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Meadowland: A Novel of the Viking Discovery of America
 
 
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Meadowland: A Novel of the Viking Discovery of America [Paperback]

Thomas Holt (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 1, 2005
In 1037, a senior civil servant of the Byzantine empire faces a tedious journey to Greece, escorting the Army payroll. His only companions are a detachment of the Empire's elite Guard, recruited from Viking Scandinavia. When the wagon sheds a wheel, he passes the time talking with two veterans, who have a remarkable story to tell—the Viking discovery of America.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

The year is 1036. John Stetathus, a middle-aged civil servant from Constantinople, is volunteered to accompany the army payroll to Sicily. Traveling with him are twelve iron chests filled with gold coin and three soldiers from the Varangian Guard—the elite troops recruited from Scandinavia. When their wagon loses a wheel somewhere near Corinth, all they can do is wait and talk. And the Varangians have a remarkable story to tell. For two of the men, originally from Ireland, once knew a man called Leif Erikson. And all three of the soldiers, some years earlier, had founded a settlement on a large island they called Meadowland. In his memorable new historical novel, Thomas Holt tells the story of the Vikings' discovery of America.

About the Author

Thomas Holt is the author of historical fiction, including THE WALLED ORCHARD and ALEXANDER AT THE WORLD'S END, also such comic fantasy classics as WHO'S AFRAID OF BEOWULF?, EXPECTING SOMEONE TALLER and OVERTIME.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 438 pages
  • Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group (March 1, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0349117411
  • ISBN-13: 978-0349117416
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,307,810 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another gem, June 1, 2005
This review is from: Meadowland: A Novel of the Viking Discovery of America (Paperback)
Tom Holt's latest foray into historical fiction is as classy as the previous efforts. He has a somewhat unique premise that runs through all his historical novels. Namely to prove that history is just a consequence of arbitrary discussions by the main protagonists. So, for example, in the book, `Alexander at the World's End' he tells us that everything this global legend did was due to the farce of yapping dog philosophy by Euxenus. In this effort we learn that Harald Sigurdson's decision not to settle in America and thus set back the discovery back several hundred years was entirely due to a conversation with our story's narrator John Stetathus. His narrative style also follows the same formula. Just as with Cratus and Cleander in `Olympiad', so here we have the aging Eyvind and Kari telling their story in one continuous chronolgy though with their own voices at different times whilst stuck in a wet cave after the axle falls off their money cart. It's rather good and anyone who has liked the previous novels will enjoy this one.
Not much actually happens in this novel, concerning, as it does the ill-fated voyages of Kari and Eyvind with various members of Eirik the Red's progeny. The pair spend most of their lives joined at the hip, grumbling about each other whilst drifting between Greenland and Meadowland over the course of six voyages.
The first is a brief visit with Bjarni Herjolfsson after getting blown off course whilst attempting to reach Greenland. The second is with Leif Eirikson where the infamous Leif's booths are founded before misery sets in and they ship back. The third is with Thorvald Eirikson after Eirik dies and Leif takes over running of Brattahlid. The voyage ends up with them encountering the indigenous population and killing them before returning again to Greenland
The fourth is with Thorstein - a particularly ill-fated voyage as they never get to Meadowland but instead end up a day's sail down the Greenland coast suffering the plague. The fifth occurs with `Bits' Thorfinn, who has ideas of a great settlement but no actual clue as to how to implement it. This is a fairly lengthy sojourn with the birth of the first child in Meadowland and a prolonged fight with the indigenous population which is resolved by a large bull and Gudrid's bare chest.
Lastly, we have a voyage where our protagonists are taken against their will by the evil Freydis Eiriksdatter who is in partnership with some Icelanders to form a settlement and ship trade wood. This ends up in mass murder and another failed settlement attempt and concludes the narrative.
Mixed in are the sibling's rivalry over Gudrid, unplanned dreams and generally ineffectual leadership tantrums. Kari and Eyvind spend most of their time just getting on with everything in a quiet and generally lazy way, becoming the men to have on each voyage and recorders of the true attempts to colonise America in the early part of the eleventh century.
Tom Holt's historical novels are utterly refreshing. The nostalgic dialogue that seeks to prove some kind of philosophy just ends up in proving the chaos that controls our lives and events. At the end it's all down to pure luck and happenchance and there's not much we can do about it other than simply tell the story. Holt has managed to create a genre all by himself where he mixes history and philosophy to come up with something that is both subtly comic and delightful to read. If you've not done so yet, give these books a go. You won't be disappointed.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining and fun; not plausible and not supposed to be, June 15, 2005
By 
Lois Huneycutt (Columbia, MO USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Meadowland: A Novel of the Viking Discovery of America (Paperback)
I enjoyed this book; found it both ironic and funny and fell in love with the two aged Icelandic characters who narrate the story. It tells the little-known story of the ill-fated Scandinavian settlements in North America in the 11th century very well. I didn't give it five stars because I honestly doubt that this is a book that will stick with me much after a year -- but it's good, light summer reading.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Respectable Historical Retelling of the Vinland Voyages, March 28, 2011
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This review is from: Meadowland: A Novel of the Viking Discovery of America (Paperback)
I bought this one eagerly because the subject matter was, in a sense, up my alley -- and I wanted to see how Thomas Holt handled it.

