

The Vinland Sagas (Penguin Classics) [Keneva Kunz, Gisli Sigurdsson] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The Vinland Sagas (Penguin Classics) Review: Excellent new edition - This is the second edition of The Vinland Sagas that I've purchased from the Penguin Classics series. The first, published a few decades ago, was adequate, but this new edition is well worth having an extra copy around. These translations, by Keneva Kunz, are fast-paced, clear, and easy to read. The two sagas included here are The Saga of the Greenlanders and The Saga of Eirik the Red. Both tell of the Norse discovery of and attempts (there were more than one) to settle in North America. They differ in focus and emphasis, but tell essentially the same stories. First, Eirik the Red settled himself in Greenland. Then, when Norse sailors were blown off course and sighted more land even farther west, Eirik's son Leif decided to check it out for himself. Leif, later known as "the Lucky" after rescuing wrecked sailors, discovered a land where wild grapes and "self-sown wheat" grew and named it Vinland. He and others explored up and down the coast of Canada and New England, perhaps as far south as Manhattan. They settled in several places all along the coast and even traded with the natives. Then things turned sour. The Vikings, many are shocked to learn, actually fought wars with the Indians. Of course, the Norse settlers won handily in every engagement, but the fighting was enough to convince them that the sheer numbers of the natives would eventually wear them down, and after several years of exploration, settlement, and farming, they packed up and returned to Iceland and Greenland. But Vinland was never forgotten. The book is short, and the sagas even shorter--the two combined take up only 48 pages in this edition. But the book is rounded out with an informative--if sometimes dry--introduction and notes by Gisli Sigurdsson. Sigurdsson mentions several instances from later records in which people were said to have sailed to Vinland, including a man cutting lumber who returned from his trip and a bishop who did not. Also included are illustrations and diagrams of Icelandic farms and Norse ships that have been lifted from the Sagas of Icelanders collection. Perhaps the most helpful appendix in the book is the map section. There are six pages of maps and a two-page table setting out scholars' guesses on the locations of places in the sagas. For example, is Vinland actually Newfoundland? Or perhaps Prince Edward Island? The maps themselves are labeled according to Sigurdsson's suggestions, which certainly helps while reading the sagas. But even if you aren't going to look at the introduction or back matter, the sagas themselves are well worth reading. And of course, if you are interested in learning more about Leif the Lucky and the New World's first European settlers, this edition of the Vinland Sagas, with its strong translation and good supplementary material, is the one to have. Highly recommended. Review: Vikings! - A great story about how the Vikings discovered America 500 years before Columbus did! It’s an amazing saga. I love reading the old sagas. Thank you






















| Best Sellers Rank | #48,896 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #8 in Norse & Icelandic Sagas (Books) #851 in Family Saga Fiction #1,611 in Classic Literature & Fiction |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 420 Reviews |
J**S
Excellent new edition
This is the second edition of The Vinland Sagas that I've purchased from the Penguin Classics series. The first, published a few decades ago, was adequate, but this new edition is well worth having an extra copy around. These translations, by Keneva Kunz, are fast-paced, clear, and easy to read. The two sagas included here are The Saga of the Greenlanders and The Saga of Eirik the Red. Both tell of the Norse discovery of and attempts (there were more than one) to settle in North America. They differ in focus and emphasis, but tell essentially the same stories. First, Eirik the Red settled himself in Greenland. Then, when Norse sailors were blown off course and sighted more land even farther west, Eirik's son Leif decided to check it out for himself. Leif, later known as "the Lucky" after rescuing wrecked sailors, discovered a land where wild grapes and "self-sown wheat" grew and named it Vinland. He and others explored up and down the coast of Canada and New England, perhaps as far south as Manhattan. They settled in several places all along the coast and even traded with the natives. Then things turned sour. The Vikings, many are shocked to learn, actually fought wars with the Indians. Of course, the Norse settlers won handily in every engagement, but the fighting was enough to convince them that the sheer numbers of the natives would eventually wear them down, and after several years of exploration, settlement, and farming, they packed up and returned to Iceland and Greenland. But Vinland was never forgotten. The book is short, and the sagas even shorter--the two combined take up only 48 pages in this edition. But the book is rounded out with an informative--if sometimes dry--introduction and notes by Gisli Sigurdsson. Sigurdsson mentions several instances from later records in which people were said to have sailed to Vinland, including a man cutting lumber who returned from his trip and a bishop who did not. Also included are illustrations and diagrams of Icelandic farms and Norse ships that have been lifted from the Sagas of Icelanders collection. Perhaps the most helpful appendix in the book is the map section. There are six pages of maps and a two-page table setting out scholars' guesses on the locations of places in the sagas. For example, is Vinland actually Newfoundland? Or perhaps Prince Edward Island? The maps themselves are labeled according to Sigurdsson's suggestions, which certainly helps while reading the sagas. But even if you aren't going to look at the introduction or back matter, the sagas themselves are well worth reading. And of course, if you are interested in learning more about Leif the Lucky and the New World's first European settlers, this edition of the Vinland Sagas, with its strong translation and good supplementary material, is the one to have. Highly recommended.
