Pages: 192 (Paperback) ISBN: 0140441832 Pub: Penguin Classics Pub date: 1976-07-29 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 178192
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Reader Reviews:Politics is a dirty business (1/1 people found this helpful)This saga is a series of wars, mercenaries, plundering, raiding, razing, destructions (`islanders lost their lives there, flames devoured their houses'), murders, revenges, jealousies, cruelties, maiming, confiscations, taxations by an autocratic and vindictive king (`I kill without compunction').
Wonderful introduction to the sagas (10/10 people found this helpful)On a long car trip, my very cool 16-year-old son finally gave in to my urgings and started grudgingly to read this book (the only one in the car). After grumbling his way through the first page or so, he became completely caught up in it and started to exclaim aloud: "Whoa! Listen to this! Harald has just put out the Byzantine emperor's eyes!" "He just threw all the prisoners overboard so that the pursuing fleet would have to stop and rescue them!" "He just told the enemy earl to 'kiss my thin-lipped axe'!" The saga starts with the fifteen-year-old Harald fleeing for his life through the Norwegian forest after the battle that killed his older brother, King Olaf (Saint Olaf). Harald is a historical figure, and if one-tenth of the stories about him are true, he was a towering leader and villain. The translation is wonderful, the language is vivid, and the emotions and intelligence of these eleventh-century figures are as modern as those of any story of our own times. I can't think of a better introduction to the world of the sagas. After this, read Njals Saga and Egils Saga! A life enough for ten men (6/7 people found this helpful)Harald fits into English history as the character who sapped Harold's strength in 1066, distracting him north to Stamford Bridge before his defeat by William in the south. This saga shows Stamford Bridge was the climax of a far more fascinating life. A swash buckling epic around the Mediterranean, Africa, Russia, the Byzantine Empire and Scandanavia. Written around the 1220-30s, this is epic stuff in a pithy style. Similar ProductsThe Vinland Sagas: "Graenlendinga Saga" and "Eirik's Saga" (Classics) The Saga of the Volsungs: The Norse Epic of Sigurd the Dragon Slayer (Penguin Classics) The Prose Edda: Norse Mythology (Penguin Classics) Egil's Saga (Penguin Classics) The Saga of Grettir the Strong (Penguin Classics) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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