"Thoughts on The Merlin Codex"

erhaps sensing that Merlin's own first-person telling was the
most engaging of the narrative voices in Merlin's Wood, Holdstock
returns to it in "The Merlin Codex", beginning with Celtika (2001).
We recognize the same Merlin earlier in life, magic carved into his
very bones, perpetually youthful through careful husbanding of the
sorcery which alone can age him. Once he sailed with Jason on the
Argo, and seven centuries later recovers this broken-hearted hero --
preserved by his charmed ship -- from the depths of a magical frozen
lake in Pohjola, as Lapland is known in the Finnish Kalevala legends.
A rebuilt Argo with a new patron goddess and Argonaut crew heads
south on a quest for Jason's sons, who in this revised legend were not
killed by his vengeful wife Medea but hurled by her spells into a
future which is the story's present.
The voyage touches on the ghostly terrors of a Britain blighted by
unnatural desolation, crosses the Germanic lands with magically-aided
portage between the Rhine and Danube rivers, and links to an
extraordinary episode of real history: the Celtic invasion of Greece
in 279BC, with one of Jason's sons included as a high-ranking officer
in this wild, dream-inspired crusade. Merlin helps his old friend
Jason with clairvoyance and charms but is opposed by Medea herself --
another long-lived mage, determined that her husband's second chance
should also end in tragedy. Incidental action includes a lesser-known
battle of Thermopylae, the sacking of Delphi, and a finely imagined
set-piece of Celtic single combat, heart-stoppingly violent yet
governed by formalities as elaborate as any code-duello.
Shadows gather around Merlin's own story as he becomes dangerously
involved with the lore-hungry Pohjola sorceress Niiv, who foreshadows
or may even be Vivien. Hard-fighting Celtic argonaut Urtha is
identified as the great-grandfather of Arthur, prophesied by Niiv to
be "the reason for your life, and the death of everything you love."
The intricate saga continues in The Iron Grail (2002), returning to
that haunted Alba or Britain where the land of the dead and unborn is
literally just across the river. This otherworld's mysteriously
troubled and all too tangible inhabitants have invaded Urtha's
territory and seized his hill-fortress. Echoing the disruption of
heartwoods in The Hollowing, the reason for the spirits' disturbance
involves a son of Jason, hidden by Medea in the otherworld. The Argo
makes a memorably wonderful voyage through the ghost-land's ocean and
magic islands of marvels and horrors, where at last Merlin unravels
its complex, painful secret -- also learning more about his own past
and future. The author is at the height of his powers, stimulated to
great creativity by this novel fusion of one era's history with
another's myth; further "Merlin Codex" novels are eagerly awaited.
Robert Holdstock's gift for evoking landscapes and weaving mythic
patterns is outstanding. He has a remarkable ability to strengthen
rather than diminish resonant myths by peeling away romantic
embellishment to suggest both deeper strangeness and tough underlying
realities, the rich soil and compost from which enduring stories grow.
David Langford
An extract from a longer essay on Robert Holdstock.
Appears in Supernatural Fiction Writers (2nd Edition)
Edited by Richard Bleiler. Charles Scribner's Sons.; 2002. ISBN: 0684312506