indigo-night-wisp:

So… sometimes, I will read a book, and then later, I will tell someone, “I love this book.” And they’ll be all like, “Oh, okay, cool, uh-huh.” And I’m like, “No. You Don’t Understand. I. Love. This. Book.”

Runemarks, by Joanne Harris, is one such book. It’s basically everything I want in original fiction based off of Norse mythology. Not only is the heroine a 14 year old girl who is just plain awesome, but the characterizations for the Aesir and the Vanir are just amazing. Absolutely amazing.

Particularly for Loki, who, I’m sure it comes as no surprise, I have a definite soft spot for. Never, in fiction, have I ever come across a Loki who fits so well with what I see in the original Norse myths. Instead of a Loki who is malicious and villainous, he is a Loki who often is in over his head, but too stubborn (or too deep) to admit it. He plays both sides, and is always on his own, but he holds a certain loyalty for the Aesir, who took him in so long ago. Loki spends most of the book being kicked around, losing his glam, falling to pieces, getting beaten up by a 14 year old girl (main character Maddy Smith, being awesome as always), being out-played by the bad guys, and just generally being his usual self (as Norse mythology portrays). He is a perfect fit, and I love him dearly.

Okay, enough about Loki (as if, but for a little while, at least). Let’s talk Odin. Odin, One-eye, the Allfather. The “General,” in Runemarks. Odin is a mess, though somewhat less of one than Loki. His glam is in shreds, he looks like an old man, his allies are suspicious of him, at least one of them has totally turned against him, and to top it all off, he’s got family members crawling out of the woodworks. All in all, pretty stressful. But he’s still himself, still tricksy and false, still the man with the plan, even if the plan is something less like, “We will conquer them all!” and something more like, “We will die trying.” AND, Odin actually acknowledges his brother (ahem, that would be Loki, for those who aren’t in the know), and tries to save him, even when the rest of the gods would leave Loki to his doom. (See, it’s really all about Loki in the end.)

Except for Maddy Smith, who really should have gone first, because she is, in fact, the main character. No spoilers, for those who will naturally want to read the book after reading this little… thing, but she is in fact a character from the myths, though she is an original character in her own right. It’s complicated, as so many things in Norse mythology are. But let’s talk Maddy: powerful, intelligent, cunning, in her way. She trusts Loki, which is such a bad idea, I cannot even, but it endears me to her immensely, for reasons which I’m sure are obvious. Also, she adores Odin, who was her teacher since she was young, though she doesn’t know who he is exactly until later. She’s got glam, which has nothing whatsoever to do with shiny things. (Well, okay, a little bit to do with shiny things.) It’s powerful. She beats up Loki a lot. Sometimes it’s even on purpose. (No, but seriously though, the amount of times Maddy injures Loki on accident is bordering on running gag material by the end of the book.) She is literally the most important character in the book. Everyone is after her, in some way, shape, or form (puns, totally intended: read the book and you’ll get them too!). And… and yeah, no spoilers, but Maddy is awesome.

I could get into all the other Aesir and Vanir and the excellent, excellent characterization. I could also get into the bad guys of the book, who are definitely NOT who you’d expect them to be. But I won’t, because there are like a gazillion of them. Suffice to say: characterization is spot-on, and the bad guys are delightfully twisty.

And may I just gush, one last time, about Loki? Because he is perfect, really. Spot-on. From the way he looks out for himself first of all, and his “family” secondly, and reluctantly, to the way he is constantly getting into trouble (in one book!) because of poor planning, curiosity, or atrocious luck, to the way he tries so hard not to care, to this gem: “‘Your son?’ said Maddy. ‘Gods, Loki, is there anyone here you’re not related to?’” His fear of snakes, his devil-may-care attitude hiding deeper hurts and cares, his delight in battle, his Fiery Aspect. All of it, is absolutely brilliant. I cannot gush enough.

Plus, there’s a sequel. 🙂

Okay, ranting done. Now, since you definitely want to read this book now, but don’t want to scroll to the top of this long long text post, here’s the title and author again:

Runemarks, by Joanne Harris

You are welcome.

Trickster, Dogstar, Sky-traveller, Wolf-father…

balladedutempsjadis:

So, friends, I’ve always had a soft spot for Norse mythology ever since I first read a pretty expurgated (i.e. Sigurd’s/Sinfjoetli’s twincesty parentage was glossed over!) version of the Volsunga Saga illustrated by Arthur Rackham when I was, like, 10 or 11. And I always liked Loki the best of the Norse pantheon because, unlike just about everyone else in that group, he used brains, rather than heavy weapons, to solve problems.

