Wild
Wild: Tales From Early Medieval Britain, by Amy Jeffs After I read Storyland, I wanted to read Wild; I really wondered what kind of stories Jeffs would collect into this book. This one is shorter, and also I think takes more liberties with the material, and the result is intriguing.
Jeffs takes some of the more obscure poems from things like the Book of Exeter, or panels of the Franks Casket, often melds a couple of them together, and turns them into short tales. So we read of the Sorrow of Hos -- Hos is named in a real manuscript, and Jeffs gives her a story fitting the existing clues. "The Wanderer" is adapted a bit and told from the perspective of Grendel.
I enjoyed these short tales and the explanations Jeffs provided of how she came to write them. The illustrations, again linocuts, and this time not so plentiful, were also very good.
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