4.00 JOD
Proclaimed as one of the finest Icelandic sagas, this text was written in about 1280 and refers to events a couple of centuries earlier. It is full of the details of everyday life, as well as the social structures of the society in which they take place. Translated by Lee M. Hollander, with an Introduction by Thorsteinn Gylfason. Njals Saga is the finest of the Icelandic sagas, and one of the worlds greatest prose works. Written c.1280, about events a couple of centuries earlier, it is divided into three parts: the first recounts the touching friendship between noble Gunnar and the statesman Njal, together with the fatal enmity between their wives. The second part works out the central tragedy of the saga, while the third describes the retribution wrought by Flosi and Kari. The saga is remarkable not only for the details of everyday life – the farming, the feasting and the charcoal-burning – but also for the social structure of the society in which that life took place – the Althing or Parliament, the lawmaking and the lawgiving. The grandeur of the narrative and the beauty and distinction of the characters mark Njals Saga as an essential text for all who love adventure and great literature.
Wordsworth Classics of World Literature: Njal's Saga
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