Song of the Vikings Published Today

Actually, the official date was yesterday, but the hurricane intervened—my publisher’s offices in New York were closed.
I did make it to my first event, a lecture at the Samuel Reed Hall Library at Lyndon State College in Vermont, about 3 miles from my home. LSC had electricity; we didn’t. While there, I was interviewed by Channel 7 news for local TV.

Tomorrow, I go to Portland, Maine, where I’ll be speaking at the University of Southern Maine in the Glickman Library, Room 423, at 5:00. Portland-area friends, please join me!
Here’s the rest of the tour: 11/2: Maine: Portland Free Library @ noon 11/5: New Hampshire: Dartmouth Bookstore, Hanover @ 6:00 11/7: Vermont: Mount Holly Town Library, Belmont @ 7:00 11/8: New York: Cornell University Library @ 4:30 11/9: Pennsylvania: Bucknell University Bookstore @ 5:30 11/10: Virginia: Icelandic Jólabasar, American Legion Post 177, Fairfax @ 11-3 11/11: Pennsylvania: Webster’s Bookstore, State College @ 6:30 11/12: Pennsylvania: Penn State Comparative Literature Luncheon, 112 Kern, University Park @ 12:15 11/13: North Carolina: Malaprop’s Bookstore, Asheville @ 7:00 11/17: Georgia: Eagle Eye Book Shop, Decatur @ 1:30 11/20: Massachusetts: UMass-Amherst @ 2:30 11/29: Vermont: Sterling College @ 6:30 11/30: Vermont: Northshire Bookstore, Manchester Center @ 7:00 12/3: New York: Scandinavia House, New York City @ 6:30 12/6: Vermont: Phoenix Books, Burlington, VT@ 7:00
Not near any of these events? Check out my book trailer:
Or take a peek at the jacket flap:
Snorri Sturluson, the thirteenth-century Icelandic chieftain who gave us Odin, Loki, and Thor, was as unruly as the Norse gods he created
Norse mythology has seeped into our imagination. Tales of one-eyed Odin, Thor and his mighty hammer, the trickster Loki, and the beautiful Valkyries have inspired countless writers, poets, and dreamers through the centuries, including Richard Wagner, JRR Tolkien, and Neil Gaiman. Few modern fantasy novels, films, or games are free of wandering wizards, fair elves and werewolves, dragons and dwarf smiths, magic rings and weapons, heroes that speak to birds, or trolls that turn to stone. But while Homer and Ovid are widely celebrated for their stories of Greek and Roman gods, the medieval Icelander who gave us Viking mythology is nearly forgotten.

Brown takes the reader on a tour of medieval Icelandic society as well, with its web of laws and blood feuds fueled by the Icelanders’ fierce sense of independence. There Snorri’s extravagant personality and unscrupulous tactics brought him close to ruling his country—and even closer to betraying it—before he was betrayed himself. He died a coward, cringing in his cellar, his Viking ideals abandoned. But his books lived on.
Drawing on her deep knowledge of Iceland and its history and first-hand reading of the original medieval sources, Brown gives us a richly textured narrative, revealing a spellbinding world that continues to fascinate.
Learn more at nancymariebrown.com
Published on October 31, 2012 06:29
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