Helpful Score: 2
Much of the book is dedicated to Guidrid, The Far Traveler, and the proof that she actually existed. Archeological studies of how the Vikings lived, where they explored, and finally a short account of how Christianity affected them.
Cynthia L. (Honeygirl62) - , reviewed The Far Traveler: Voyages of a Viking Woman on + 165 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book was a little hard to read. The author refers to the sagas a lot and includes a lot of archaeology, but it doesn't flow along easily like a nice story. You had to really concentrate on all the names and places etc because they are so foreign. But I felt I learned a lot about Greenland and Iceland and the settlers there, which I had known nothing about previously. It also clarified for me the things I've heard about Leif Eiriksson. My only disappointment was that I thought it would be more like the chronological story (a true story, not fiction) of the woman in the title and it wasn't exactly that, but still a very good, detailed book.