Customer Reviews
Holy Bible of the Heathens - By: Ryan West, 13 Apr 2008 
This is an exellent book & a pretty good translation of the 12th century icelandic epics. It tells the myths of the Germans, English, Danes & Scandinavians before Christianity. I reallly enjoyed the first half of the book as it described how the world began & how its going to end according to our ancestors & not the Jews/Christians. But i enjoyed it less then 'Gods & Myths of Northern Europe' (see my reviews), which i thought was better & easier to understand. This book is probably best for students or die-hard entusiasts but not for the average learner of the myths. But if you want the myths from the original source then look no further, this is a very interesting book.
bit dissapointed - By: Ryan Salisbury, 24 Mar 2008 
i was dissapointed in this book... i enjoyed the first half of the book which talks of the creation & destruction of the world with a few tales thrown in... that was good. the second half of the book i found hugely dissapointing as it is mainly a large collection of poems which sound very cryptic & i found very difficult to understand (probably because they have been translated from icelandic & because a hell of lot of metaphors are used)i think this book would have appealed to more to someone who enjoys poetry a bit more than i do.
The definitive guide to norse mythology, a must read book - By: , 08 Nov 2000 
This book recallls how the world was formed & how it will be destroyed, & has some amusing stories in the middle. A work of genius
Edda at last - By: , 19 May 1998 
A must for anyone interested in ancient Norse mythology or the sources for Wagner's Ring Cycle. Very amusing stories written in an accurate, but easy-to-understand style.
An excellent translation of Sturluson's edda - By: , 23 Mar 1997 
This is an excellent translation of Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda. The text is very easy to read; it doesn't seem translated in the least. A big plus is the fact that the book contains both the original names of characters in old Icelandic, & a translation in English. Sturluson is a great writer, & I would recommend this book to anyone who is the least bit interested in the old Norse tales.