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C**S
Good edition of a great saga
Grettir's Saga is sometimes called the Last of the Great Icelandic Sagas. It was composed decades after Njal's Saga for example, and shows mastery of the literary techniques in the earlier sagas. Any saga reader should read this saga in some translation, and this translation is accessible.The saga tells the story of Grettir Asmundarson, a cruel child turned great warrior, outlawed for a crime he didn't commit, and eventually killed by his opponents. It is a masterful tragedy about a romantic hero, unromantically viewed.I am now going to spend some time discussing what I don't like about this translation. I think the translator's choice to move genealogies into footnotes is distracting, and disrupts the typical feel of the Icelanc Sagas. A second issue is that the introduction is weaker than I have come to expect from, say, the Penguin editions. The author of the introduction spends most of his time doing a literary critique of the story rather than looking at wider areas of inquiry such as what this story has to tell us about heroic motifs in Germanic literature, or what the overall historical context of the story was. While these do not doom the book entirely, they are marks against it.At the same time, the translation is accessible and easy to read. All in all I would recommend this version, though I am slightly disappointed in it.
T**A
One of the world's first psychological novels
That's right. The 12th and 13th century Icelanders invented the psychological novel. In language so spare it would make Hemingway seem like a motor mouth, they transcribed the verbally handed-down tales of their ancestors in the settlement days of the country during the height of the Viking Age, which was equivalent to our Wild West. The artists who wrote these stories had a keen grasp of human motivations that one rarely finds in any literature until Shakespeare. Grettir's Saga, the life of a man who refused to compromise--much like many a Western protagonist--no matter the odds against him, is the last of the great sagas. It stands next to Njal's Saga and Egil's Saga in my estimation, full of unforgettable scenes and deep insights. Highly recommended.
J**S
Warrior, Outlaw, and Poet
In the definitive 5-volume COMPLETE SAGAS OF ICELANDERS, Grettir's Saga is situated in the volume entitled "Warriors, Outlaws, and Poets." For the story of Grettir Asmundarson, all three are appropriate. From an early age, the gigantic Grettir the Strong allows no man to show him disrespect without challenging him to a duel to the death. After one too many challenges, the combined Icelandic chieftains at the Althing sentence him to outlawry, which means, in essence, that anyone could kill him at any time without being held responsible. For a period of 19 years, Grettir moves from one part of Iceland to another, living on isolated farms or in the wild -- either alone or together with friends and sympathizers -- while relatives of those whom he had killed follow him around, setting up mostly unsuccessful ambushes. Finally, he settles on the islet of Drangey with his brother Illugi and a servant. One local farmer who owns the islet and the flock of sheep that feed there resorts out of desperation to having a magical spell placed on him that causes him to be injured, making it easy for him to kill the brothers. But because Christianity has taken root in Iceland, the chieftains are outraged at the use of magic to kill Grettir. The farmer is assailed on all sides until HE is declared an outlaw; and Grettir's half-brother chases him all the way from Norway to Constantinople avenge his death. Even while an outlaw, Grettir had visited many of the chieftains, including the legendary Snorri Priest of Eyrbyggja Saga fame, and met with sympathy. Had he lived another year, the decree of outlawry would have expired, and he would have been a free man. Grettir had good and bad qualities in abundance, including a ready wit and a meticulous sense of honor. His poems are razor sharp and earthy. Once you get past the Icelandic genealogies at the beginning, this saga reads more rapidly than any of the others I have read. It one of the most readable -- and loveable -- works of the entire Middle Ages.
C**T
Tree foot rocks!
My second copy of my favorite saga, & itโs in pristine condition. Hardcover, library book, almost 50 years old, never checked out. My wife told me the book was just like me that regard. Haha.
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