A truly epic chronicle of the story of Arthur, told through the eyes of the loyal warlord Derfel. Cornwell spins his unique version of the tale, and manages to turn legendary characters into real people with faults and all. Many fabled names make an appearance, like Arthur, Merlin, Morgan, Mordred, Guinevere, Lancelot, Galahad, Sagramor, Bors and Tristan and Iseult. But also historical names like the Saxon warlord Aelle, and the Briton kings Tewdric and his son Meurig, and Cuneglas.
With the lack of information from this period, Cornwell must have felt the freedom to write a true historical fantasy, underlined by magical occurrences influenced by the druid Merlin and his fierce lover and apprentice Nimue. It carries a truly magical tale right in between the struggles between the old gods of the Briton and the new god of the Christians, smack in the middle of the fight against the Saxons, and infighting between the British kingdoms.
It is interesting to see how these books must have been the stepping stone for the current series by Cornwell, the Saxon Series. There is a lot of the warlord Derfel (and a pinch of the savage Culhwch)in the protagonist of that series, Uthred.
A few final comments. The story started quite slow, and it took a while to gather pace. But when it did, I couldn't stop reading. That brings me to the second matter; the sheer size of this tome. These are three huge novels in one, and if you have the discipline to put you Kindle aside after each separate story, that would not be a bad idea. And finally, I have to take issue with the proofreading and formatting of the Warlord Chronicles. It seems that the publisher hurried to add this great series to the tide of ebooks, and the hurry shows, unfortunately.