Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Sutcliff, Rosemary - Marcus Crouch
Sutcliff, Rosemary - Marcus Crouch
MARCUS CROUCH
Rosemary Sutcliff has dwelt so long, imaginatively, in the Dark Ages that she seems not quite at ease in bringing Arthur into the age of chivalry. Future literary historians, assessing her contribution to the literature of our age, will find profitable exercise in comparing her approach to the figure of Arthur in The Lantern Bearers, in the adult novel Sword at Sunset, and in this rather more conventional exploration of Malory and other medieval sources [The Sword and the Circle].
Perhaps it is some evidence of her incomplete ease that Miss Sutcliff returns here to some of the stylistic devices of her earlier books. There is much elegant and atmospheric writing, a little less of the terse, hard lines which have distinguished the later novels for children.
This having been said, let me hasten to add that this is as good a retelling of the ancient stories as we have had in this half-century.
...
[The entire page is 199 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Louise S. Bechtel
- Naomi Lewis
- Lavinia R. Davis
- Louise S. Bechtel
- Elizabeth Hodges
- Margaret Sherwood Libby
- J. O. Prestwich
- Lavinia R. Davis
- Eric Hood
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Margaret Sherwood Libby
- C. S. Bennett
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Carolyn Horovitz
- Margaret Meek
- Marcus Crouch
- Robert Payne
- Padraic Colum
- SHEILA EGOFF, G. T. STUBBS, and L. F. ASHLEY
- Joan V Marder
- Eleanor Cameron
- The Times Literary Supplement
- John Rowe Townsend
- MAY HILL ARBUTHNOT and ZENA SUTHERLAND
- Feenie Ziner
- Jill Paton Walsh
- Margery Fisher
- Sarah Hayes
- Pauline Clarke
- Elaine Moss
- Ann Evans
- Marcus Crouch
- Hilary Wright
- Neil Philip
- Marcus Crouch
- Sheila A. Egoff
- Neil Philip
- Margery Fisher
- Anne Duchene
- Copyright
