Jen R. L. Disarray

Reading The Mists of Avalon at Age 12

I was twelve years old and I was every bit of awkward, social pariah stereotype that you could think of. I had probably read every Arthurian book in our (admittedly limited) middle school library. At school, my favorite lunchtime activity was sitting in the classroom of a sympathetic teacher and discussing books with her. She knew I had an abiding love for the King Arthur legends. During one of these lunch-hour mythology discussions, she said to me, “I bet you’d love The Mists of Avalon.” The next day, she brought her copy to school with her for me to borrow, with the caveat that I should run it by my mother first. So I did.

My mother asked her neighbor about the book, probably hoping for the comforting reassurance that this was appropriate reading material for her twelve-year-old daughter. Instead, the neighbor warned her that MoA was chock full of pagan sex rituals and other material likely to corrupt me. As far as my conservative mother was concerned, the book was off limits. I begged for a chance to read it. The Mists of Avalon had become my forbidden fruit. I saw it sitting on my mother’s armoire every day. I found myself making excuses to wander past it; touching the embossed cover; carefully opening it to read a few pages of the prologue when no one was looking. Never had I wanted to read any book more than I wanted to read The Mists of Avalon. She held out for weeks before agreeing to my pleas, on the stipulation that I had to wait until she had read it first, then abide by her final judgement. She didn’t know it, but, in what may have been the first rebellious act of my life, I was already well into the story.

It felt subversive to a sheltered girl from a conservative home. Little injustices that I always had a nagging suspicion were unfair were described for the first time I could remember. It wasn’t just lush scenery and detailed sex acts (although that made for great reading, too). Through the eyes of Marion Zimmer Bradley’s characters, I learned about patriarchal domination, gender inequality, slut-shaming, religious persecution, bigotry, and heterosexism. I recognized that these weren’t mere wisps of fantasy. This was my nascent introduction to feminism.

I read after school, before my parents were home from work. I could leave no bookmarks, so I memorized my page numbers; repeating them to myself like little prayers. When my brother was home, I would hide it under pillows in the bedroom, piles of towels in the bathroom, or wrapped in a sweater in my backpack. By the time my mother gave her grudging permission for me to start reading, I had already read the book from cover to cover.

The day she gave her permission, I started it again from the beginning.

~ Jen

One Response to Jen R. L. Disarray

  1. koreofasphodel says:

    I haven’t read the book, but I’ve seen the movie and loved it. Have you seen it? What did you think?

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