by David Horspool
Harvard University Press, 2006
Cloth: 978-0-674-02320-8
Library of Congress Classification DA153.H78 2006
Dewey Decimal Classification 942.0164092

ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

When the BBC ran a poll in 2001 to name the greatest Briton, Alfred, a ninth-century monarch, was the only king to make the top 20. Also the only English sovereign to be called "the Great," Alfred used to be remembered as much through folklore as through his accomplishments.

Horspool sees Alfred as inextricably linked to the legends and stories that surround him, and rather than attempting to separate the myth from the "reality," he explores how both came together to provide a historical figure that was all things to all men. This book offers a vivid picture of Alfred's England, but also of the way that history is written, and how much myth has had to do with that.