Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Knight Life

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Language
  
English

Originally published
  
1987

Genre
  
Comic novel

Publisher
  
Ace Books

3.8/5
Goodreads

OCLC
  
52543434

Author
  
Peter David

Followed by
  
One Knight Only

Country
  
United States of America

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Publication date
  
1987 and special edition in 2002

Media type
  
Print (hardback & paperback)

Pages
  
343 pp (paperback special edition)

ISBN
  
0-441-01077-6 (paperback special edition)

Similar
  
Peter David books, King Arthur books, Speculative fiction books

Knight Life (ISBN 0-441-01077-6), is an Arthurian fantasy novel by Peter David. The book was first published in 1987, and an expanded, updated edition of the book was published by Ace Books in 2002.

Contents

Plot summary

(The following summary is based on the 2002 rewrite.)

In a rundown apartment in New Jersey, Morgan Le Fay has finally decided to end her own life. Although kept immortal by magic, she has become apathetic, elderly, and corpulent, and sees no point in continuing with her life. Before cutting her wrist with a steak knife, she decides to look in on her old nemesis, Merlin's prison, one last time, and is surprised to see that he has escaped. Given a reason to live again, she laughs triumphantly.

In Manhattan, King Arthur appears on the streets in full medieval armor, which he quickly divests in favor of a tailored suit (thanks to an American Express card that appears in his pocket by magic). He then walks into Central Park, where the Lady of the Lake rises from the pond and gives him Excalibur.

Setting up an office under the name "Arthur Penn" (short for Pendragon), Arthur reunites with Merlin, who advises him that the world needs a leader like him, so Arthur decides to enter politics, beginning with announcing his candidacy for Mayor of New York City. As he is setting up his campaign headquarters, he hires the first applicant for an executive secretary, Gwen DeVere Queen, despite Merlin's disapproval. Arthur also "acquires," as hangers-on, two petty thugs, Buddy and Elvis, who crossed his path in Central Park and became awed by him.

After collecting the requisite number of signatures to run as an independent candidate, Arthur begins his campaign with impromptu speeches on street corners in New York, where his medieval, yet chivalric views fascinate random passers-by. His campaign alarms his illegitimate son Modred, who is immortal thanks to his mother Morgan's sorcery, but now works as a campaign manager for the Republican mayoral candidate.

Two versions

The original version of the book sold decently, but was not a runaway best seller. During his efforts to bring the book to the big screen, Peter David grew more and more dissatisfied with what he considered to be an amateur novel. He was also concerned with how dated the story seemed, with anachronisms such as an office filled with clattering typewriters and an almost non-existent Republican presence in New York City mayoral politics. Because he had updated and expanded the story when writing a screenplay version of it during one of the numerous times it was optioned to be adapted into a film, he decided to rewrite the novel, incorporating aspects from the screenplay version, and bringing it more into line with how his writing style developed over the years. Whereas the original edition contained 65,000 words, the 2002 edition contains 95,000.

Characters

  • Arthur Pendragon/Arthur Penn
  • Merlin
  • Percival
  • Gwen DeVere Queen
  • Morgan Le Fay
  • Modred/Moe Dreskin
  • Lance Benson
  • Miss Basil
  • Buddy
  • Elvis
  • Bernard "Bernie" Keating
  • Kent Taylor
  • Ronnie Cordoba
  • Influences

    Knight Life is influenced by numerous Arthurian literary works, including the following:

  • Le Morte d'Arthur by Sir Thomas Mallory
  • The Once and Future King by T.H. White
  • The Book of Merlyn by T.H. White
  • The Last Enchantment (and other assorted titles) by Mary Stewart
  • Tales of King Arthur by John Steinbeck
  • Arthur Rex by Thomas Berger
  • Film

    The novel was optioned to be adapted into a film several times, for which Peter David wrote a screenplay version of the story, but to date it has never been brought forward into production.

    Sequels

    The 2002 edition of the book was followed by two sequels, One Knight Only in 2003, and Fall of Knight in 2006.

    References

    Knight Life Wikipedia