(Full disclosure: I received a free e-ARC for review through Edelweiss. Trigger warning for misogyny, homophobia, nudity, and violence.)
When the Viking maiden Aydis is caught engaging in "unnatural acts" (kissing her best friend Liv), the village elders (all men, natch) call on her father to choose Aydi's punishment: death or marriage. He chooses death, but instead spares his "little warrior" by taking her to the woods and banishing her from the village forever.
His last words to her: be brave. Brave, like the mother who gave birth to Aydis, alone in the woods, and clung to life just long enough to ensure her daughter would be found.
And so Aydis undertakes the greatest feat of bravery she can imagine: freeing Brynhild, the leader of the Valkyries, from her mountaintop prison. As legend has it, when Brynhild dared defy Odin's orders, he banished Brynhild from the realm of the gods and cursed her to marry a mortal. But only a worthy suitor: one who could conquer the fiery wall that guards the mountain. Brynhild, who once struck fear into the hearts of men, has sat waiting for her savior for centuries. But what if he is actually a she?
In freeing Brynhild, Aydis hopes to break Odin's iron-fisted rule over her people - the women, especially. But an already impossible task becomes all the more labyrinthine when Odin sets his spies, slave armies, and curses against Aydis, Brynhild, and their allies.
I first read the three-volume trade paperback version of HEATHEN, and loved it - right up until the end. I don't recall why, but I remember being a bit disappointed by the final few chapters of Aydis's story. (I gave Volumes 1 & 2 a solid 5/5 stars, whereas Volume 3 merited 3.5/5 stars.) Reading them all in one omnibus, sixteen months later, I'm ... not really sure why? The ending still feels a bit anticlimactic, sure, but it's not terrible. And I can't bring myself to give the omnibus anything other than 5/5 stars (and add it to my favorites shelf, at that).
The artwork is gorgeous; the world building a thing of beauty; the large, diverse cast of supporting characters, utterly compelling. There are all-women pirate crews who sail the seas, searching for trafficked humans to liberate; toothy mermaids with a hankering for apples; doomsday wolves; a sassy wight disguised as a miniature horse; and a pansexual orgy pile led by Freyja herself, now leading the Valkyries since Brynhild's exile.
If your favorite part of VIKINGS was Lagertha, have I got the comic book for you.
Bonus points: the omnibus dropped just in time for pride month!