Lancelot and the King
BOOK ONE ONLY
FREE June 29th to July 4th!!!
BOOK ONE ONLY
FREE June 29th to July 4th!!!
The Knights of Camelot Book 1
by Sarah Luddington
Genre: M/M Historical Fantasy Romance
Genre: M/M Historical Fantasy Romance
A
love long-held, the love of a knight for his king, a love which must
be denied.
Lancelot
is banished from Camelot in disgrace, not only has he lost his honour
and country, but too late he realises he has lost his love.
When
duty calls him to return, Lancelot doesn’t think twice and once
more puts on his armour. If his king needs him and he is called to
the sword, he knows where he must be.
His
country is threatened, the dark wings of war are gathering and his
love... that will just have to wait.
The
needs of one man’s heart cry for peace, but Lancelot understands
what he must do.
He
will stand shoulder to shoulder with the man he loves and if they
survive the battlefields, if they can survive the peace, then maybe,
just maybe, a knight and his king can put aside their call to arms
and listen to the call of their hearts.
The
Knights of Camelot series is a reimagining of the Arthurian legends.
Each book features two (or more) men in love with one another, steamy
encounters, and more. These books are not intended to be read as
standalones, so be sure to start at the beginning with Lancelot and
the King.
What inspired you to write this book?
I found Lancelot as a character in a book that will never be published, because I can’t write it well enough, and knew he needed a story of his own. So began my research into Arthurian mythology. What a rabbit hole that turned out to be!
When I studied the original texts I began to see a pattern. Arthur forgives Lancelot, but never Guinevere and her punishment is far worse than Lancelot’s for their affair. Why would a king forgive a knight for bedding his queen? Maybe the king loves the knight far more than the queen and maybe the knight bedded the queen to somehow reach out to the king…? That was the question I asked myself when I began Lancelot and the King, the first in the Knights of Camelot series. It took a lot of words to figure out the answer.
What can we expect from you in the future?
More stories where I turn icons of history and contemporary literature into heroes for the LGBTQ+ community. We deserve heroes and if I have to write them, then I will! These iconic characters, ones that have shaped our understanding of what it means to be heroic and honourable, should also be gay or trans or queer. Why can’t King Arthur or Robin Hood be gay? Does it make them weak? Or less able? Of course not, so that’s why I write these stories.
Do you have any “side stories” about the characters?
Loads…
Can you tell us a little bit about the characters in Lancelot and the King?
The Knights of Camelot. You know the iconic characters I write about. What I’ve tried to do is inject them with the frailties of a real person, while maintaining their essential heroic motifs and the deep magic in the original stories that acted as metaphors for the medieval world view.
Lancelot’s mind breaks under the pressures Arthur, his king, places on him. The dead haunt him. His love for Arthur destroys him and he tries to walk away but fails, so has to find the strength to return and make Arthur really ‘see’ who he is and what he needs. Meanwhile he has to save Camelot from powerful enemies of the supernatural kind and battle gods to prevent England and Albion from being destroyed.
King Arthur was, in many ways, more difficult because I had to learn about him from Lancelot’s point of view. He’s strong, born to be a leader, but doesn’t want the mantel thrust upon him by his birth. It makes him petulant and selfish, especially over the object of his affection. If Arthur can’t have Lancelot, then no one can! As he grows older and sees the damage his selfishness causes to others, Arthur changes, probably the most out of all the characters. He learns that love comes with heavy responsibilities and he shouldn’t always expect to win just because he is a king. He learns about self-sacrifice and in that finds the true meaning of honour. He’s a complex character in the original myths and that doesn’t change in my stories.
Tell us about your main characters- what makes them tick?
I’ll talk about Lancelot but I could go on forever about the rest of them. His service to his king and country dominate every waking thought for Lancelot. Every decision he makes, every move, he is a soldier first and a man second. His warrior code is scored on his bones but his mind and heart are still fragile and his soul cries out for peace, for hearth and home. For a family. He can and does kill without conscience but he always tries to kill the right person and save the weak or vulnerable.
If your book was made into a film, who would you like to play the lead?
Easy one – Aidan Turner of Poldark fame. When I saw him in the BBC version of Begin Human he became my Lancelot.
What is your favorite part of this book and why?
