peril. When Kay and Lancelot rise in this near-future dystopia, Britain and the world are on the brink of extinction as global warming turns apocalyptic. The lowlands are flooded, dragons have risen, and someone is playing with magic. The fun part of this debut novel is following along as Kay and Lancelot roll with the punches. But the beating, breaking heart of the story rests with Mariam and her Feminist Environmentalist Transgressive Alliance, who are determined to keep on trying to save the world, no matter who or what stands in their way, which puts them in opposition to Arthur, Morgan le Fay, and all the demons who are just itching to return from the void. The conflict gives the story a breakneck pace and a compelling urgency that pulls readers along on a wild, glorious, and epic ride. VERDICT Highly recommended for lovers of Arthurian reinterpretations and climate-disaster thrillers.--Marlene Harris

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

1 Kay crawls up from under his hill, up through the claggy earth. For the last thousand years, the land around his hill has been dry. Drainage and farming and modern miracles kept the water away. He remembers. Now the ground is waterlogged, as it was when he was first buried. Before the fens were drained. He starts to wonder why, but then he gets a worm in his eye, which is the sort of foul development that drives the thoughts from your head. He makes a small, disgusted sound and wipes the worm away. This part's always disagreeable, the brute scramble up toward daylight. He burrows through clay, grabs at roots, until the earth falls away and he's looking up at a vaguely yellow sky. He gets his head out first, and then an elbow, before taking a break to catch his breath. The air doesn't taste particularly good. The sun is baking down on his face. It must be midsummer. He has another go at getting free. The earth's pulling down on his legs, but the slippery mud slickens his chainmail and provides lubrication. Finally there's an almighty squelch, and he feels the earth let go. His leg comes free. His hips get past the roots. When he's out to his knees he almost slips, falls back into the strange hollow that he's climbed out of, but he manages to stop himself. He gets his shins above ground, and then he's up, kneeling in the sun, panting in the heat. Wearing a coat of mail and a green wool cloak, both rimed with muddy afterbirth. His dreadlocks are matted with earth. Sure enough, his little burial hill is surrounded by bog. The waters have risen. This is how it was when he was buried, before the tree grew from his stomach. He gulps down air, trying to fill his lungs, but the air feels heavier than it ought to feel. It doesn't look like there's anyone here to wake him up this time. In the old days there were bands of horsemen, sometimes even a king, in person, when the need was dire. Then it became army lorries, or circles of druids in white shifts, slightly surprised that their dancing had actually achieved something. More recently, a man in a raincoat, checking his wristwatch, with a flying machine roaring on the grass behind him. Nothing today. It must be one of the more organic ones, where the earth itself decides to shake his shoulder. Something shifting in the spirit of the realm. Or maybe the birds in the sky have held a parliament and voted to dig him up. He looks around. No sign of any birds, either. "Bad, then," he mutters, to nobody. Kay drags himself to his feet. First thing to do is to find his sword and shield. They usually get regurgitated somewhere nearby, though there's no exact science to it. He's not sure that the earth fully understands its obligations. The covenant with Merlin was fairly specific. Make this warrior whole again and surrender him back to the realm of the living, whenever Britain is in peril. Return him with his sword and shield and other tools of war, untarnished. When peril is bested, let him return to your bosom and sleep, until peril calls him forth again. It couldn't have been much clearer. But mud is mud. Mud struggles with written instructions. There were bound to be some misunderstandings. There's something new across the bog. He squints at it, because the sun is bright and reflecting off the metal parts. An ugly cluster of low buildings, with pipes running everywhere like a mass of serpents. In the center is a silver tower shaped like a bullet. A fortress? Bigger, though, than Arthur's fortress at Caer Moelydd ever was. "Didn't used to be there," he says to himself. It seems like a good place to start, if he's going to figure out why he's back. He heads downhill, the earth squishing underfoot. His sword might be in the bog somewhere, hilt protruding from the wet earth. Hopefully he'll just stumble onto it. That's usually how this works, the various ancient forces of the realm conspiring to make things easier for him. That was always one of the perks of being in Arthur's warband. You'd blunder into the forest and