With The Mists of Avalon the reader enjoys a new perspective: that of the women [in the Arthurian legends]…. Furthermore, the development of the novel depends not on a contest between good and evil, Christianity and paganism, nor on the characters themselves so much as it does on the tension that frowns as a new culture overshadows and obliterates an older one. Thus Marion Zimmer Bradley has written of a present urgency in a mythical setting, and written magnificently at that! (p. 2)
Perhaps the most beautiful and wonderful image in the story is that of Avalon/Glastonbury, separated by a magical veil of mist, two worlds sharing a single island, one tradition on different planes. The passage from the real world to the mystical will linger in the reader's mind long after battles, pageants and Pellinore's dragon have faded from memory; the question, too, of which world was the more real will remain.
This is a free excerpt of 152 words. There are 263 words (approx.
1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.
Read the rest of this Criticism with our Bradley, Marion Zimmer 1930–: Critical Essay by Lawrence M. Caylor Access Pass.