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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=Young Knights of the Round Table
|author=Julia Golding
|publisher=OUP
|date=April 2013
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0192732226</amazonuk>
|amazonus=<amazonus>0192732226</amazonus>
|website=http://www.juliagolding.co.uk
|video=N7etmLCWu4w
|summary=When the Fey stole Rick, centuries before, they told him he had been abandoned by his parents. All his life he has been trained to believe that humans are the enemy. Now there's a rumour that the Knights of the Round Table are re-forming to defeat Avalon, and he is sent to stop them. Once there he faces two challenges: firstly he discovers that the Fey have been lying to him — and secondly, he has to cope with being a modern teenager.
|cover=0192732226
|aznuk=0192732226
|aznus=0192732226
}}
Rick is thirteen hundred years old — not bad going for a teenager. He has been living in Avalon, where time moves differently, and training (along with another two hundred human changelings) to get his revenge on the human family which abandoned him so long ago. And now he has his chance.
If you fancy a more light-hearted approach to chivalry, you could try [[Measly Middle Ages (Horrible Histories) by Terry Deary]], which practically guarantees that your sides will ache from laughing. Older and more serious fans of the Middle Ages may like [[Belle's Song by K M Grant]], which introduces a chap called Chaucer. And in the modern day, Charlie Bone encounters a fair number of courtly warriors: Bookbag really enjoyed [[Charlie Bone and the Red Knight by Jenny Nimmo]].
{{amazontext|amazon=0192732226}} {{waterstonestextamazonUStext|waterstonesamazon=93212380192732226}} {{toptentext|list=Top Ten Books for Confident Readers 2013}} 
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