The Tower of Beowulf
by Parke Godwin
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The story of Beowulf, the 8th Century Norse hero, portraying his acts of valor as a reaction to an act of cowardice in his youth. It is told against the background of a growing conflict between paganism and Christianity. By the author of Beloved Exile.Tags
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Member Reviews
In the book's afterword, Godwin himself notes the difficulties that confront a modern author trying to translate the epic poem into terms a 21st century audience can grasp. Given those limitations, Godwin, a gifted and literate writer, does a good job of making Beowulf a figure comprehensible to modern readers.
Godwin has kept the more fantastic of the saga's images while explaining them to readers who may be unfamiliar with Norse mythology. Grendel and his mother are tormented immortals, trapped in grotesque bodies, and with abominable appetites for living flesh. They yearn for beauty, love, and warmth, and are condemned to live without any of these comforts except the little they can offer each other. Grendel's attacks on Heorot are show more set in the context of a disputed inheritance, and his mother's grief at the loss of her only solace in the world lead to her final confrontation with Beowulf.
But Godwin does more than just reclothe the poem in the trappings of modern language. He leads the reader into the minds and hearts of the characters, from Beowulf himself, fighting always to prove himself the brave warrior his father never believed him to be; to Grendel, yearning for acceptance from both gods and men.
Not my cup of tea, I'll admit, but a good piece of writing for those who prefer fantasy to hard science fiction. Godwin is particularly skilled at making the complex motivations of his characters understandable. show less
Godwin has kept the more fantastic of the saga's images while explaining them to readers who may be unfamiliar with Norse mythology. Grendel and his mother are tormented immortals, trapped in grotesque bodies, and with abominable appetites for living flesh. They yearn for beauty, love, and warmth, and are condemned to live without any of these comforts except the little they can offer each other. Grendel's attacks on Heorot are show more set in the context of a disputed inheritance, and his mother's grief at the loss of her only solace in the world lead to her final confrontation with Beowulf.
But Godwin does more than just reclothe the poem in the trappings of modern language. He leads the reader into the minds and hearts of the characters, from Beowulf himself, fighting always to prove himself the brave warrior his father never believed him to be; to Grendel, yearning for acceptance from both gods and men.
Not my cup of tea, I'll admit, but a good piece of writing for those who prefer fantasy to hard science fiction. Godwin is particularly skilled at making the complex motivations of his characters understandable. show less
I LOVE the way Parke Godwin writes historical fiction. Although this is the least "realistic" of his historical works, it nonetheless brings the Viking Saga to life in a way that we buy it, accept it as truth. Set in Scandinavia during the 5th or 6th centuries.
This is a better redaction of the Beowulf story than Crichton's "Eaters of the Dead". Mr. Godwin has made an interesting version and it goes well. No Arabian travellers had their lives distorted in the making of this novel. And, the dragon deserves it. You know that it was killed in 571 AD., the last recorded Draco kill in Western Europe? (the historic Hugelac, succeeded by Beowulf, and internal evidence in the poem establishes the date of the kill.)
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Common Knowledge
- People/Characters
- Beowulf; Hrothgar; Father Eligius; Sigyn; Loki; Grendel (show all 22); Freyr; Gerda; Shild Scefing; Weltheow; Unferth; Hygelac; Hygd; Herdred; Wiglaf; Hrethric; Hrothmund; Esher; Edgetho; Ina; Father Justin; Hondshew
- Important places
- Frisia; Asgard; Lejre, Denmark; Helsingborg, Sweden
- First words
- If lightning had not struck Father Eligius' roof and set the thatch afire, the monk would never have seen the longboat sliding westward through the first light of morning.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)What a cosmic bore.
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, Fantasy, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
- DDC/MDS
- 813.54 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999
- LCC
- PS3557 .O316 .T68 — Language and Literature American literature American literature Individual authors 1961-
Statistics
- Members
- 135
- Popularity
- 241,357
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.61)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 2
- ASINs
- 1























































