
The Saga of Gisli the Outlaw
The Saga of Gisli was written early in the thirteenth century. It offers an imaginative reconstruction of the story of a man and his family who came to Iceland from Norway about AD 960. Soon after 960 Gisli, the central figure, was outlawed for killing his brother-in-law, and then, for thirteen years or more, he lived in hiding in remote parts of the northwest of Iceland until he was finally caught and killed by his enemies.Around this imaginative core the author has spun a web of conflicting passions - love, hare and jealousy between man and wife, brother and sister, brother-in-law - intricate emotional bonds which are here seen ironically patterned against a background of inevitable fate. Gisli, the hero, is portrayed not only as a man of strength and courage, but also a poet and dreamer, tormented in his outlawry by nightmarish visions which seem gradualy to sap his will to resist. The author's probing into the emotional depths of his characters, the superbly effective architecture of his narrative leading to the central climax, his sense of the dramatic, and his cool, compelling style all combine to make this one of the most memorable of all the Icelandic sagas.
Autores
Ediciones

The Saga of Gisli the Outlaw
146 págs.
Apr 23, 1999

The Saga of Gisli
Dec 31, 1973
The Saga of Gisli the Outlaw

The Story of Gisli the Outlaw
194 págs.
Mar 1, 2010

Gísla saga Súrssonar: Translation and Icelandic Text
162 págs.
Dec 23, 2012

The Story of Gisli the Outlaw
126 págs.
Jan 1, 2010

The Story of Gisli the Outlaw: Gisli's Saga
140 págs.
May 30, 2012
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