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-
- The Troll's Grindstone/The Curse of Slagfid
- by Elizabeth Boyer, Published by Corgi, RRP £3.99 each
-
- Reviewed by Kjell Robertsen
-
- Once upon the time there was a world called Skarpsey where Light
- Elves fought Dark Elves and unlucky mortals were caught in the
- middle.
-
- This is the background for Elizabeth Boyer's Alfar novels. There
- are six books but only the last two are still available. This
- doesn't matter much as this is not a series, each book is a
- finished story. They are set in the Viking world of long ago but
- the books don't tell where Skarpsey was or even if it is a real
- place. I found the word "Gardar" in the book and this is an old
- Viking name for Greenland. If Skarpsey really is Greenland then
- it must have been settled by Vikings almost 2000 years ago which
- is impossible.
-
- The Troll's Grindstone tells how the Viking Leifr escapes from the
- Draugar by impersonating a missing Light Elf called Fridmarr (in
- the books the Light Elves are called "Ljosalfar"), who turns out
- to be not so missing in the end. Evidently the Draugar are not to
- be taken lightly, they are more like zombies and are not like the
- Norwegian draug who is a guardian of waterfalls and plays a
- musical instrument, usually a fiddle. I must admit that I've
- never heard of these Draugar before, but Boyer could be drawing on
- local myths or maybe she knows something I don't which is more
- than likely.
-
- I always enjoy catching an author in an obvious error and Boyer
- has made a few. For instance, Leifr's three hounds are called
- Kraftig, Frimodig, and Farlig, which the author says mean
- Strong, Fearless and Dangerous. Close enough but the words are
- taken from modern Norwegian/Danish, languages that didn't exist
- when the Vikings terrorised Europe. It is small errors like this
- that can spoil a novel especially when all other names are in old
- Norse (a language that today is spoken only on Iceland),
- unfortunately the old Norse names are difficult, I had a lot of
- problems with them. But back to the story. Fridmarr has
- apparently done a lot of wrong and Leifr sets out to correct it.
- To help him he has an old scavenger named Gotiskolkr, an elven
- girl named Ljosa and an inept wizard named Thurid. Leifr has to
- fight many strange creatures and the powerful but evil wizard
- Sorkvir. During a fight with Sorkvir, Ljosa disappears.
-
- In The Curse of Slagfid, Thurid escapes the Wizard's Guild who are
- going to take his magic away, only to be captured by the Wizard
- Djofull. Leifr sets out to rescue him only to be captured
- himself. Djofull promises to release them if they can destroy the
- curse that is on Hraedsla-Dalur and they accept. But the family
- who lives there is under attack by the Draugar who are after the
- oldest member of the family. Thurid needs all his magic to
- succeed, and even if they can destroy the curse there is still
- Djofull to fight. And Ljosa is still lost.
-
- Elizabeth Boyer has created a world of fantasy as believable as
- Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. It is based on the old Norse
- mythology that Tolkien used but fans of Tolkien will find that
- that both elves and wizards are nothing like his. Tolkien's elves
- were all good, Boyer's are a mix of both good and bad, just as the
- old fairy tales. Boyer's world is more realistic than his, and
- although Troll's Grindstone/Curse of Slagfid aren't Boyer's best
- books, I'm already looking forward to her next.
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