In every book my favourite bits are killing the bad guys. Damn, I love it when Lancelot pushes his sword into some bastard and they die knowing he’s taken their life. And the slightly less psychotic answer… When he shares his heart with Arthur or Tancred. When they have those soft moments among the war and mayhem that makes them men, not machines of death. I love exploring the tenderness such a man is able to share with someone he trusts.
If you could spend time with a character from your book whom would it be? And what would you do during that day?
I spent every day of ten years with Lancelot and miss him all the time but his story is done. If I could walk into a room with him I’d coax him outside, ask him to teach me more about fighting and ride off into the sunset to find adventure at his side as his equal.
Do your characters seem to hijack the story or do you feel like you have the reins of the story? Convince us why you feel your book is a must read.
This one made me laugh… I wish I had some measure of control over them. I come up with the general outline of the book, but they write it. They often surprise me and when someone dies, it’s difficult writing through the tears.
Why should you read these stories? They are full of the ancient mysteries of a time lost in myth and magic. They have romance and adventure at their core and characters are so complex they fill your mind with passionate – What Ifs? These are stories to be told by firelight or while watching the stars turn overhead on a summer’s evening. They speak to the heart of love and how it can change entire worlds if one person is strong enough to make a stand.
When I first starting writing these stories gay marriage didn’t exist, that’s how much each voice can change a world.
Is there a writer whose brain you would love to pick for advice? Who would that be and why?
I can’t answer this one easily though I wish I could. I love talking to writers. Euripides and Aeschylus would be first because their Greek tragedies filled my imagination with wonder as a child and when I studied them at collage. Makes me sound really posh but damn these guys could tell a story!
Jane Austen because she fascinates me. The depth of her understanding of society and a person’s mind is deep. Also, how she survived her own, very controlled, life for so long.
Men like Chris Ryan and Andy McNab – who to go from serving in the SAS to writing about it and living in a domestic world. It must be the most difficult transition we ask of our service men and women who become elite warriors.
A
powerful new threat looms over Camelot and the fleeting sanctuary of
love is shattered. Maybe beyond repair.
Lancelot
and Arthur must place their joy on hold to save the kingdom.
As
chaos takes hold over the land, the time for tender passion has
passed. This is the time for heroes, the time for a king and his
greatest knight to make a stand and lead their country through the
fires of war.
But
in the midst of the battles sometimes the needs of the moment demand
sacrifice and a trust is broken.
With
the blood of betrayal still running, Lancelot finds himself drawn to
another. Perhaps in Tancred’s tender embrace he might just find the
peace he so desperately craves.
But
a jealous king is a dangerous creature and the ghosts of the dead are
intent on hounding a broken soul to the grave.
A
broken and shattered knight hides from the world and from the man who
destroyed him. Betrayed by the man he loved, Lancelot vows that the
only way he will return is to see the heart of his king staining the
floors of Camelot.
Then
one day, a gentler soul tracks down the tormented knight and sets to
repairing a mind so damaged, there may never be a way back. When
Tancred finds Lancelot, he is barely recognisable.
The
revenant of a once powerful knight, with a heart which burns so
intensely, it is only the pain which gives life.
But
Tancred is not going to lose a soulmate he has spent a lifetime
waiting to find.
Lancelot
will return and his sword is thirsty for blood. The power of the
Grail and the fury of Excalibur are turned on the enemies of Camelot
in a race to save a kingdom and a brotherhood bound in blood.
With
King Arthur’s blood still fresh on Lancelot’s hands, a deal is
struck. A deal which will bind the knight to an evil power in return
for the life of the man he loves.
Lancelot
is forced to work for the fey in a bargain which is set to unleash a
new terror on the lands. A force so powerful that even the gods step
back to watch.
With
Tancred at his side, the vengeful knight must bide his time and play
the fey’s games.
Games
which will cost Lancelot his soul if he cannot find a way to defeat
the evil which grows. But when the final prophecy is revealed,
Lancelot must challenge his fate alone.
The
gods play games, and Albion’s gods seem to enjoy the chase. When
chaos descends the gentlest soul will break.
When
that soul belongs to the man to whom Lancelot has given his heart,
death is coming for the tormenters.
Lancelot
is now the king of Albion and his sword will destroy her enemies.
Even if those enemies are more powerful than anything he could have
dreamed.
But
first he needs to save his love. A man so destroyed that his thirst
for revenge will not stop until the kingdom runs red.
