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Why the Interest in the Vikings?

By: Nordmanni send a private message
Grand Junction : CO : USA | 7 months ago  
Views: 23
  • Westward to Vinland!
    Westward to Vinland!
    Posted by: slydog
    vikings
Westward to Vinland!

I have had a lifelong infatuation with the Vikings of medieval Greenland. After reading everything available, one is left with a nagging question. What happened to them? It is difficult to study them because they wrote nothing down. Everything we know comes from archaeological research and the Norse sagas. The Saga of the Greenlanders and Eirik the Red's Saga both tell stories about them, although centuries after the fact, but we know nothing about the people themselves. I decided to tell their tale using fiction because I wanted to convey to my readers what a lifetime of research has led me to believe regarding the abandonment of the two known Norse settlements on Greenland and the disappearance from history of every single settler. Nobody ever saw them again and nobody knows to this day, what happened to them. In spinning my Axe of Iron series of tales, I give my characters personalities, to make them as we are. No other author has ever told their story as I do.

One of my book reviewers, Melissa Levine, IP Book Reviewers had this to say: 'It’s the details that grab the reader’s attention in J. A. Hunsinger’s historical novel, Axe of Iron: The Settlers. The book is the first installment in a planned series of stories about the migration of the Greenland Norse to North America. From the introduction, which provides background information, to the brutal ending, Hunsinger uses his extensive knowledge of the history and culture of Norsemen to craft a story that exposes the lives of an ancient people with an admirable sense of adventure and value for community.
Hunsinger teaches with the details that he infuses into this story. The reader will learn what the Norsemen ate; how they set-up temporary camps and permanent residence; how they conducted themselves in battle; and the manner in which men and women fell into intimate relationships. The importance of respect and loyalty in the culture is represented by the relationship between Halfdan and Gudbj. Their bond that is stronger than that often seen between blood brothers. There is an intense trust between them that provides the level of security needed to lead their followers while exploring a new land, surviving severe storms at sea, and battling against natives. The love and admiration between the two men is so overwhelming it frequently makes Gudbj uncomfortable. But their feelings for each other do not diminish them as men. Halfdan and Gudbj are so secure in their masculinity that they are not intimidated by the strength of their women who work as hard and love as strongly as they do.
Axe of Iron: The Settlers is a hearty, adventure-packed history lesson. I highly recommend it.'

I am pleased with her assessment of my tale. The saga continues with Axe of Iron: Confrontation. The second book of the continuing tale of the Greenland Norse people and their adventures in North America will be published during the summer of 2009.

by J. A. Hunsinger, Vinland Publishing, LLC, http://www.vinlandpublishing.com/

©2009 Jerry A. Hunsinger, All Rights Reserved

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  • Posted By slydog slydog | 7 months ago
    Did you read Jane Smiley's wonderful saga "The Greenlanders"?
    A haunting book! My Grandpa came from Tonsberg, Norway and had that
    nuance of Viking blood stirring deep in him.

    http://www.nytimes.com/books/98/04/05/specials/smiley-greenlanders.html
  • Reply By Nordmanni Nordmanni | 7 months ago
    Yes, I tried to read it, but could not maintain enough interest in her style or story to finish the book.
    Jerry
  • Posted By Nordmanni Nordmanni | 7 months ago
    Great picture, thanks! Do you have a name other than Slydog?

    Jerry

  • Posted By Sherrill_Fulghum Sherrill_Fulghum | 7 months ago
    I am a Danish (Norse) Celt, my ancestors did the island hop until we landed in the New World as English in 1640. Many of the Norse died out or were assimilated into other cultures. Since the Vikings were the more fierce of the Norse many of them died in battles.
  • Posted By Nordmanni Nordmanni | 7 months ago
    Hi Sherrill, I am Swedish/German, half and half, so we share a common heritage. You are correct in saying they assimilated into other cultures. They did that throughout their medieval world. If you have an interest in what I, and others, think happened to the aproximately 4000-Greenland Norse settlers, take a look at my website: http://www.vinlandpublishing.com/.< a> />I have written the first book of a six book series on that very subject. Jerry
  • Posted By slydog slydog | 7 months ago
    The Celts and the First Nations people of North America had a lot in
    common. The Celts were the "true" aboriginal culture of middle/North
    Europe that evolved out of the last ice age! Like First Nations, their
    religion was manifest in Nature and they both valued a Warrior Spirit.
  • Reported by Nordmanni
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