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[G0T]⇒ [PDF] Free Forest Child Vikings of the New World Saga Book 2 edition by Heather Day Gilbert Religion Spirituality eBooks

Forest Child Vikings of the New World Saga Book 2 edition by Heather Day Gilbert Religion Spirituality eBooks



Download As PDF : Forest Child Vikings of the New World Saga Book 2 edition by Heather Day Gilbert Religion Spirituality eBooks

Download PDF Forest Child Vikings of the New World Saga Book 2  edition by Heather Day Gilbert Religion  Spirituality eBooks

"Gilbert crafts an engaging story depicting timeless human struggles with faith, love, loyalty, and leadership." ~Publisher's Weekly starred review

Viking warrior. Dauntless leader. Protective mother.

Determined to rise above her rank as the illegitimate "forest child" of Eirik the Red, Freydis launches a second voyage to Vinland to solidify her power and to demand the respect she deserves. She will return home with enough plunder to force her brother, Leif, to sell her the family farm in Greenland.

But nothing can prepare her for the horrors she must confront in Vinland...and nothing can stand in her way when her family is threatened.

In her race to outrun the truths that might destroy her, Freydis ultimately collides with the only enemy she cannot silence—her own heart.

Historically based on the Icelandic Sagas, Forest Child brings the memorable, conflicted persona of Freydis Eiriksdottir to life. This immersive tale is Book Two in the bestselling Vikings of the New World Saga.

Forest Child Vikings of the New World Saga Book 2 edition by Heather Day Gilbert Religion Spirituality eBooks

"Forest Child"
Vikings of the New World Saga, #2
by Heather Day Gilbert

Description

Viking warrior. Dauntless leader. Protective mother. Determined to rise above her rank as the illegitimate "forest child" of Eirik the Red, Freydis launches a second voyage to Vinland to solidify her power and to demand the respect she deserves. She will return home with enough plunder to force her brother, Leif, to sell her the family farm in Greenland. But nothing can prepare her for the horrors she must confront in Vinland...and nothing can stand in her way when her family is threatened. In her race to outrun the truths that might destroy her, Freydis ultimately collides with the only enemy she cannot silence—her own heart. Historically based on the Icelandic Sagas, Forest Child brings the memorable, conflicted persona of Freydis Eiriksdottir to life. This immersive tale is Book Two in the bestselling Vikings of the New World Saga.

Biography

HEATHER DAY GILBERT, a Grace Award winner and bestselling author, writes novels that capture life in all its messy, bittersweet, hope-filled glory. Born and raised in the West Virginia mountains, generational story-telling runs in her blood. Heather is a graduate of Bob Jones University, and she and her husband are raising their children in the same home in which Heather grew up.

Heather's Viking historical novels, God's Daughter and Forest Child, are Amazon Norse bestsellers. Heather has also authored the bestselling Murder in the Mountains mystery series, the Hemlock Creek Suspense series, and the Indie Publishing Handbook: Four Key Elements for the Self-Publisher.
This genre is quite new to me, but I was captivated by the events throughout this book. A novel about the differences between family, enemies and the struggle for power takes us on journeys to Vinland and Greenland. The fight for power and respect creates both darkness and horror. Historically based on the Icelandic Sagas, the daughter of Eirik the Red, Freydis Eiriksdottir is known as the illegimate Forest Child.

Unfamiliar with either Vinland or Greenland, I discovered much through Gilbert's descriptive skills of both the terrain and the lifestyles of people throughout these areas during this time period. Freydis demonstrated an immense power and strength that many men couldn't match. Her craving for respect and power nearly consumed her. This obsession for power brought her to experience unknown atrocities and horror.

I found it very difficult to like Freydis through this powerful novel, and was revulsed by her actions while in Vinland. I grew to respect her after her return to Greenland when she endured unfairness and cruelty from her brother. Once she returned to Vinland Freydis became a character who I grew to respect and favor.

