The Long Winter (1867) by Liam Caidic
The Long Winter was written at a pivotal time in Prydanian history. The victory over Lakotah in the Great War in Dixie was fresh in the minds of the nation, and nationalist sentiment was at an all time high. It was then that Liam Caidic, a half Erien playwrite from Burn, wrote what many consider one of the greatest works in the history of Prydanian literature.
The book is set during the 12th century and tells the story of Sir Arthur Bellmont, a knight on the Myrorian Crusade. The work follows his journey from faithful and earnest man to the moment when he first kills a man in battle to his longing for home and finally to his realisation that the commanders are hopelessly unprepared for the trials war brings. War has not brought God's glory, but only the death of his comrades and the stain of death upon the Church. Sir Arthur returns home, finding himself unable to connect to his loved ones, even as they shower him with praise over his role in "doing the Lord's work." He wonders if God will ever truly let the world know peace.
To Caliard and Back (1482) by Sir Garrison Maelor
The epitome of the chivalric romantic novel. Sir Maelor's work weaves the old stories of the ancient King Ryon of Caliard into a grant tale of heroic exploits. The work is mostly useless in trying to establish the historicity of King Ryon, as Maelor created a grand narrative around the straightforward exploits recoded in Owen of the Hightower's Chronicles of Prydania. The book's true value lies in the form of the medieval chivalric romance and in how Maelor, a Catholic, deals with the pre-Catholic Ryon. The narrative represents the height of the scholastic method as Catholic Prydania worked to integrate its earlier pre-Catholic legends into its world view.
The Sagas (100-1200 CE) various authors
The Sagas is an umbrella term for a collection of stories from Prydania's First Age of Exploration, dating roughly from 100-400 CE. They tell of great battles, heroic deeds, and holy quests, both Catholic and pagan, that supposedly accompanied these voyages. Favourites for study at the secondary school level are The Book of Upland, an epic retelling of great events from early Upland history, Voyage of the Black, detailing the adventures of famous pirate Hator the Black, and The MacBiek Trials, the story of the early conflicts and civil wars that defined the emergence of the Midland kingdoms in the 5th century.