In ancient days, mankind by word of mouth passed on their history from the ancient fathers and mothers throughout the generations, to their present day sons and daughters. These ancient peoples used descriptive basic words to explain an advanced technological species of intelligent beings that used their chariots to travel on land, in the sea, and through the air, as well as the contact they had with humans. The third planet from the sun, our “Earth” was identified in their ancient language as Midgard or the middle planet. The ancient scrolls and sagas detail other worlds in a great inter planetary battle called Ragnarok where a planet named Asgard was destroyed. In the fifth orbital energy ring of our sun lays a belt of asteroids from another historical time, where an ancient fifth planet somehow was destroyed.
Many readers will note that at the beginning of the story, the author wrote in depth, as much of the the details of Asgard, in order to preserve the names, villages, and places of this legendary planet of the gods.
This book is probably the most precise and correct translation and interpretations of the many mythological stories about the Asgard gods ever written.
"Asgard - The Planet of the Gods" is the first book of GrinOlsson's Asgard Series.
If I could give this negative stars, I would. It takes a huge amount of effort to strangely write a book, which is a tome, which has many pages made of paper, of this amount of huge number of words to fill a book, about this niche topic, which many have not read, because it is not widely explored. But there are huge numbers of people who have not read this huge book, and it is a huge shame. "No, just kidding," I strangely say. "This is one of the most oddest, strange, huge books I've read that utilizes the word 'huge' a strangely huge number of times." Also, it states that things are "strange" often. I don't know how much longer I can go with this review. I skimmed this book, and you could read this whole thing and still never be more informed than if you picked a random chapter to read in isolation. After a while, one suspects that the book is the result of a madlibs project, or else the author possibly is autistic of some sort. The descriptions are simultaneously overly detailed and insufferably dull. It baffles me that there are supposedly FIVE books in this series, and stranger still is it that there are two books labeled number 2. Maybe that was supposed to be a subtle warning of the quality of this series...