![]() He thinks that myths do tell satisfying stories, and that the Norse myths are more satisfying than most, because of the promise of the apocalypse in Ragnarok. ![]() “They shape different parts of the world inside our heads, and they shape them not as pleasures, but as encounters with the inapprehensible.” “Myths are often unsatisfactory, even tormenting,” she writes. Byatt’s Ragn a r o k is lyrical and positively teeming with imagery: As you read, you can vividly imagine the dripping maw of Fenrir the wolf as he prepares to swallow the world, the sea frothing around the Midgard Serpent as she frolics in destruction.īut Ragn aro k is uninterested in story and the satisfactions of narrative, which Byatt considers to be counterproductive to the project of myth. ![]() Byatt’s Ragn a r o k, the story of the apocalyptic destruction of the gods. In books, the most beautiful and stirring of the recent retellings is A.S. And Norse mythology has been increasingly in vogue over the past few years, perhaps as a side effect of the popularity of Marvel’s Thor movie franchise. ![]()
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