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Here Comes the Reign, Sir Guillaume! book cover
Here Comes the Reign, Sir Guillaume!
Another collection of warped, wicked and wild stories about medieval history and life in (and around) the SCA.
2005
First Published
4.14
Average Rating
122
Number of Pages
From jester to king, Guillaume sees the Current Middle Ages from every angle. In his second collection of humorous stories and insightful reflections, Guillaume looks at the lighter side of castle building, jousting on ESPN, learning Arthurian mythology (with the help of tequila), and making topiary animals out of duct tape. Plus, just to prove that no subject is beyond the scope of his irreverent sense of humor, he also shares the laughter and chaos that took place “behind the scenes” during two reigns as King of Caid. Whether by fate or “an implausible disruption of the natural balance of the universe,” Guillaume’s readers are in for some royal laughs, and some touching moments, as the SCA’s funniest knight wins the throne and seeks shelter from the reign in a deluge of hilarious stories,
Avg Rating
4.14
Number of Ratings
21
5 STARS
43%
4 STARS
33%
3 STARS
19%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Scott Farrell
Scott Farrell
Author · 2 books

Scott loves a good story, and has been attempting to write his own (with varying degrees of success) since the age of 9. He worked for 15 years as a professional journalist and magazine editor before striking out on his own. He currently works as a freelance writer, and educational "living history" interpreter (director of his own Chivalry Today Educational Program, and during summer 2012 interpreter in the 100th Anniversary Titanic Exhibit at the San Diego Natural History Museum), and performing artist with the Intrepid Shakespeare Company. Scott's has contributed to a variety of compilations and anthologies. His current writing project is an Arthurian fantasy novel, "The Champion In Silence," a modern retelling of a 13th century legend about the only woman to ever become a Knight of the Round Table. (Ironically, several publishers have turned down the manuscript because, "Women don't read books about knights." Strangely, it seems that some notions about gender haven't changed much since the 13th century.)

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