Once again, today is Easter, and I am spending the day reading about one the people who gave us a reason for the season...
Not, not the guy on the Cross. I read those books a long time again (Thank you, Anne Rice).
No, the guy at the bottom, who used his spear to hurry along the passing of the condemned. And thus, was condemned himself, to near eternal life and a forgotten place in history.
Casca, the Eternal Mercenary.
This time around, after a rough start traveling through the deserts of the Middle East, Casca finds himself north of the Roman Empire, fighting along side the Barbarian Norseman of Germania.
Along the way, he destroys some slavers, is imprisoned in a dungeon without food or water for over 2 years, and then becomes the lord of a fiefdom of his own. And taking a wife who he truely loved.
First time I read this, the ways of the Barbarians were still fresh in my mind - we had studied them while reading about Beowulf and the Saxon people. And so I was familiar with the Weird and the Gods of Asgard. (Of course, part of my education on this particular mythology began in the pages of the Thor comics. And WAY WAY before there was anything like the MCU!!!). So, I knew what to expect with some of the book.
31 years later, my field of knowledge has grown in such a way that I now could understand all references - Roman emperors, the battles of what would be the Holy Land, the gathering of Vandals and Barbarians that would, someday, bring down the Roman empire.
So, there was less running to the Encyclopedia, to look things up, and more fun just reading.
One thing that was throwing me off was the name of one character - having watched the tv show "Vikings" for the past half decade, and having just finished the last episode 3 weeks ago, I kept on telling myself the one character mentioned is NOT the same as the main viking of the series.
I would definitely recommend this book...