M**E
Vikings!
A great story about how the Vikings discovered America 500 years before Columbus did! It’s an amazing saga. I love reading the old sagas. Thank you
P**D
Historic translations, but dry and academic
Four stars or not, it is hard for me to write excitedly about the Penguin Classics Edition of the Vineland Sagas. The very short book consist of some accessible and generally interesting introduction and very helpful maps and notes by Gisli Sigurdsson and the Sagas of The Greenlanders and Erik the Red both by Keneve Sigurdsson. Total page count is about 100. My notion of the importance of sagas is that they combine history, local legends and perhaps enough facts to transmit travel directions to the careful reader. That is sagas should be somewhat like a Bible, being the oral traditions, and history and generally the main way to carry vital information forward across generations. More than incidentally these particular sagas reflect the arrival of Christianity among the Vikings with some obvious changes in priorities and emphasis. Speaking only of this translation, for this is the only version I know; these sagas read like academic documents. They seem edited to be dry, documentary, summary and absent any of the kinds of drama and entertainment that would keep pagans, adult or children wide eyed at the communal fireside. Look elsewhere for the heroics of Beowulf. Check your insurance before you depend on these sagas as your sailing directions before exploring in an open boat with neither back up compass nor web based aps. The sagas do recite the same stories we heard in school about European discovery of Greenland, so named as a sales ploy to promote immigrations and do not expect to be thrilled by the early battles between the Viking settlers on what 500 years later they called Vineland and would come to be called America (more exactly the Canadian Maritime) and the ‘Skraelings’. This being the earlier Viking name for most likely Eskimos. Or perhaps what the Canadians now call the people of the First Nations. I rather wish we could have played cowboys and skræingjar (plural). However here the fights were not steel and gunpowder, versus bows and arrows, but rather iron verses large number of locals. Where Iron won, the sagas got to be written. My decision to read the Vineland Sagas was to learn about the tales of early travelers and non-Greco-Roman mythologies. This deck chair exploration is academically interesting, but too sanitized
K**A
Good Reading
Very informative and good maps. It was a fast read, but worth the time.
H**E
the new world
This book actually consists of two Icelandic sagas, "The Saga of the Greenlanders" and "The Saga of Erik the Red," which offer tantalizing and all too brief accounts of one of the most intriguing events in history--the exploration and attempted colonization of North America (in this case basically the Canadian Maritime Provinces) by Norsemen (Vikings) half a millennium before Columbus. The Vikings today are best known as looters and marauders, but they were also intrepid explorers, enterprising merchants, and hardworking farmers who succeeded in carving out long-term colonies in Greenland (which lasted until the sixteenth century) and Iceland (which still exists). They did not succeed in Vinland, largely because the hostile "Skraelings" (Native Americans) were too numerous and too powerful. Remember, folks, this was before the invention of gunpowder. They were also plagued by internal dissensions and the machinations of one truly evil woman, Leif Ericsson's half-sister Freydir Eriksdottir. The sagas were written down some three centuries after the events narrated therein, and must not be regarded as sober history, based as they are on oral traditions combining myth, legend, and solid fact. They have the directness of the Bible and the objectivity of Homer, and like the Bible and Homer much time is taken up by confusing genealogies and polysyllabic names that are hard to keep track of (a key to Icelandic pronunciation would have been nice). Though the tone is largely objective, there is a subtle evangelical spin to the narratives: the sympathetic characters are mostly Christians, while the unsympathetic characters are largely pagan. Also, one cannot help noticing that the pagan characters usually come to bad ends. This Penguin Classic version, translated by Keneva Kurz and edited with notes and introduction by Gisli Sigurdsson, contains maps, illustrations, and a glossary, and examination of Norse ships, farms, and legal structures. A very useful book for students of Norse culture and pre-Columbian America.
B**B
Great book
Awesome story, couldn't put it down.
R**.
Great book. "Natives" is PC tho. Skraelings!
Reading this parallel to the Magnusson translation, overall very close. A few major differences here and there (contrast the description of the mysterious woman in black and "Skraelings" vs "natives") between the Magnusson and Kunz translations.
T**J
Great read
I’ve always loved these, my Opa used to read me the tales of the Norse when I was a kid
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