Forced
to make alliances with once hated enemies, the needs of war forge
dangerous bedfellows.
To
save a kingdom may just cost Lancelot the only thing he has left. His
soul.
With
only one chance to save his lover, and his land, Lancelot must make a
new deal with the gods.
They
will demand everything Lancelot holds and take the last threads of
hope from his heart.
The
torment that the god of chaos and misery sets to work in Lancelot’s
life, threatens to destroy Albion and Camelot, but the god never
figured on the power of love and with Arthur’s help, there may just
be a way to survive such sadness.
Lancelot
must find a way to stop their destruction before Camelot, Albion and
Tancred are lost forever. This time there is no hope, no battle he
can win, no twist to save his cursed life.
The
knight turns his eyes to the heavens and his curse follows on a swift
sword.
His
only hope is that the sacrifice he gives proves to be enough to save
his lost love.
For
six hundred years, Lancelot has been lost.
Lost
in a world so far from Camelot that his blood stills and his soul
craves nothing but oblivion. Six hundred years of fighting other
men’s wars and bedding other men’s lovers. Six hundred years of
death.
But
Fate wants her hero back and Lancelot must give up this new world of
machines and cities to return to Albion.
The
gods are rising and Mordred has a new ally.
An
ally more fearsome than any Lancelot has ever encountered.
With
Arthur once more by his side, they face what they believe will be
their final battle. An appointment with the darkest soul in Albion
and his even darker god.
When
the battle rests, the hearts are laid bare.
Lancelot
has destroyed the person who loved him and who brought him back from
the dead. Tancred lies broken and Arthur will never release his hold
on Lancelot.
But
wars have no time for broken hearts and the three men are all that
stand between Camelot and the advancing armies in the north. Somehow
they must find a way to put the pain of broken love to one side
before all is lost under the gathering evil.
They
must learn to trust each other once more, if only for one last time.
Camelot needs its greatest knights now; there will be time enough for
hearts to heal when the battle is done.
If
they survive.
When
a god strips you of everything you love, what is there left to do but
fight?
Lancelot,
Arthur and Tancred face their god of madness and chaos in the centre
of the world. Fate holds her breath as the three heroes draw on the
last of their strength to bring peace to Albion.
But
can a warrior ever be still? Is there a place where heroes can sleep?
Or is there only death for those who made death their lives?
Lancelot
knows he is facing his final battle, but it is not the battle of the
sword he fears, it is the battle of the heart.
If
he is victorious, he will secure peace for Albion for eternity. Yet
still his heart aches.
The
fiercest knight that Camelot has ever known is fearful of the fragile
soul his battered body conceals.
There
may be only one answer and the thought scares him more than any enemy
he has ever faced.
“The voices of the past
are often too strong to resist. I have been away from Camelot and
Albion for five long centuries. Occasionally though, a soul brushes
against mine and I feel it... I feel love in all its forms regardless
of the cost. No one can replace Arthur or Tancred, but there are
souls in this long lonely life that make it bearable, even happy, and
I live only for those candle flashes of hope.”
Lancelot is
cursed to walk the world alone. His is the immortal Knight of
Camelot, cast adrift after angering the god Balar. Time drifts
endlessly for him until he finds a reason to live.
Lady
Elizabeth Rothschild is a noble of the Great British Empire and she
is going to prove that a noble woman can control just as much as a
noble man. Her tool for this mission is a man called Lance Ash, a
drunkard, a whoremonger, a wastrel, but someone very good at his job.
He is her treasure hunter, and she wants him to find the Holy Spear
which pierced the flank of the true God.
Lance Ash knows
exactly how dangerous such a quest can be for all involved, but when
he meets the Lady Rothschild’s half brother, Lance Ash is lost and
Lancelot du Lac is reborn.
A Knights of Camelot story which
takes place between Lancelot’s Curse and Betrayal of Lancelot.
Sarah Luddington is the
author of historical gay romance and contemporary gay romance. She is
a gay rights activist, holds three martial arts black belts, a degree
in Medieval History and far too many dogs. She lives on a mountain in
Spain and in her spare time writes and reads LGBT fiction.
Come and visit her
website at www.romanticadventures.net or Facebook for more
information. She always welcomes contact with her readers.
Many thanks.
Follow
the tour HERE
for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!
No comments:
Post a Comment