On balance he did a respectable job, constructing a novel which faithfully (allowing for inevitable variations in the sources) captures the basic details of a series of voyages to North America, undertaken in the early eleventh century by Norse colonists in Greenland. Holt's novel involves a cleverly designed set-up in which a Byzantine eunuch, serving as an Imperial bookkeeper, is conducted by a three-man detail of Varangian Guardsmen (Nordic warriors in the employ of the Byzantines) overland to deliver a payment to some mercenaries. Their cart loses an axel and they're forced to hole up in an abandoned tomb to await repairs. Two of the three guardsmen are old buddies with a tale to tell, a tale of voyages to an unknown land on the western edge of the ocean, while the third is a young Harald Sigurdsson who will one day rise to fame in the north, both for his exploits as a Varangian captain with the Byzantines and, later, as a Norse viking and king.

The tale of the oldsters relies on their recollections (sometimes faulty, often testily expressed) of the series of Norse voyages from Greenland to Vinland (somewhere on the North American coast) in which they participated. The conceit of the book is that Kari and Eyvind sailed on all the voyages recalled in the two extant sources, Eirik the Red's Saga and The Tale of the Greenlanders, and so are uniquely placed to give the fullest account of what actually occurred. The real record is terse and often cryptic in its reports and Holt aims to flesh it all out through the loquacious testimony of his two eyewitnesses.

The two oldtimers are cranky and, like an old married couple, spend a lot of time carping and sniping at one another, contradicting their partner's reminscences. Eyvind claims to dislike Kari and resent his always hanging around him, but never quite tells Kari that, while Kari claims to like Eyvind but really dismisses much of what he has to say. And yet the story they have to report is largely confirmed in their two accounts (they tell their story separately, each picking up where the other left off, during the course of a night's watch until near the end when both manage to collaborate in the telling for their Greek listener).

The tale mostly reflects the historical record we have though Holt manages to give us lots of detail concerning the everyday lives of these people, making them out to be a rather petty, small minded bunch of hicks actually, while painting reasonable pictures of the main personalities involved in the events and the reasons they did what they did. Bjarney Herjolfsson, we learn, is a down to earth business type with little interest in adventure (true to the terse saga account of him, by the way) while Leif the Lucky is anything but, spending his time in frustration and uncertainty as he tries to get out from under his father's shadow and ends up trapped within it at Brattahlid (Eirik's Greenland estate). Thorfinn Karlsefni (called "Bits" here by Eyvind) is a man whose capabilities don't match his vision (in Eyvind's opinion anyway, Kari has a different, perhaps more rose colored, view) and Fredyis Eiriksdaughter is a hard, manipulative, ruthless woman (again not far from the saga record).

Hampered by their flawed characters and the circumstances of the time, Holt's two storytellers reveal inadvertently (though sometimes the heavy hand of exposition creeps in) the reasons the Vinland voyages ultimately failed, leaving only a paltry record, and little physical remains of their occurrence, behind. The thread which binds the separate voyages is the ongoing friendship/dislike of Kari and Eyvind and their repeated attempts to avoid being drawn back to Vinland and, in Eyvind's case at least, the other's company. It makes for some clever running jokes to spice up the otherwise fairly straightforward account but, finally, it's not enough to bind these events together in a unified narrative that holds the interest all the way through. I got bogged down about halfway and set the book aside with little impetus to go back until I ran out of other things to read.

The Vinland voyages, why they occurred and why they finally failed, are fascinating grist for the author's mill but this story, perhaps because it hews too closely to fictionalizing the actual record, voyage by voyage, suffers from a lack of narrative power which I believe fiction requires. Even the story frame of two feuding Varangian oldtimers, bound to each other by events and circumstance and yet mired in misunderstandings, isn't enough to fully offset the weakness of the main thread. Holt does do some nice work with the narrative, though, as driven by his ongoing dry wit, tongue always firmly in cheek, and he gives us a nice view of the Byzantine culture in which the narrative takes place as a proxy for our modern world. And he's clever at the end when he tilts us back to Harald who played a major part in English history, allowing the Greek accountant to help the soon-to-be Norse king choose his ultimate objective and thereby giving our eunuch a rather special role in English and, ultimately, world history. But even that seems a bit forced because it's pretty clear that conditions in the eleventh century were insufficient for real colonization of the Americas, whatever a Byzantine court official and a future viking king had in mind.

In sum this one started with a clever idea but the narrative doesn't quite meet its promise, getting bogged down in the repetitiveness of these events and heavy reliance on the running joke of two old Norse codgers who can't quite get along but can't do any better alone, either. Too often I found myself unable to distinguish between the two personalities driving the narrative, and lost track of who was telling us what. And too often, too, I found myself getting their accounts confused with the Greek clerk's own words. There's a certain cynical world weariness in the humor and a lot of repetitive philosophical musing that tends to slow the narrative down. Perhaps, too, the dynamics of the Kari-Eyvind relationship were just not enough to overcome the lack of dramatic tension that occurs when you already know how things turn out which, certainly, was the case here where the upshot of the Vinland voyages, and the future King Harald's choices, are widely known to readers to begin with.

SWM
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