Forest Child is a powerful and deeply disturbing tale of a woman who fought like a man, but exhibited love for a child. Impressed by "Forest Child," I will be picking up a copy of "God's Daughter." Forest Child has piqued my interest in learning the background for this compelling tale!

Disclaimer: I received a copy of this book for review, with no expectations for a positive review. All expressed opinions are my own, and no monetary compensation was received for this review.

Product details

  • File Size 3656 KB
  • Print Length 292 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publisher WoodHaven Press; 1 edition (October 31, 2016)
  • Publication Date October 31, 2016
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B01M3NTUW9

Read Forest Child Vikings of the New World Saga Book 2  edition by Heather Day Gilbert Religion  Spirituality eBooks

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Forest Child Vikings of the New World Saga Book 2 edition by Heather Day Gilbert Religion Spirituality eBooks Reviews


This is the long-awaited sequel to the author's God's Daughter, and brings her Saga of the Vikings of the New World to a conclusion. IMO, this book, if anything, is even better than the first. I would strongly advise reading the books in order; they have many of the same characters, and it will help you as a reader to come to this book with the better and deeper understanding of the relationships, personalities and general situation that the first book will give you. Where the first book focused on Gudrid, former pagan priestess (now a Christian) and healer, however, this one focuses on her half-sister-in-law by a previous marriage, Freydis, out-of-wedlock daughter of Eirik the Red.

The fictional element in historical fiction about real-life people (which both these women, and a number of the other characters here, were) uses imagination to reconstruct the details history leaves out, and especially the inner personalities and motivations that history may record imperfectly or not at all. As I already knew from reading some faithful modern re-tellings, our sole historical source for the Viking voyages to Greenland, the Icelandic sagas, don't remember Freydis kindly she's depicted as a vicious, treacherous psychopath who becomes the New World's first mass murderer. BUT.... 1.) No historians, medieval or modern, are wholly free from biases that shape their reaction to their material. Gender relations in early Scandinavian/Germanic and Celtic society, as reflected in these books, were comparatively more equalitarian and meritocratic than those of the "civilized" states of southern Europe. By the 13th century, though, when the oral sagas were being committed to writing, the more patriarchal and stratified attitudes of the latter were re-shaping thought and practice in the northern lands. To these historiographers, a woman who clearly didn't fit their picture of proper gender roles may well have been seen as an obviously deviant villainess by definition, whose actions called for censorious treatment. 2.) Even some of the details recorded by the saga compilers themselves, if one reads between the lines, cast doubt on the supposedly innocent and pacific intentions of Freydis' adversaries. And 3.), the two key conversations in the sagas that cast Freydis in the worst light, taken at face value, were totally private conversations that none of the original tellers of the material could actually have been privy to. They're imaginative reconstructions, just as much as Gilbert's dialogue is --and they're reconstructions created by writers with an ideological agenda of their own.

Gilbert follows the factual account of events in the sagas faithfully (even including the two conversations I find suspect). But she fleshes out the picture with a more sympathetic vision, and a broader reconstruction of a plausible context, that gives us a very different picture of what (may have) actually happened on the Vineland coast a thousand years ago. The Freydis who emerges here isn't an evil harridan, and isn't psychotic. What she is is a tough-as-nails young woman who's the product of a society that puts a premium on physical courage and fighting ability, who's had to fight tooth and nail for anything she's ever gotten, who didn't feel loved as a child, never knew her birth mother, and doesn't show love or give trust very easily, a female warrior (in her culture, that wasn't a contradiction in terms) who killed men in combat while she was still in her teens, who doesn't readily take orders from any man, woman, or deity, and who isn't a total stranger to the effects of the special kind of dried mushrooms imbibed by Viking "berserkers" --which are as potent as modern-day "angel dust," and just as dangerous. She's also a smart, competent woman (it says something that <i>she's</i> the expedition leader here, not her husband) with principles as strong as steel, and deep reserves of love and loyalty. And like all of us, she's a woman on a spiritual journey ... which might not end where it began. In real life, the Vikings of succeeding generations never forgot her. Modern readers probably won't, either.

