Everything you need to understand or teach
Mary Stewart.
Products may contain comprehensive summaries, analysis, notes, articles, essays,
lesson plans and more. See below for details on what is included.
Mary Stewart's writing career divides into two distinct parts. In her first period, according to Kay Mussell in the St. James Guide to Crime and Mystery Writers, Stewart "wrote a remarkable series of ...
Read more
In the following review, the critic praises My Brother Michael as an improbable but well-written and fully absorbing mystery.
[My Brother Michael is a] fast moving suspense novel set against the backg...
Read more
In the following essay, Jurich explains Stewart's use of the ancient figure Mithras, from the Zoroastrian religion, in the creation of her Merlin.
The figure of Merlin is a fascinating palimpse...
Read more
In the following review, the critic assesses Rose Cottage as familiar Stewart material—"mild doings in enchanting surroundings."
For the frazzled Anglophile, the countryside-enamo...
Read more
In the following review, Byerly offers a favorable appraisal of This Rough Magic, noting in particular Stewart's wide range of subject matter synthesized into a single plot.
[In This Rough Magi...
Read more
In the following review, Grady offers a favorable assessment of Stewart's complex and colorful plot and writing in The Gabriel Hounds.
Christabel Mansel, a spirited and pretty English girl on a...
Read more
In the following review, Cadogan questions several inconsistencies in the plot of A Walk in Wolf Wood but praises the novel overall for its subtlety and cleverness.
In A Walk in Wolf Wood Mary Stewart...
Read more
In the following essay, Herman argues that Stewart's portrayal of women in her Merlin trilogy is the most sympathetic and groundbreaking in Arthurian legend because of her rejection of feminine...
Read more
In the following essay, Watson examines the ways in which Merlin symbolizes the "word of power" in that he is a visionary who is privy to the knowledge and wisdom of the gods.
The Merlin...
Read more
In the following review, the critic praises Stewart's ability to evocatively portray the setting of her novel The Stormy Petrel.
By the English author of Thornyhold (1988), etc., more atmospher...
Read more
In the following essay, Dean argues that a successful literary representation of the character Merlin requires that modern readers be able and willing to suspend their skepticism and accept Merlin as ...
Read more