This brilliant Arthurian epic cuts through the mists of pagan, early
Christian, and medieval splendors that have gathered about the subject
and tells the authentic story of the man who may well have been the real
King Arthur-Artos the Bear, the mighty warrior-king who saved the last
lights of Western civilization when the barbarian darkness descended in
the fifth century. Presenting early Britain as it was after the
departure of the Romans-no Round Table, no many-towered Camelot-the
setting is a hard, savage land, half-civilized, half-pagan, where a few
men struggled to forge a nation and hold back the Saxon scourge. Richly
detailed, the story chronicles the formation of a great army, the
hardships of winter quarters, the primitive wedding feasts, the pagan
fertility rites, the agonies of surgery after battle, the thrilling stag
hunts, and the glorious processions of the era. Stripped of the
chivalric embellishments that the French applied to British history
centuries ago, the Arthurian age here emerges as a time when men stood
at the precipice of history-a time of transition and changing values and
imminent national peril.