I have a reserve in and have finally settled on a denizen, but... it's someone from the Arthurian mythos, someone not Arthur, Merlin, or Lancelot. Considering how much of a mess the Arthurian mythos is, with no less than six major contributors and innumerable minor ones over the last thousand years chopping apart stories and inventing entirely new characters wholesale at the drop of a hat, I was wondering if it would be acceptable to use a modern rewriting of the tales so as to have one complete set of myths/legends/grand magical epics. Specifically the ten-book set by Gerald Morris that encompasses a very large number of the tales, major and minor, and slightly reworks them so they don't directly contradict each other.
Because I love Arthurian myth but ow. I do have another option as a source for the particular character I'm going to app, but I would prefer using Morris' works as they give the most comprehensive view of the world and other characters in it as well. Also they are really, really funny.
no subject
I have a reserve in and have finally settled on a denizen, but... it's someone from the Arthurian mythos, someone not Arthur, Merlin, or Lancelot. Considering how much of a mess the Arthurian mythos is, with no less than six major contributors and innumerable minor ones over the last thousand years chopping apart stories and inventing entirely new characters wholesale at the drop of a hat, I was wondering if it would be acceptable to use a modern rewriting of the tales so as to have one complete set of myths/legends/grand magical epics. Specifically the ten-book set by Gerald Morris that encompasses a very large number of the tales, major and minor, and slightly reworks them so they don't directly contradict each other.
Because I love Arthurian myth but ow. I do have another option as a source for the particular character I'm going to app, but I would prefer using Morris' works as they give the most comprehensive view of the world and other characters in it as well. Also they are really, really funny.