This is a retelling of the legends of King Arthur.
His life, his death, and his Round Table. Lots of swearing. A decent amount of charts.
Maybe a few bears.
Light on the “forsooths” and “foreasmuches” (but I do love me a good “whosoever”).
A few aqueous and empowered damsels chucking various arsenal at people. And a good deal of Sir Kay–though you’ll see plenty of Arthur and all the other knights.
Why Sir Kay?
Obviously, he was the best knight.
The thing is, Kay gets overlooked sometimes in the retelling of all the legends. I mean, no big deal, he was only Arthur’s foster brother and stuff, only the guy who taught him everything he needed to know to be king and whatnot.
Sure, Bedivere was wise, Gawain faced the Green Knight, and Lancelot was the court hunk who got all the ladies (including a queen or two), but Kay was there first.
So is this real or not?
All the work herein is fiction.
Though I generally follow Malory and Chretien de Troyes (among others), and occasionally post history things sort of based on real facts.