Vikings 1: Inroads from the Sea 2: Fire and IceNorth 3: In the Lands of the North 4: North of all Northmen 5: Where the Wild Things AreWest 6: Westward Ho! 7: New World 8: The Way the World EndsEast 9: Eastern Promise 10: Set in Stone 11: Far-Travelling BeastsSouth 12: Journey to the Centre of the Earth 13: Sailing to Byzantium 14: World's End Epilogue Notes Sagas in Translation Index
Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough is Assistant Professor in Medieval History and Literature at Durham University. In 2013, she was chosen as one of ten BBC Radio 3 New Generation Thinkers, in a competition to find young academics with the potential to turn their research into programmes for broadcast. Eleanor's research often takes her to the chilly Nordic climes of Scandinavia, Iceland, and Greenland. Whilst researching this book, Eleanor had many far-flung adventures of her own: bumping along on the back of an Icelandic horse whilst exploring Norse ruins in Greenland, sailing ice fjords under the midnight sun with a caribou hunter, and searching for Norse rune-stones in Sweden. Her proudest moment came when travelling across Arctic Norway, where she was knighted with a walrus penis bone in Hammerfest and became a member of the Royal and Ancient Polar Bear Society.
A vibrant account that evokes the spirit of the Viking age in a
thoroughly entertaining, yet historically sound, fashion.
*Philip Parker, BBC World Histories*
Barraclough provides a confident, compelling narrative of their
brutal, challenging world and a valuable companion to their
sagas.
*Diana Bentley, Minerva*
[An] excellent, erudite, yet light-hearted glimpse into Norse
culture, exploration and the melding of story and history. Filled
with interesting facts, pop culture references and quirky asides,
this is an immensely appealing, accessible resource, whatever your
level of knowledge.
*Joanne Harris, author of Chocolat and the Rune series*
A book that is entertaining as well as erudite... There is no
doubting Barraclough's meticulous and insightful scholarship.
*Hana Videen, Times Literary Supplement*
A delight ... a book that provides us with a highly entertaining
and informative sense of the real Norse world-view.
*Philip Parker, Literary Review*
A BBC Radio 3 New Generation Thinker does that delightful trick of
weaving lightly worn serious scholarship into a publisher- and
educated general reader-pleasing "journey" narrative, as she serves
up sagas and the world that inspired them in this well-illustrated
book. Her voice is charming, wise and just the right side of
whimsical as we meet "the jaculus and his posse of teeny tiny
dragonlets", Skraelings, Snorri, Snaefrid's smelly corpse and
Soviet-era Kievan Rus. Includes a knighting with a walrus penis
bone; a beguiling TV series doubtless awaits.
*Times Higher Education*
what may chiefly distinguish [Eleanor] from other Viking scholars
is her lively style. [...] Many well-chosen colour illustrations
further bring her picture of adventurous Vikings, and their varied
roles, vividly to life.
*Harry Mead, Northern Echo*
draws upon the Norse sagas and historical sources to take a lively
and entertaining approach to her subjecy which will appeal to the
casual reader.
*Leon Burakowski, Shropshire Star*
Wonderfully illustrated and authentic to place and time, the author
has written perhaps one of the ultimate works for those wishing a
deeper insight, as well as those new to the study of medieval
Scandinavia.
*Josh Provan, Adventures in Historyland*
Moira reviews one of the funniest, and most fascinating books on
the Norse Sagas that she's ever read ... Lively ... entertaining
... (I mean, you don't expect to find yourself honking inelegantly
over the Vinland Sagas)
*Moira Briggs, Vulpes Libris*
[Barraclough's] book stretches our imaginations in time as well as
space, combines literature, archaeology and personal observation,
and reminds us of many works more than half-forgotten even by
scholars. Blessedly, for all the rigor of the endnotes, there is
not a trace of academic obfuscation. Truth is stranger than
fiction, yes, and more fun too.
*Wall Street Journal*
Barraclough produces an intoxicating fusion of travelogue, history
and saga... What emerges is a surprisingly complex portrait of
Viking culture... Beyond the Northlands is a magnificent
contribution to the understanding of a fierce and poetic
people.
*Shelf Awareness, Starred Review*
With a clever and engaging style, the author marries
interpretations of Norse sagas with historical references, creating
a detailed analysis of Viking evolution and worldview with clarity,
humor, and a sense of relevance... Thoroughly researched and well
rooted in historical and literary context.
*Library Journal*
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