
Grendel's Mother
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In Grendel's Mother: the Saga of the Wyrd-Wife, an emotionally rich retelling of Beowulf, Susan Signe Morrison reveals the tragically human monsters obscured by the heroic bravado of the original poem. Only a scholar and poet steeped in Anglo-Saxon literature and culture could conceive of such a lyrical extension of the poem from the perspective of the women in the mead hall. Reading it opened the poem to me as never before. What a gift! Grendel's Mother is sure to become an integral part of every class on Beowulf. -- Candace Robb, author of the Owen Archer Mystery Series and, as Emma Campion, A Triple Knot This fascinating narrative is to readers today what John Gardner's Grendel was to readers of the 1970s. Grendel's Mother gives extra pleasure to lovers of medieval culture, since Morrison has enriched her novel with numerous treasure pieces taken from the earliest literatures of northern Europe. Poignant and yet exhilarating, Morrison's story surrounding the women of Beowulf has a universal appeal that will keep readers captivated from beginning to end. -- Haruko Momma, Professor of English, New York University, author of The Composition of Old English Poetry Morrison's historical novel explores the legend of Beowulf. On the shore of the land of the Scyldings arrives a baby found in a boat of foreign make, swaddled in salt-encrusted blankets and accompanied only by a silver spoon, an illuminated book, and a piece of gold jewelry. The foundling is taken in by a local fisherman and his wife, who name her Brimhild. The young king, Hrothgar, sanctions the adoption, though the king's mother is sure that the alien girl will bring only misfortune to the land. From a local "mere-woman" Brimhild learns the lore of the land and its magic. From a traveling Irish monk she learns of a religion that worships a pitiable, gentle god. Brimhild grows to adulthood, rising to a place of prominence among her new people: she becomes the wife of Hrothgar and oversees the construction of Heorot, an immense hall that becomes the pride of the Scyldings. She bears the king a son, Grendel, a sensitive child she raises secretly in the faith of Christ. Yet Brimhild sits at a crossroads between old ideas and new ones, and the truth of her origins threatens her placement at the head of her adopted tribe. Her betrayal and fall from grace give birth to a new set of stories, one in which she and her son are defamed for all time. Morrison writes in alliterative, lyric prose that evokes the Old English of her source text: "There she saw the soft seaweed, barnacled bed, of a marine monster. Leaving her work, approaching with caution, she listened for linnets along the lime lane." An incredible world is spun out of blunt, staccato words: a world of customs and objects, of heroes and faiths, and, of course, monsters. Morrison manages to update the medieval morality of the original poem while preserving its mournful sense of the old ways passing away. An enchanting, poignant reimagining of Beowulf. https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/susan-signe-morrison/grendels-mother/ * Kirkus Reviews *More details
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Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Prologue
- I. The Brine Baby
- Chapter 1: The Seal Suckling
- Chapter 2: A Kingly Command
- Chapter 3: Gobban's God
- Chapter 4: Leech Lore
- Chapter 5: Red Gold
- Chapter 6: The Flaxen Foe
- Chapter 7: The Riddle of Us
- II. The Hall-Queen
- Chapter 8: Spinning Fate
- Chapter 9: All Creation Wept
- Chapter 10: Glittering Gables
- Chapter 11: Uneasy Dreams
- Chapter 12: Dance with Me
- Chapter 13: Will We Burn?
- Chapter 14: The Loyal Thane
- III. The Mere-Wife
- Chapter 15: The Alone-Goer
- Chapter 16: Islands Adrift
- Chapter 17: The Wanderer
- Chapter 18: Embracing Death
- Chapter 19: How Can You Love Me?
- Chapter 20: The Youth's Journey
- Chapter 21: Blood Eagle
- Chapter 22: The Angel of Death
- Chapter 23: Re Member
- IV. The Sea-Seer
- Chapter 24: The Charm of Life
- Chapter 25: The Wyrd-Wife
- Chapter 26: The Death Dirge
- V. The Undiscovered Country
- Chapter 27: This Once Happened
- Note to the Reader
- Sources for Quotes
- Bibliography
- Glossary
- Proper Names
- Also by Susan Signe Morrison
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