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Paperback

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English
Columbia University Press
18 November 2025
Written in 13th-century Iceland by the poet and historian Snorri Sturluson, The Prose Edda is part cosmic origin story, part poetic handbook, and part mythic encyclopedia. It's our richest surviving source of Norse mythology-the strange, brutal, radiant tales of Odin, Thor, Loki, and the twilight of the gods.

But The Prose Edda is more than legend. It is a deliberate attempt to preserve a dying world: a pagan past reimagined for a Christian age, cast in prose to explain poetry, and passed down to ensure that the old stories outlive their time. Within its pages, the Norse cosmos opens like a riddle-wild, cold, and profound.

Snorri writes with clarity and cunning, arranging the raw materials of oral tradition into a coherent, almost literary architecture. The result is both source and scripture: a guide to the poetic language of the skalds, and a sacred relic of the northern imagination.
By:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Columbia University Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Volume:   1
Dimensions:   Height: 178mm,  Width: 102mm, 
ISBN:   9781967751358
ISBN 10:   1967751358
Series:   Cletham Classics
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming

Snorri Sturluson (c.1179–1241) was an Icelandic poet, historian, and politician—one of the most remarkable figures of medieval Scandinavia. A master of skaldic verse and a recorder of fading myth, he authored The Prose Edda to preserve the old Norse poetic tradition and the mythic world it evoked. His work bridges the oral and the literary, the pagan and the Christian, the mythic and the historical—shaping how we know the Norse gods today.

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