Gilbert brings Freydis' world vividly to life here, without employing info-dumps or cluttering the narrative with excessive details. (She includes a family tree for Freydis and a short list of other characters in the back, along with a short glossary of Viking terms used in the text; but I personally didn't need the former, and with my Scandinavian background, the latter only included a couple of words I didn't know --and I'd roughly deduced the meanings of those from the context already. Even readers who haven't read much about Vikings, I think, could guess the definitions of all these terms the same way.) This is a very taut, gripping read, with a lot of suspense in the first part even when you know the general outline of the history, and the plot continues to hold dangers and surprises up to the denouement and beyond. It's written in first-person, present-tense, which puts us inside Freydis' head and bonds us to her quickly. As in the first book, the characterizations are believable and vivid. All told, this is historical fiction at its finest! I give it my highest recommendation, and I'm looking forward to reading more of Gilbert's work.

As a quick footnote, I was gifted with a free copy of this work by the author, just because she knew I wanted to read it, and because she's got a generous heart. (A lot of authors give out e-books, which are relatively cheap --she gave me a signed trade paperback copy!) I wasn't asked to give a favorable review (or, really, any review at all) --that had to be earned, and it was earned in abundance.
"Forest Child"
Vikings of the New World Saga, #2
by Heather Day Gilbert

Description

Viking warrior. Dauntless leader. Protective mother. Determined to rise above her rank as the illegitimate "forest child" of Eirik the Red, Freydis launches a second voyage to Vinland to solidify her power and to demand the respect she deserves. She will return home with enough plunder to force her brother, Leif, to sell her the family farm in Greenland. But nothing can prepare her for the horrors she must confront in Vinland...and nothing can stand in her way when her family is threatened. In her race to outrun the truths that might destroy her, Freydis ultimately collides with the only enemy she cannot silence—her own heart. Historically based on the Icelandic Sagas, Forest Child brings the memorable, conflicted persona of Freydis Eiriksdottir to life. This immersive tale is Book Two in the bestselling Vikings of the New World Saga.

Biography

HEATHER DAY GILBERT, a Grace Award winner and bestselling author, writes novels that capture life in all its messy, bittersweet, hope-filled glory. Born and raised in the West Virginia mountains, generational story-telling runs in her blood. Heather is a graduate of Bob Jones University, and she and her husband are raising their children in the same home in which Heather grew up.

Heather's Viking historical novels, God's Daughter and Forest Child, are Norse bestsellers. Heather has also authored the bestselling Murder in the Mountains mystery series, the Hemlock Creek Suspense series, and the Indie Publishing Handbook Four Key Elements for the Self-Publisher.
This genre is quite new to me, but I was captivated by the events throughout this book. A novel about the differences between family, enemies and the struggle for power takes us on journeys to Vinland and Greenland. The fight for power and respect creates both darkness and horror. Historically based on the Icelandic Sagas, the daughter of Eirik the Red, Freydis Eiriksdottir is known as the illegimate Forest Child.

Unfamiliar with either Vinland or Greenland, I discovered much through Gilbert's descriptive skills of both the terrain and the lifestyles of people throughout these areas during this time period. Freydis demonstrated an immense power and strength that many men couldn't match. Her craving for respect and power nearly consumed her. This obsession for power brought her to experience unknown atrocities and horror.

I found it very difficult to like Freydis through this powerful novel, and was revulsed by her actions while in Vinland. I grew to respect her after her return to Greenland when she endured unfairness and cruelty from her brother. Once she returned to Vinland Freydis became a character who I grew to respect and favor.

Forest Child is a powerful and deeply disturbing tale of a woman who fought like a man, but exhibited love for a child. Impressed by "Forest Child," I will be picking up a copy of "God's Daughter." Forest Child has piqued my interest in learning the background for this compelling tale!

Disclaimer I received a copy of this book for review, with no expectations for a positive review. All expressed opinions are my own, and no monetary compensation was received for this review.
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