It’s not often that I pick a book that has 200 pages of appendices following 300 pages of text. I’m grateful Farley Mowat arranged his 1965 book Westviking: The Ancient Norse in Greenland and North America this way. He prevented the engaging, thoughtful text from becoming clunky and disjointed. Yet he also proves that the text is based on vast research.
One of my favorite appendices was on ancient weather because it spoke to the environmental historian in me. When my people sailed west from Iceland in the latter decades of the tenth century, they benefited from warmer conditions generated by the Little Climatic Optimum. Climate change occurs in cycles… no, really. During this period, sea ice melted and storms in the North Atlantic decreased. Those conditions improved lifestyles for Norse colonists, the colonists from Ireland and Britain who preceded them to Iceland (called Westmen), and the Dorsets, Beothuks, and other native people who lived in Iceland, Greenland, Labrador, and Newfoundland.
Clearly, Chris Columbus was not the first European to explore North America. In the late 900s, Erik the Red reached Greenland after being exiled from Norway initially and later Iceland; Bjarni Herjolfsson’s knorrir (merchant ship) was blown off-course and he explored Newfoundland’s coast before returning to Greenland; and Leif Eriksson bought Bjarni’s ship and went to Newfoundland. Erik’s other two sons, Thorstein and Thorvald, also explored coasts west of Greenland as did his daughter Freydis Eriksdottir. Thorfinn Karlsefni also led expeditions. Norse expeditions resulted in permanent settlements in Iceland and Greenland, but stupid decisions regarding interactions with native peoples led to abandoning settlements further west. The stories were fascinating.
I found this book on my parents’ shelves and rescued it from a thrift store future. I’d glimpsed its title and Mowat’s name countless times before and dismissed it as probable fiction. I’m glad I read it and I recommend it.