The Burning Land: a Heathen’s tale continues
In today’s Wall Street Journal, Tom Shippey reviews the latest installment in Bernard Cornwell’s “Saxon Tales” series set in Anglo-Saxon England. The Burning Land continues the story of Uhtred Uhtredsson, a ninth-century Northumbrian who was brought up as a Heathen by the occupying Danes and as a grown man becomes an unwilling vassal of King Alfred (who is anything but “Great” in this anti-history).
The Burning Land concerns the battle for Mercia, which was partly occupied by the Danes. Uhtred has finally joined his Danish blood-brother Ragnar in the North, but Alfred’s family pleads with him to fight for the English. Uhtred has saved Alfred’s skin any number of times, but is always rejected and betrayed afterward because he is not a good obsequious Christian. For Uhtred still has a Heathen soul, and that’s why I love him.
Most of this series is enjoyable historical fiction, with an emphasis on the “fiction” part — Cornwell uses the gaps in the historical record to rewrite history with a starring role for his fictional hero Uhtred. But The Last Kingdom, the first book in the series which treat’s Uhtred’s boyhood and coming of age, is really something special. In a tale of adventure, with blood and guts interspersed with lyrically moving passages on the Heathen worldview, Uhtred grows up into a Heathen warrior, with a understanding of fate and honor and a fierce love for his adopted family.
I’ll read the latest book because of the vivid writing and my continuing interest in Uhtred and his adventures, but if I really want to be moved, I’ll go back and reread the beginning of Uhtred’s story, a tale that truly sings.
The Winter 2007 issue of the American Saami journal 