The story says that one day a Fisher King will rise to heal the land.In the 1950s, theyre still waiting. . . .At the turn of the twentieth century, a baseball player named George Gibson embarks upon a mystical journey to the Congo. His mission: to shepherd a powerful relic to its home in Abyssinia. But poetturnedgrail seeker Arthur Rimbaud is after what Gibson possessesas others before him have been for millennia.A half-century later, after receiving an honorable discharge from the Korean War, twenty-year-old Lance Porter vows to put his civilian life back togetherwhich means heading to commie-infested Berkeley to see his high school sweetheart, Ellie. But after Lance gets cold feet, he encounters instead a drunk, gay poet named Jack Spicer, who spews crazy stories about Lance being the Fisher King.It appears that the bearing of the grail has been bequeathed to young Lance, much to his shock and disbelief. Can a legacy born in the deserts of Ethiopia truly be reemerging in the bohemian bars of New York City and San Francisco? And is a vet with a lost soul really worthy of its care?ALEXANDER C. IRVINE has breathed a refreshing burst of air into the Arthurian legend. In One King, One Soldier, ancient characters and Irvines pitch-perfect historical accuracy merge with a gritty, dark portrait of America in the Cold-war 50s. Here, three stories come brilliantly together in an edgy mix of baseball, imperialism, poetry, and grail mythology.From the Trade Paperback edition.