For a while, I read tons of novels based on Norse mythology and then I thought I was basically over the whole thing, and … then I fell in love with the MCU versions of Thor/ Loki/ Odin/ Frigga, etc., but especially with Loki (:D) and so all my dormant love for those stories/characters got a huge surge of new energy; in the past month or so, I’ve been re-reading old favorites like Eight Days of Luke, and American Gods, and on a whim, I also picked up Runemarks, by Joanne Harris (author of Chocolat, which some of you may remember was made into a lovely film starting Johnny Depp and Juliet Binoche), which I finally read today.

And folks, as Stephen Colbert likes to say, as of tonight, I have a new favorite version of Loki. For some reason, this book is marketed as YA (maybe because Maddy Smith, the heroine, is fourteen when the book opens) but it’s a fantastic and compelling read for adults too. (I read all 572 pages TODAY because I couldn’t put it down and I’m forcing myself not to start the sequel, Runelight, tonight, or else I know I’ll be up till 4 a.m.) 

So, I love Maddy, Odin, and vicious, remorseless Skadi in this, but my absolutely favorite thing about this book is Loki, who is charming, mischievous, tricky, resentful, self-serving, and bratty, but also brave, and sometimes heroic, albeit usually dragged into random acts of heroism by someone else (mostly Maddy) and did I mention charming?

Some quotes because I JUST LOVED this book SO MUCH:

“Chaos was in my blood, they said- but they were happy enough to use my talents when it suited them. They despised deceit, hated lies, but were content to enjoy the fruits of them…When Odin took me in,” Loki went on, “he knew exactly what I was. Wildfire that cannot be tamed. So what if I slipped my leash a couple of times? I saved their skins more often than any of them knew. No one was grateful. And in the end” -once more Loki gave his crooked but oddly charming smile- “in the end, who betrayed whom?”

Loki is resentful and angry, just as he should be:

“The Æsir!” Unexpectedly her words had struck home; for a moment Loki’s eyes flared with unfeigned anger. His colors flared too, from ghostly violet to fiery red. “All they ever did was use me when it suited them. When there was trouble, it was always Please, Loki, think of something. Then when it was over, it was Back to your kennel, without so much as a thank-you. I was always a second-class citizen in Asgard, and not one of them ever let me forget it.”

But he also enjoys mischief for its own sake:

"Loki grinned. In a fair fight he knew he had no chance; but Loki was not accustomed to fighting fair, and had no intention of starting now.”

Or: 

“There’s an old Northlands saying that goes like this: When lies don’t help. try telling the truth. Loki knew it well, of course, but preferred his own version, which was: When lies don’t help, tell better lies.”

Plus, Harris’s Odin, who is Loki’s blood-brother (as in mythology) not his adoptive father (as in MCU canon), is also kind of great!! (And a bit manipulative as well.)

Since the beginning of the Elder Age, Loki had helped the gods only inasmuch as he’d usually caused the trouble in the first place. And yet hadn’t Odin himself known this from the start? And in his arrogance, hadn’t he always been shamefully eager to blame Loki for his own mistakes?

(Well, yeah, it does seem like Odin definitely used Loki to get stuff without paying fairly for it – in the myth cycle, I think Loki even gets Thor’s hammer for him – and then acting like he had nothing to do with the mischief!)

EVERYONE, YOU SHOULD READ THIS BOOK AND TALK ABOUT IT WITH ME!!!! (Please?) Seriously, it is so good! 

Thanks to “Thor”/”Avengers”, etc., I cannot imagine anyone but Tom Hiddleston playing Loki, but Harris’s version of him is red-haired and green-eyed, so it has to be a ginger version of MCU’s Loki. So, basically, this is what I saw in my head the entire time I was reading : 

image

I can’t imagine him playing Loki, but I agree with the rest!

benjaminthecoathanger:

benjaminthecoathanger:

hemillsie:

aliciasimaginaryfriends:

scandigayvians:

hemillsie:

aliciasimaginaryfriends:

godofturmoil:

aliciasimaginaryfriends:

hemillsie:

benjaminthecoathanger:

aliciasimaginaryfriends:

benjaminthecoathanger:

You know the Runemarks fandom is small enough for us to theoretically be able to have a massive group…

are we doing this then

Oh my good us yes yes

please let this be a thing

someone start collecting skypes then, lets stop talking about it and actually do the thing I am excited now

So far I’ve sent a thing to y’all that have commented on this version, plus emptyroomfullofpeople and lady-sigyn-of-Asgard plus someone else who I’ve forgotten. I’m not entirely sure if anyone else wants to join this but if so, let me know.

I’ve got friend requests from two people (hemillsie and emptyroomfullofpeople).
I’ve sent requests to those that replied ( I’ll have to go back and heck though) Now all I have to do is figure out how to start a group chat
WHOOP

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