Jack Whyte

 

Jack Bibliography

1992 This is volume one of the Camulod Chronicles. Publius Varrus, a retired centurion, now an ironsmith, finds the secret of the mysterious ore-bearing stones that fell "from the sky". This forges a link to a legend born two centuries later with the arrival of King Arthur.

1993 In fifth-century Britain the last vestiges of Roman authority are gone and a thriving colony that has lasted for more that 400 years is poised on the brink of destruction. Publius Varrus and Caius Britannicus are two Romans who choose to stay and fight for their adopted land.

1994 This is volume 3 of the Camulod Chronicles. Caius Merlyn Britannicus is the leader of the Colony, responsible for its safety, justice and salvation. Uther Pendragon is a tireless warrior. Each man is the other's guarantee of survival to the Colony, until a vicious crime drives a wedge between them.

1995 The saga of Camulod--founded by the descendants of those brave Romans who forged a new way of life for Celt and Roman together after the departure of the Legions--continues as Arthur is born and orphaned into the care of Merlyn. Here, under Merlyn's tutelage, he grows into manhood and ever closer to his destiny as High King of all Britain.

1997 The fifth in the Arthurian saga, "The Camulod Chronicles", in which Merlyn is faced with the task of educating his young charge, Arthur, future king of the Britons. A failed assassination attempt forces him to take Arthur and his boyhood companions to hide in a ruined fort.

1997 The sixth volume of Jack Whyte's "Camulod" series sees Merlyn the Sorceror finally ready to realize his sacred dream: to present Arthur as the Riothamus, the High King of Britain, and in doing so to change the face of history and legend forever.

2000 "Uther" is, like the other books in the Camulod Chronicals, a realistic version of the legend of Camelot. Uther is Merlyn's closest friend who grows up, through boyhood, various adventures and both fate and tragedy, to fall in love with the one woman he must not have.

2004 The Lance Thrower is the story of how Clothar came to the court of Arthur Pendragon. The name of Clothar may be unknown to modern readers, for tales change in the telling through centuries. But any reader will surely know this heroic young man as well as they know the man who became his king. Hundreds of years later, chronicles call Clothar, the Lance Thrower, by a much more common name. That of Lancelot.

Jack Whyte