And we have Loki, cunning and ingenious with his own complex intentions. And it really is what it says on the cover: it’s a whole bunch or Norse stories about some familiar faces. I think this can be taken as either an introduction to such works or simply as it is at face value. I do like old poetry, though not everyone does. In doing so he makes them approachable and, perhaps even, more engaging for a reader today. So here he has retold some already excellent stories. He has contributed much to the arts, and this work here shows he has much more to give. He has many years of writing ahead of him (I hope.) And I don’t think it is too far a thing to suggest that he may win the noble prize for literature in his lifetime. He really is a talented man he is capable of that rare, rare, thing of being able to write fiction that is worthy of literary criticism but is also ridiculously popular and, well, just plain cool. Not only does he write fantastic comics, intelligent children’s stories and detailed novels about the nature of godhood (even if I didn’t personally enjoy them all), he also has adapted Norse mythology and re-written it with his modern stylish flair. I don’t say this out of a sense of personal bias, but with a degree of objectivity. Gaiman is, without a doubt, one of the most multi-talented writers alive today.
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