Storm Over Camelot cover

Storm Over Camelot

Morgan le Fay • Book 3

by Sophie Keetch

4.17 Goodreads
(817 ratings)

Why You'll Love This

Morgan le Fay as the grief-fueled, vengeance-driven center of an Arthurian world — and by book three, she's finally ready to burn it all down.

  • Great if you want: a morally complex antiheroine in Arthurian legend rewritten her way
  • The experience: emotionally dense and atmospheric — tension builds slowly but hits hard
  • The writing: Keetch leans into grief and rage with precision, not melodrama
  • Skip if: you haven't read books one and two — this won't stand alone

About This Book

The Arthurian legend has been told a thousand times, but rarely from inside the fury of the woman history made its villain. In this concluding volume, Morgan le Fay is grief-soaked and dangerous, nursing a vow of vengeance while Camelot rises ever brighter against her darkness. Sophie Keetch refuses to let Morgan be simply wronged or simply wrong — she is both, magnificently, and the tension between her rage and her humanity is what makes every page feel genuinely urgent. This is a story about what it costs to be the person the world has decided to destroy.

Keetch writes with a lush, atmospheric intensity that suits Morgan's voice perfectly — brooding without becoming static, emotionally raw without tipping into melodrama. At 552 pages, the novel earns its length through careful accumulation of character and consequence rather than padding. Readers who have followed Morgan from the beginning will find the payoff deeply satisfying; those new to the series will quickly understand why this retelling built such a devoted following. Keetch trusts her readers to sit with moral complexity, and that trust is its own reward.