The Altuna runestone was discovered in 1918 on the wall of a chapel in Sweden; it is said to date back to the Viking Age (between the 9th and 11th centuries) and shows Thor on a fishing expedition, attempting to capture the Midgard Serpent | Creative Commons
Books on mythology are usually written by academics and intended for academic reading, so seeing the same material approached by a storyteller, and one as acclaimed as Neil Gaiman at that, was always going to be interesting. Norse mythology was famously an oral tradition. The onset of Christianity in the Nordic regions led to an active discouragement of the propagation of the ‘heathen’ Norse religion. As a result, there are few authoritative texts on the arc of Norse mythology, and no comprehensive source text to which to revert. Indeed, some of the stories are lost forever in the mists of time.
In Norse Mythology Gaiman tells the tales of the world of Asgard (one of the Nine Worlds and the home of the Aesir tribe of gods), its formation and eventual demise, not in the manner of an academic teaching a course at a university, but in the manner of a storyteller telling tales from times gone by. In so doing, he is choosing to tell the tales in a manner closer to their original telling, and that helps build a much more interesting atmosphere around the stories. The book is also structured almost like a novel, with a clear flow from the creation of the universe down to its eventual downfall and each story pulling in plotlines from its predecessors.
There are gaps in this narrative though, either due to some of the stories having been lost over the ages, or because Gaiman chooses to focus on certain key events in the overall mythological canon. As a result, the narrative is not so much a complete timeline from end to end, but a patchwork of vignettes that are stitched together skilfully to show the overall picture. Not every detail is filled in, but the general impact is dramatic enough.
A faithful retelling of Norse mythology for the young adult audience
In the recent past, Norse mythology has primarily reached the popular consciousness through the universe of comic books, and lately the Marvel film adaptations. The world of comics was also where Gaiman discovered the world of the Norse myths and to a large extent the voices of the gods in his book are influenced by the world of the comic books. Cracking wise, speaking in colloquialisms — these gods aren’t all that godlike.
And this is something that keeps coming back to me. That these gods don’t behave in a very divine manner. They lie, they steal, they break their word, they betray and are betrayed, conspire and connive. In other words, they exhibit traits that can only be described as, well, human. Thor, the mightiest of them all, is characterised in a manner similar to a jock in American culture, blundering into situations and relying on sheer physical strength to get him out of them, and prone to violent outbursts. Loki, the trickster, is a manipulator and troublemaker whose utility is presumably his ability to get the gods out of trouble; yet it appears that the problems he helps the gods to solve are, more often than not, ones he caused in the first place. And neither is he repentant, nor do the other gods hold him accountable.