This is essentially the story of Harold, who was king of England at the time of the Norman Conquest. The story is told in first-person narrative (which is unusual for Godwin, and takes a bit of getting used to) from the points of view of about twenty characters. It begins at the end of the Battle of Hastings, then flashes back to when Harold was a young man, one of the sons of the Earl of Wessex. The story centres around his love for his wife Edith against a backdrop of political machinations and battles with rebellious nobles, and follows his rise from earl to king, eventually leading back to that fateful day at Hastings. I actually found the first hundred or so pages of it (out of 466) fairly dull, which is why I cannot give the book full marks, but then after Harold's wedding the story starts to come to life, and Godwin's trademark of getting into the heads of long-dead people comes to the fore. I doubt that any storyteller or historian has ever given the lives of Harold and the other characters such a sense of realism and humanity as he achieves in this book. A nice touch is the periodic appearance of Aelred of Denby, a character from Godwin's novel 'Sherwood', giving some continuity with this. The title `Lord of Sunset' is rather obscure, and never explained, but I suppose that day in 1066 would represent the sunset of Anglo-Saxon England and its way of life.
Before reading this book I knew very little about Harold's life. Now I feel that I know the man. All right - I know that much of what Godwin writes has to be imagined, but who cares - for all we know most of it could be true. Harold and the others could have been whispering from the spirit world into Godwin's ear as he wrote. In this book Godwin has done what he always does, and what he does better than anyone; bring characters from the pages of history to life.