Lady of the Forest

Jennifer Roberson

Book 1 of Robin Hood

Language: English

Publisher: Zebra

Published: Jan 1, 1992

Pages: 951
ABC: 4

Description:

Robin Hood and Maid Marian--their love has belonged to legend for centuries, and now it belongs to us all, stunningly brought to life by the masterful pen of a truly gifted storyteller. From the author of Chronicles of the Cheysuli and Sword-Dancer Cycle. ### From Publishers Weekly A beautiful girl waits, angry and afraid, surrounded by imprisoning walls and men who desire her both to satisfy themselves and to further their ambitions. A powerful man with dreams of preferment callously manipulates those around him to gain his ends and finally stoops even to treason. A young lord, scarred by war in body and mind, attempts to deal with the waking nightmares that wall him off from others and from himself. A group of once-upstanding men become outlaws in a corrupt world where their very nationality can be seen as a crime. These characters may not sound like Maid Marian, the Sheriff of Nottingham, Robin Hood and the Merry Men, but they are. Lively storytelling and pacing help make Roberson's impressively mature first novel an enjoyable, almost creditable recasting of the Robin Hood legend as historical fiction. There are flaws. Some of the characters' actions seem false; given their backgrounds, Robert of Locksly and Marian FitzWalter are unlikely to have been as naive as Roberson depicts them. She also has a few annoying stylistic ties: faces are scrubbed, looks are disreputable and appearance is dishabille far too often. But the romance works beautifully, capturing in the tale of Robin and Marian the terrifying bliss of first love. A diverting, delightful book from a most promising talent. 50,000 first painting; $5,000 ad/promo; author tour. Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc. ### From Kirkus Reviews Roberson, author of 15 previous novels, re-creates the first flush of romance between young Maid Marian and the man who will be Robin Hood in this prequel to the more familiar `merry men'' legends--an often tiresome mixture of political chicanery and courtly passion that pales in comparison to those rollicking legends to come. Recently orphaned by her father's death in the Crusades, Marian of Ravenskeep finds she is one of many women attending the celebration given by the Earl of Huntington to honor his son and heir, Robert of Locksley, who has recently returned from that same battlefield. While the other maidens hope to attract the eye of the Earl's well-born son, Marian prays only that Robert might supply her with the details of her father's last days. Marian remembers Robert as a reclusive, somber boy, but she now finds him a ravaged victim of battle fatigue, robbed of peace by nightmares and violent visions. Despite these distractions, the pair fall in love on sight--but before they can ride off into the sunset, they must outmaneuver the likes of King Richard's younger brother, Prince John, who will abuse anyone in England for a chance at the throne; the Earl of Huntington, who wants Robert to wed the prince's daughter; the Sheriff of Nottingham, who intends to marry Marian himself and wed his own daughter to Robert; and many another blackguard who slinks in and about Sherwood Forest. While Roberson expertly evokes the sensations and frustrations of medieval life and succeeds in creating what she calls a`logical underpinning'' to the Robin Hood legends, her tedious detailing of the paths by which Robert, Marian, Little John, Friar Tuck, and several others make their way to that hideout in the woods serves mainly to detract from the myths' innate drama. The minstrels were right--Robin's altruistic thievery remains the real story here. -- *Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.*