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  • Published: 7 August 2014
  • ISBN: 9781473513020
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

The Table Of Less Valued Knights




Eagerly awaited second novel by the author of Gods Behaving Badly - a deliciously funny peek into one of the dustier corners of Camelot

Longlisted for the 2015 Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction

Longlisted for the 2015 Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction

Sir Humphrey du Val of the Table of Less Valued Knights – Camelot's least prestigious table, with one leg shorter than the others so that it has to be propped up with a folded napkin – doesn't do quests ... until he meets Elaine, a damsel in distress with a secret to hide.

Meanwhile, Queen Martha of Puddock is on the run from an arranged marriage to the odious Prince Edwin of Tuft. But an encounter with the Locum of the Lake (standing in for the full-time Lady) leaves her with a quest of her own: to find her missing brother, long believed dead.

The two quests collide, introducing a host of Arthurian misfits, including a freakishly short giant, a twelve-year-old crone, an amorous unicorn, and a magic sword with a mind of her own.

With Gods Behaving Badly Marie Phillips showed that she has a rare gift for comedy, giving the Greek Gods an ingenious contemporary twist. In The Table of Less Valued Knights it's Camelot's turn, and you'll never see a knight in shining armour in the same way again.

  • Published: 7 August 2014
  • ISBN: 9781473513020
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

About the author

Marie Phillips

Marie Phillips was born in London in 1976. Her first novel, Gods Behaving Badly, was published in 2007. Widely acclaimed, it was translated into over fifteen languages and made into a feature film. She is also the writer, with fellow novelist Robert Hudson, of the BBC Radio 4 series Warhorses of Letters.

Also by Marie Phillips

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Praise for The Table Of Less Valued Knights

Entertainingly rollicking.

Lucy Scholes, National

This confirms [Phillips] as a genius comic writer… This is Camelot – but as you have never seen it.

Woman and Home

As if Jane Austen were rewriting Terry Pratchett: snorts and chortles plus elegant eyebrow-raising… Bold literary and historical misadventures, told with a twist and a lightness of touch.

Ian Sansom, Guardian

The reader can enjoy the same level of affectionate detail that the Pythons brought to Monty Python and the Holy Grail… Phillips clearly delights in the world of [King Arthur] and…subverts fantasy motif in refreshing and absurd ways… Very good fun.

Leonora Craig Cohen, Literary Review

Very funny… It’s a real joy to read a novel that makes you snort out loud with laughter.

Skinny

The author bends a lot of historical and literary myths to humourous effect.

The Stooshie

The Table of Less Valued Knights infects Arthurian legend with a brio not seen since Monty Python and the Holy Grail

New Statesman

a joy to read

Susannah Perkins, 4 stars, Nudge