you'd happen upon a talking raven who could tell you where to find what you were questing for. How else would idiots like Bors and Gawain have achieved anything, if they hadn't had assistance from white hinds and river spirits, guiding them on their way? Not that they ever showed any gratitude. Across the bog, the mess of buildings glistens. Strange that whoever built this thing built it so close to his old hill. But it's no stranger than white hinds or talking ravens. Riding through the old forests, you could never shake the feeling that there was a quest around the corner, put there by some greater power, whether that power was the Christ King or the Saxon gods or some older goddess of the trees. Arthur never seemed to notice. It seemed natural to him that things of import should occur in his proximity. If anyone else noticed, they knew better than to mention it. Only Kay would bring it up occasionally and earn himself a scowl from Merlin or a jibe from Lancelot. There's a thought to make him angry. Lancelot on his white horse, sneering. Whispering in Arthur's ear. Look, sire, a brown Nubian covered in brown filth, and no browner for it. It's a good thought for fueling you through a bog. He imagines Lancelot in the distance, goading him. He imagines pulling Lancelot down from his horse and punching him in the jaw. Drowning him in the mud. That's a nice thought for getting you through a bog, too. The mud isn't so bad, at first. He wades through it with barely a grimace. It's no worse than Agincourt, or the Somme. At least there's no bullets flying, no hot shell fragments raining down or French coursers charging at him. The only problem is the mail, which weighs him down. And Christ, it's a hot day. Summers never used to be this hot, he's sure of it. It's a day for resting in the shade, not wearing mail, or wading. If it gets any thicker he'll be right back underground again, slowly choking, lungs filling with mud. And what would happen then? He's died in forty different ways over the years, from Saxon spearheads and Byzantine fire and Japanese inhospitality, but he's never drowned in mud before. That would be a new one to add to the list. He can't help but notice that there's something odd about this mud. It has a slickness to it, a purple sheen, that reflects the sunlight more than mud really ought to. He's up to his knees in it now. No sword yet. He casts his eyes around, throws up his hands in hopelessness. "Nimue?" he asks. It's worth a shot. "Bit of help, maybe?" No answer. No pale arm shoots skyward from the oily waters, holding aloft a gleaming sword. That only works for Arthur's Caliburn, apparently. Not common swords like his that soil themselves with blood now and again. It's made him careless, coming back from the dead. He'd never have walked blithely across a moor in the old days. Suicide. He's used to being pampered now, cars and helicopters and warm beds whenever he's above ground. He's forgotten the basics. If he does drown here then it will be his own fault and no one else's. No wonder Nimue isn't helping. She's probably got more important things to do in another lake somewhere. More important than helping errant knights find their bloody swords. He's thinking of wading back when a sound breaks out across the moor, a modern sound. There's still a part of his mind that thinks of old-­fashioned explanations first. It's a beast that needs slaying, or else a signal horn. But no, it's a klaxon, a warning siren. Coming from the mass of buildings. That piques his interest. If it sounds like peril, it's probably peril. Onward, then. Through the heat. After five minutes of trudging, he reaches a wire fence. Cruel razors coiled on top of it to make the passage even more unpleasant, and thorny bushes planted thickly on the other side. Slim chance of cutting through it all, without his sword. But there are some signs on the fence, which he reads out slowly, sounding out the words with dry lips. The first sign says, secure fracking facility. Some kind of fortified brothel? They didn't have secure facilities for that sort of thing, the last time he was up and about. Times change. The second sign is more interesting. It says, this site is protected by saxons. There's red heraldry of a nasal helmet, which doesn't look like any helmet that he ever saw on a Saxon head. In the corner of the notice are the words saxon pmc. protection you can rely on. He is confused by this sign. How can there be Saxons guarding places again? Have they overthrown the Normans, finally? Have more Saxons come from Saxony, as invaders? Perhaps that's it. Invaders have overrun Britain's shores, and it's his job to stop them. Classic peril. The sort of thing he used to be good at, a long time ago. Pushing Saxons back into the sea. If he finds Saxons in this place then he will kill them. Then maybe he can go back to sleep. Excerpted from Perilous Times: A Novel by Thomas D. Lee All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.