The Sagas of Icelanders

by Anonymous, Jane Smiley, Robert Kellogg
The Sagas of Icelanders
book data
168 ratings, 4.35 average rating, 33 reviews (more data...)
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published
March 2000 (first published 2001) by Viking Adult

binding
Hardcover, 544 pages

isbn
0670889903   (isbn13: 9780670889907)

description
Commemorating the 1000th anniversary of Leif Eriksson's pioneering voyage to the New World, Viking will proudly publish a major new translation of the...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 330)



Itsbecka
The best anthology of Icelandic sagas you can get the States. If you haven't read the sagas, then you haven't said a poem then chopped a guys head off.
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Autumn
08/20/08

Read in January, 2001
This book is full of stories that represent the first written literature in a native European language other than Latin. The stories refer to the life and times of Northern Europeans, especially Scandinavians at the end of the first millenium, about 800-1000 AD. The stories were written down from oral around 1000-1200 AD (approximations).

These stories are full of action and drama, and are really about these larger-than-life, iconic people. The stories include tons of interesting informat...more
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Scott
10/21/08

bookshelves: taking-a-break, to-read
Read in August, 2008
This is a mammoth collection of stories, some of which are novel-length, so this will expand over time.

Egilssaga / Snorri Sturluson -- This was my first ever saga, and it was really very cool, telling the story of Egil Skallagrimmson, a gigantic and ugly Norwegian man in the 9th-10th centuries possessed of an amazing fighting prowess and the somewhat prideful conviction to fight for his honor and rightful belongings. As a saga, it starts with his family history and tells a bit about ...more
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Eldon
Read in October, 2007
The preface by Jane Smiley was a bit disappointing, but the introduction by Robert Kellogg was good, and the translations are great. These sagas still risk a bit of repetitiveness and can seem stiff or wooden in parts, but these new translations (with notes on the source texts used) have made them a good deal fresher than the ones I read as a child (what were my parents thinking? so violent!). The violence is still there, but so is the disarming directness and humor in some spots. Also, the comp...more
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Chris
01/31/08

Read in January, 2008
I got this book a couple of years ago and decided to read onw Saga a year. during the winter months. I dunno, Winter seemed the time for reading Nordic Sagas. So this year I read "The Saga of the Cofederates" which, I'm told, is a satire. There is a trickster character who outsmarts the confederates and saves his son, repairs their father-son estrangement, and gets to live comfortably ever after.
Where the first Sagas I read, had little more than bare story, explanation of bloodli...more
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Daniel
11/25/08

Read in October, 2008
recommended to Daniel by: My son Joe
recommends it for: Those interested in Scandinavian history, especially Vikings.
Wonderful stories of rugged people, mostly emigrants and exiles from a Norway undergoing major change from forced unification and christianization. Most memorable characters are Egil Skallagrimson, Gisli Storrason, and Halli the Sarcastic.
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Rmfarrell
recommends it for: Swedes
If you're like me you've probably thought to yourself among the vikings/pirates/ninjas triad, which can I favor for color, character and baddassery. Well, as a young lad I would not hesitate to say Ninjas! All Through college I would have to say Pirates, Pirates, Ninjas respectively. Now that I am in my mid-20's and I have read the sagas of Icelanders, I realized I have been very, very wrong! Vikings, vikings, vikings.

The writing here is elegant in its simplicity and the absence introspectio...more
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Jough
11/22/07

I read two of the sagas in this book from the Vinland Sagas, Saga of the Greenlanders and Eirik the Red's Saga. Both were excellent. I read these before venturing to Iceland and after. They made a lot more sense after we visited because our trip and Icelandic tourism mainly covers The Settlement, when the early Vikings escaped or were forced away from Norway.

Excellent resource for learning the beginnings of Iceland and subsequent exploration of Greenland and Atlantic Canada by Leif the Lucky ...more
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Andrew
12/07/07

Read in December, 2007
I know I'm probably biased, but this stuff is awesome. As a monument of western literature, the sagas and tales of the Icelanders are as strange as they are magnificent. Intensely violent, utterly human, and completely entertaining. Don't let the thought of having to read Beowulf again fool you. This is not Beowulf. The sagas are surprisingly realistic. Check it out. You'll be glad. Make sure you start with some of the shorter sagas though. The long ones, though great, can be a little too detail...more
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Hallaj
06/23/08

Read in July, 2003
The West's earliest novel form. Part fact, part myth, here is the distant ancestor of today's Daniel Steel, MacKinlay Kantor and James Joyce. Trash or treasure, today's novel descended from these texts. And all that without even mentioning the stories the Sagas tell!!!

If nothing else, read this for Jane Smiley's excellent preface. Not only are the Nordic peoples fascinating, their impact on Western history and culture is under-appreciated.
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Kathleen
bookshelves: partially-read
While many are familiar with the Icelandic sagas as classics of world literature, it often seems that few bother to read them, probably due to a misconception that they are stilted and dull. Hardly! They are full of heroic lawyers (best seen in Njal's Saga) and violent revenants known as draugar (the Norse living dead). I challenge you to find zombies involved in tense courtroom battles dull.
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R.
06/09/08

bookshelves: dipped-into-from-time-to-time
Stories from the land of ice and snow...Valhalla, I am coming! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

This is the type of stuff - along with Lord of the Rings - that Robert Plant was digging, whilst his Guitarist With Mystique, Page, was reading up on Your Mutual Friend, Crowley.

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Jimi
05/02/08

The human drama as well as the poetry of the sagas is amazing. The human element to the chronicles unfurls slowly and you have to get through the constant referencing to lineages which was vital at the time. if you can find a dual language version and learn to read the icelandic the sagas come alive a bit more.
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Paul
09/16/07

bookshelves: classicliterature, norseceltic
Read in January, 2003
recommends it for: any lover of classical literature
1. What inspired Tolkien's names.
2. That early Icelanders were a paradox: poet, pirate, farmers who besides exhibiting tremendous individualism and sense of freedom, developed sophisticated legal systems and literature.

Egil's Saga was perhaps the most impressive and the one I keep rereading.
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samantha
samantha marked it as to-read (review of isbn 0141000031)
02/10/08

bookshelves: to-read
Warren gave this to me after learning about my love of Jane Smiley (who wrote the preface) and the history of the Norse peoples. I can't wait to read it, just have been in school continuously since he gave it to me, so no time to treat it right!
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Andrea
02/16/08

bookshelves: favorites
The most entertaining violence I have ever read. Characters saved their lives with poetry and put curses on each other with shame poles. My starved inner Viking was well fed with these stories.
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mattson
my childhood bedtime stories as text book for pagan scandinavian literature capstone course. nothing says, "goodnight, matty" or "your major is pointless" quite like a good ol' bloodfeud.
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Brian
09/05/07

Read in September, 2007
This is a daunting book at first glance, but the stories are for the ages, and one of humanities greatest treasures. This translation is very easy to read, and I tore through it like fiction.
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Bianka
09/10/07

bookshelves: recentlyread
recommends it for: Brutal Poets, history buffs
Blood, sex, death, brutal violence, paganism, and shape shifting and poetry what more could you want from this translation of texts as old as King James' Bible.
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Jason
12/01/08

bookshelves: folklore, literature, medieval-studies, scandinavia
Read in December, 2008
Great collection with more sagas for less monay. The translation is more direct and follows the conventions of the sagas in simplicity.
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The Sagas of Icelanders (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)
The Sagas of Icelanders: A Selection (Paperback)