Being into history and
fantasy, the Norse myths seemed a nice blending of the two, so I
bought this book.
The author adopts more
traditional spellings for Viking gods (Loki is identical, but Thor’s
name is spelt with the rune ‘thorn’ and two Rs). It’s more in
keeping with the history, but like Greek names spelt with Ks (Hektor,
Akhilleus etc) it can look a bit odd.
Like most people, I
have only a passing familiarity with Norse myths (I could name maybe
four gods before reading this book), and was interested to learn
more. The book begins and finishes with the start and end of the
world, with the intervening chapters covering the gods, their
opponents, and human heroes.
Loki is the most
intriguing fellow, because gods are usually good or evil with small
nuance, but he’s genuinely tricky to pin down (amongst his odder
feats was becoming impregnated by a giant’s horse and giving birth
to Sleipnir, Odin’s eight-legged horse).
An interesting
perspective was offered on Thor’s giant-killing antics, which is
generally shown as being a good thing, but when he and Loki encounter
a sleeping giant, he decides it’s hammer time and tries to smash
the giant’s skull in, which looks murderous (and impolite) rather
than heroic.
In addition to the
myths themselves, there’s also quite a lot of artwork (both from
the time and more recent versions in paintings etc) and some mentions
of recent literary works (most famously, Tolkien’s stuff) that were
influenced by Norse myths.
I especially enjoyed
the author’s inclusion of commentary on the impact of Christianity
and the dating of certain myths (which affects both Christian
influence in storytelling and in the way the gods might be painted as
inferior to Jesus). The suggestion put by several ancient writers
that the gods were in fact excellent real people, whose deeds led to
exaggerations and mythologising, is a neat way of wrapping together
ancient Norse myths and (then) contemporary Christian thinking,
without discarding wholesale the value or interest in said myths.
Downsides are minor,
but irksome. For a start, CE. Common Era is a daft revisionist
nonsense applied by some to the Christian calendar (BC/AD becomes
BCE/CE) for reasons that are beyond
me. There’s also a reference to a certain story reflecting, in the
author’s view, ‘the patriarchy’. I’m not fond of imposing
modern political perspectives on interpretations of ancient stories.
The book was enjoyable,
and a good introduction (from my limited knowledge of the area) to
Norse myths. I’d give it four out
of five.
Thaddeus
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