Merlin (novel)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Merlin
Written by: Robert Nye
Central Theme:
Synopsis:
First published: 1978
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A page from the medieval manuscript, depicting the personification of Naughtiness.
A widespread taste for pornography means that nature is alerting us to some threat of extinction.

In this book, Robert Nye's version of the King Arthur legend, Guinevere is a stutterer, Arthur suffers from pathological sadism, and the devil prefers choir boys from virgins. But this is not why this book is interesting.

It presents a theory of conspiracy staying behind the Arthurian legend, at the same time offering a satirical interpretation of medieval culture based on Freudian psychoanalysis. Somehow, all this is done almost exclusively by the means of dialogues and pornography (and no, it really cannot be called erotica). If a novel contains refined allusions to medieval theology and alchemy, makes an eye to the readers of Milton, Dante and Malory, has dialogues in Latin and metafictional interludes, only explicit pornography can save it from being torn to pieces by critics - and this is what happened to Nye's book.

Tropes used in Merlin (novel) include: