![]() ![]() White was born on May 29, 1906, in Bombay, India (present-day Mumbai). ![]() Considered one of the definitive modern takes on the Arthuriad legend, The Once and Future King utilizes the framework of Arthur's life to express an anti-war message while balancing comedic and dramatic elements to maintain the flow of the classic myth. After editing the initial works, White bound them together with a fourth book titled The Candle in the Wind and produced The Once and Future King, an extensive epic novel relating the story of King Arthur from childhood though his legendary reign as King of England. ![]() The 1958 edition of White's novel is composed of four parts, three of which were published earlier as individual novels- The Sword in the Stone (1938), The Witch in the Wood (1939), and The Ill-Made Knight (1940). White's The Once and Future King (1958) is a decidedly twentieth-century retelling of Thomas Malory's epic fifteenth-century Morte d'Arthur, a reinterpretation of the classical myth that remains true to the source material of the Arthur legend while functioning as an accessible post- World War II juvenile novel. The following entry presents commentary on White's juvenile novel The Once and Future King (1958) through 2002. (Full name Terence Hanbury White) Indian-born English novelist, poet, essayist, nonfiction writer, short-story writer, travel writer, editor, illustrator, and author of juvenile and young adult novels. ![]()
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