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Other editions of book The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    eBook (HMH Books for Young Readers, Oct. 6, 2008)
    Young Dinadan has no wish to joust or quest or save damsels in distress or do any of the knightly things expected of him. He’d rather be a minstrel, playing his rebec and writing ballads. But he was born to be a knight, and knights, of course, have adventures.So after his father forces his knighthood upon him, he wanders toward King Arthur’s court, in the company of a misguided young Welsh lad named Culloch. There Dinadan meets Sir Kai and Sir Bedivere, and the three find themselves accompanying Culloch on the worst sort of quest. Along the way, Dinadan writes his own ballads, singing of honor, bravery, loyalty, and courtly love—and becomes a player in the pathetic love story of Tristram and Iseult. He meets the Moorish knight Palomides, the clever but often exasperating Lady Brangienne, and an elvin musician named Sylvanus, along with an unusual collection of recreant knights and dimwitted defenders of chivalry. He learns that while minstrels sing of spectacular heroic deeds, honor is often found in simpler, quieter ways.
  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Paperback (HMH Books for Young Readers, Oct. 6, 2008)
    Young Dinadan has no wish to joust or quest or save damsels in distress or do any of the knightly things expected of him. He’d rather be a minstrel, playing his rebec and writing ballads. But he was born to be a knight, and knights, of course, have adventures.So after his father forces his knighthood upon him, he wanders toward King Arthur’s court, in the company of a misguided young Welsh lad named Culloch. There Dinadan meets Sir Kai and Sir Bedivere, and the three find themselves accompanying Culloch on the worst sort of quest. Along the way, Dinadan writes his own ballads, singing of honor, bravery, loyalty, and courtly love—and becomes a player in the pathetic love story of Tristram and Iseult. He meets the Moorish knight Palomides, the clever but often exasperating Lady Brangienne, and an elvin musician named Sylvanus, along with an unusual collection of recreant knights and dimwitted defenders of chivalry. He learns that while minstrels sing of spectacular heroic deeds, honor is often found in simpler, quieter ways.
  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Hardcover (HMH Books for Young Readers, March 24, 2003)
    Young Dinadan has no wish to joust or quest or save damsels in distress or do any of the knightly things expected of him. He’d rather be a minstrel, playing his rebec and writing ballads. But he was born to be a knight, and knights, of course, have adventures.So after his father forces his knighthood upon him, he wanders toward King Arthur’s court, in the company of a misguided young Welsh lad named Culloch. There Dinadan meets Sir Kai and Sir Bedivere, and the three find themselves accompanying Culloch on the worst sort of quest. Along the way, Dinadan writes his own ballads, singing of honor, bravery, loyalty, and courtly love—and becomes a player in the pathetic love story of Tristram and Iseult. He meets the Moorish knight Palomides, the clever but often exasperating Lady Brangienne, and an elvin musician named Sylvanus, along with an unusual collection of recreant knights and dimwitted defenders of chivalry. He learns that while minstrels sing of spectacular heroic deeds, honor is often found in simpler, quieter ways.
  • The Ballad Of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Paperback (Sandpiper, May 30, 2005)
    Though he would rather pursue his talent as a minstrel, eighteen-year-old Dinadan is forced to follow his older brother Tristram's path and become a knight, and while on a quest with Sir Kai and Sir Bedivere, he learns that honor is often found not in spectacular, heroic deeds of song, but in quite simpler ways. Reprint.
    V
  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Paperback (Kingfisher Books Ltd, May 15, 2006)
    None
  • The Ballad Of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, May 30, 2005)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY.
  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Hardcover (Perfection Learning, May 1, 2005)
    Young Dinadan has no wish to joust or quest or save damsels in distress.Can he find honor another way?
    U
  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Library Binding
    None
  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Paperback (Sandpiper, Oct. 6, 2008)
    Young Dinadan has no wish to joust or quest or save damsels in distress.Can he find honor another way?
  • Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Library Binding (Demco Media, May 30, 2005)
    Though he would rather pursue his talent as a musician, eighteen-year-old Dinadan is forced to follow his older brother Tristram's path and become a knight.
  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan by Morris, Gerald

    Morris

    Paperback (HMH Books for Young Readers, 2008, )
    The Ballad of Sir Dinadan by Morris, Gerald [HMH Books for Young Readers, 200...
  • The Ballad of Sir Dinadan

    Gerald Morris

    Paperback (Sandpiper, May 30, 2005)
    Young Dinadan has no wish to joust or quest or save damsels in distress or do any of the knightly things ex-pected of him. But he was born to be a knight, and knights, of course, have adventures. So after his father forces his knighthood upon him, he wanders toward King Arthur’s court in the company of a misguided young Welsh lad named Culloch. There Dinadan meets Sir Kai and Sir Bedivere, and the three find themselves accompanying Culloch on the worst sort of quest.Along the way, Dinadan writes his own ballads, singing of honor, bravery, loyalty, and courtly love—and learns that while minstrels sing of spectacular heroic deeds, honor is often found in simpler, quieter ways.