Hi,<br><br>I just finished Castleview last night for the first time, and though I know there's been a lot said on this particular book recently, I hope I've got something to add to the conversation. (Note: In addition to Castleview spoilers, there's a spoiler for The Wizard Knight).
<br><br>1.There seems to be a lot of discussion about whether Wrangler / Arthur Dunstan or Will Shields is the "real" Arthur; this got me thinking about just how many characters in Castleview seem to represent either part of an Arthurian figure or several Arthurian figures.
<br><br>a. Viviane Morgan seems to be the Lady of the Lake, Morgan le Fay, Morgause (in Malory I believe it's Morgause, not Morgan, who sleeps with Arthur), and Vivian / Nimue, the enchantress who seals Merlin under a hill or tree.
<br><br>b. Dr. von Madadh kills Shields at the end of the novel, suggesting an affinity with Mordred, but throughout much of the novel he seems to be a Merlin-figure; extremely knowledgeable constantly vanishing and reappearing (plus, he has a beard, though I think that's pushing it).The comment at the end of the book that he was "the best of them" also
seems suggestive to me. Earlier in the novel, Fee tells us that God
dislikes his group, of which we know the Doctor is a part. In those stories, then, Merlin would be the best of an evil brood. Fee's
comment suggested devils to me, and in some stories, Merlin is in fact
the devil's son. The fact that the doctor's first name is "Rex" suggests a connection with Mordred to me, as Mordred surely wanted to be the king (I believe he's even crowned in some versions of the Arthurian legend?). Anyone know the etymology of "Madadh?"
<br><br>2. I wonder if there's a Jack Vance influence to this story? Vance had published at least a few of his Lyonesse books before Wolfe published Castleview, and I wonder if Wolfe's references to Lyonesse in the text constituted another one of his homages to Vance.
<br><br>3. Some of the previous posts on the ending of Castleview suggest that Excalibur's scabbard will be useless to Will because it only protects against blood loss. I've always taken the epigraph a little less literally; I tend to think the scabbard would still have healing powers; otherwise why would it be on the boat to Avalon? I actually took that piece of the ending as a bit of lupine brilliance; it suggests how Arthur / Will might somehow survive AND it ties up a loose end of the Arthurian story, and in fact creates a very nice "circle" to the myth (Fairly early in Malory, Morgan le Fay steals the scabbard from Arthur, after that, we never hear of it again). I thought that the scabbard's presence in the boat was one of the most beautiful of Wolfe's inventions.
<br><br>4. What are we to make of Excalibur's resemblance to a cross (Mercedes at first thinks it's a jeweled cross)? How does that fit in with the pagan aspects of the ending? Furthermore, upon what leather-bound book is the tip of the sword resting? Malory? The Bible? The missing diary of the Wrangler's ancestor?
<br><br>5. Also about the ending: Wolfe really seems to like the legend of the Green Man or Green Knight; in The Wizard Knight Able tells us that he WAS the Green Knight who Gawain decapitated. Maybe Wolfe is trying to take an essentially pagan symbol and Christianize it, as it is his wont to do? The Green Man could perhaps be read as a Christ figure, though so presumably could the king who slays him, as he too will die and rise again. A little earlier in the text, Phyllis Sun sees Odin leading the Wild Hunt down the streets of Castleview; the narrator takes pains to describe his missing eye, which, if I recall correctly, he gave up so that he could give knowledge to humanity; a Christian take on Odin seems like something Wolfe would enjoy.
<br><br>Any thoughts?<br><br>-Matt<br>