Why did I love this book?
This is the book that first made me interested in the figure of Merlin.
I read it as a teenager, after family holidays had made me fascinated by Tintagel, Glastonbury, and Arthurian legends.
Mary Stewart bases her story of Merlin closely on the work of Geoffrey of Monmouth, the twelfth-century conman who convinced the world that King Arthur and his court were real.
But Geoffrey drops Merlin from the story once Arthur has been conceived, while Mary Stewart succeeds in making him a convincingly real yet magical, powerful yet doomed, character with a story so gripping that you are willing him to escape his fate – even though you know he can’t.
14 authors picked The Crystal Cave as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
The spellbinding story of Merlin's rise to power.
Vivid, enthralling, absolutely first-class - Daily Mail
So begins the story of Merlin, born the illegitimate son of a Welsh princess in fifth century Britain, a world ravaged by war. Small and neglected, with his mother unwilling to reveal his father's identity, Merlin must disguise his intelligence - and hide his occasional ability to know things before they happen - in order to keep himself safe.
While exploring the countryside near his home, Merlin stumbles across a cave filled with books and papers and hiding a room lined with crystals. It is…