Morgan le Fay
Summary
In the shadowed heart of Camelot, Morgan le Fay refuses to be a prop in others’ legends. She walks the corridors of power with a host of rivals and kin, each step a negotiation between allegiance and desire. A lineage that blurs with magic pulls her toward a destiny she can scarcely name, one that asks for sacrifice, cunning, and a truth she has long denied: that her fate is not merely to challenge a throne but to redefine what it means to rule. Amid betrayals and fragile alliances, Morgan tests loyalties, confronts the cost of power, and dares to claim a future that might finally belong to her own making.
Sophie Keetch’s Morgan le Fay sits at the crossroads of myth and memory, weaving a personal odyssey through Camelot’s shadowed halls. The series begins with a sharp, intimate voice—Morgan’s own—speaking in the first person as she negotiates loyalties, power, and a lineage that refuses to be neatly categorized. Across the pages, the author’s broader body of work explores identity and agency within mythic frames, and this set extends that interest into a focused, character-driven arc that rewards patience and emotional risk. Critical notes praise its lush prose and stubborn, flawed protagonists, though some readers seek clearer moral lines even as the narrative pushes toward ambiguity and redemption.