Le Morte d'Arthur (Modern Library Classics)
The legends of King Arthur and his knights of the Round Table have inspired some of the greatest works of literature--from Cervantes's <b>Don Quixote</b> to Tennyson's <b>Idylls of the King</b>. Although many versions exist, Malory's stands as the classic rendition. Malory wrote the book while in Newgate Prison during the last three years of his life; it was published some fourteen years later, in 1485, by William Caxton. The tales, steeped in the magic of Merlin, the powerful cords of the chivalric code, and the age-old dramas of love and death, resound across the centuries.<br><br>The stories of King Arthur, Lancelot, Queen Guenever, and Tristram and Isolde seem astonishingly moving and modern. Malory's <b>Le Morte d'Arthur</b> endures and inspires because it embodies mankind's deepest yearnings for brotherhood and community, a love worth dying for, and valor, honor, and chivalry.