Although most accounts of Norse myths begin with the Ginnungagap, Poul Anderson's War Of The Gods begins with:
"...the nine worlds in the Tree." (I, p. 9)
- although it also mentions the slaying of Ymir.
The text lists Asgard, Vanaheim, men, elves, dwarves and jotuns/thursirs: six, not nine. The Eddas present no definitive list. See Norse Cosmology: Nine Worlds.
In just over six pages, pp. 9-15, Chapter I of War Of The Gods summarizes several Norse myths as a build-up to an innovative action by Odin. In the just under three pages, pp. 295-298, of the concluding Chapter XXXV, that action, an intervention in human history, has been completed. These chapters book-end Anderson's retelling of the story of Hadding.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteHave you read any translations of the Elder Edda? I happen to have Lee M. Hollander's version of THE POETIC EDDA.
Compered to the grim and treacherous Odin, the Olympian Zeus is downright childish!
Ad astra! Sean
Sean,
ReplyDeleteI once borrowed a library copy of THE POETIC EDDA.
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteAnd what did you think of THE POETIC EDDA, from a literary POV?
Ad astra! Sean
Sean,
ReplyDeleteGood.
Paul.