Mörg Eru Ljónsins Eyru
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''Mörg eru ljónsins eyru'' (literally, 'Many are the Lion's Ears', or, in the publisher's translation, 'The Lion has Many Ears'), published in Reykjavík in 2010 by
JPV JPV was an Icelandic publishing house, established in 2001 by Jóhann Páll Valdimarsson, from whose initials the press takes its name. On 1 October 2007, JPV merged with the publishers Mál og menning, Vaka-Helgafell and Bókaútgáfan Iðu ...
, is an Icelandic crime novel by
Þórunn Erlu-Valdimarsdóttir Þórunn is a given name. Notable people with the name include: *Þórunn Alfreðsdóttir (born 1960), Icelandic butterfly swimmer *Þórunn Erna Clausen (born 1975), Icelandic actress *Þórunn Egilsdóttir (1964–2021), Icelandic politician *Þ ...
set between 1995 and 2009. It is to a large extent an adaptation of the famous medieval Icelandic saga ''
Laxdæla saga ''Laxdæla saga'' (), Old Norse ''Laxdœla saga'' (Old Norse pronunciation ) or ''The Saga of the People of Laxárdalur'', is one of the sagas of Icelanders. Written in the 13th century CE, it tells of people in the Breiðafjörður area in weste ...
''; in the assessment of Páll Baldvin Baldvinsson, 'the love triangle of ''Laxdæla saga'' is here dragged screaming into the present, though some parts of the story were clearly written before the Crash, others after'. The novel was nominated for the fiction category of the
Icelandic Literary Prize The Icelandic Literary Prize ( Icelandic: ''Íslensku bókmenntaverðlaunin''), or Icelandic Literary Award, is an award which is given to three books each year by the Icelandic Publishers Association. The prize was founded on the association's cen ...
in 2010, and for the 2011
Blóðdropinn Blóðdropinn (''Drop of Blood'') is an annual Icelandic literary award for the best crime novel of the previous year, which has been awarded since 2007. The author of the winning novel becomes Iceland's candidate for the Glass Key award The Glass ...
prize for Icelandic crime fiction — though in the view of Bjarni Ólafsson, 'as a crime-novel, the novel doesn't manage to get off the ground', whereas 'as a dramatic tragedy, on the other hand, the book is a considerable achievement'.


Summary

The novel is to a large extent an adaptation of the famous medieval Icelandic saga ''
Laxdæla saga ''Laxdæla saga'' (), Old Norse ''Laxdœla saga'' (Old Norse pronunciation ) or ''The Saga of the People of Laxárdalur'', is one of the sagas of Icelanders. Written in the 13th century CE, it tells of people in the Breiðafjörður area in weste ...
''.Ásdís Sigmundsdóttir, 'Flutningur Laxdælu til nútímans', ''Spássían'' (winter 2010), p. 12. The main characters are: The book begins with Léo investigating the scene of Kjartan's violent death at his home in Reykjavík around New Year's Day 2009. However, it then proceeds more or less linearly to recount the life and relationships of Guðrún from 1995 to that point. Guðrún has recently divorced her first husband, Þorvaldur, after he hit her; she is beginning a promising relationship with Þórður, when he drowns in a boating accident after mysterious threats from some British tenants of his mother. Leó gets to know Guðrún while investigating this incident; Guðrún explains that a
tarot Tarot (, first known as ''trionfi (cards), trionfi'' and later as ''tarocchi'' or ''tarocks'') is a set of playing cards used in tarot games and in fortune-telling or divination. From at least the mid-15th century, the tarot was used to play t ...
reader once prophesied that she would divorce her first husband; showed a mann drowning on the second card; a happy couple with a looming figure behind them on the third; a woman with her palms over her face on the fourth; and happiness on the fifth. This corresponds to Guðrún Ósvífursdóttir's celebrated prophetic dream in ''Laxdæla saga''. In 1998 Guðrún meets the cousins Kjartan and Bolli and after having sex with both at once enters a long-term relationship with the former. Over time, she finds out about the cousins' complex relationship, as sons of half-brothers. It turns out that the cousins' grandfather Höskuldur freed Kjartan's grandmother Markefka (by purchase) from human traffickers in Oslo, where she fled during the Second World War. Höskuldur brought her to Iceland, to the great displeasure of Bolli's grandmother Jórunn. This corresponds to Höskuldur Dala-Kollsson's relationship with
Melkorka Melkorka (Old Norse: ; Modern Icelandic: ) is the name given in ''Landnámabók'' and ''Laxdæla saga'' for the Irish mother of the Icelandic goði Ólafr Höskuldsson. It is possible that her name represents the Irish ''Mael Curcaig''. Accordi ...
in ''Laxdæla saga''. Kjartan has a chip on his shoulder about Bolli's inherited wealth and is somewhat obsessed with his Polish aristocratic ancestry. Suddenly, in 2005, Kjartan moves to Uppsala in Sweden to do a PhD; he expects Guðrún to accompany him, but she refuses, so he leaves her behind and breaks off communication. (While there, he also has a relationship with his supervisor, professor Bergström.) In his absence, Guðrún has a one-night stand with Leó, which leads to the break-up of Leó's unhappy marriage. Guðrún then marries Bolli. She has a son, Þorlákur, represented at this point in the story as Bolli's. On Kjartan's return in 2007, he is enraged that Bolli and Guðrún have married; meanwhile, Guðrún realises that although she loves Bolli, she is unhappy not being with Kjartan. Bolli offers Kjartan a fine horse as a present, but Kjartan refuses it. Kjartan marries a young woman from a prominent family called Hrefna. At a party in 2008, Guðrún is annoyed that Hrefna gets the best seat; after the party, a valuable shawl and pistol which Kjartan has inherited from his Polish ancestors go missing. Leó's investigation turns nothing up. Later that year, Guðrún, Bolli and Þorlákur go away to their summerhouse, but are tricked into drinking a sleeping-draught and find themselves locked into the house, where they are trapped for several days. Though no charges are pressed, it soon becomes clear that Kjartan was the culprit, taking revenge for what he imagines is Guðrún and Bolli's theft of his shawl and pistol. At this point, the
2008–2011 Icelandic financial crisis The Icelandic financial crisis was a major financial crisis, economic and political event in Iceland between 2008 and 2010. It involved the default (finance), default of all three of the country's major privately owned commercial banks in late 2 ...
commences. Bolli's wealth insulates him from significant harm, but Kjartan and Hrefna, on Bolli's advice, have taken loans and invested their and Kjartan's parents' wealth in a company that has collapsed. Kjartan has also attempted to stymie a land purchase by Bolli, further overstretching himself. Kjartan's whole family is now bankrupt and his marriage collapses. Kjartan descends into rage and alcoholism and is found dead, presumed murdered, around New Year's Day 2009. Not long after, Bolli is found shot. The novel then focuses on Leó's investigation of the murder, which is solved largely because it turns out that Guðrún had a stalker, Oddur, who witnessed and obsessively recorded the deaths of both Kjartan and Bolli. It emerges that Hrefna hid Kjartan's shawl out of jealousy; that Guðrún's son Svenni stole the antique pistol; that Kjartan in fact killed himself, staging his suicide as a murder (echoing how in ''Laxdæla saga'' Kjartan refuses to defend himself against Bolli); and that Hrefna murdered Bolli, apparently supposing that he was to blame for Kjartan's murder. In an epilogue, Guðrún bumps into Leó in the street and it becomes clear from family resemblance that her son Þorlákur is in fact not Bolli's son, but Leó's, and the two become a happy couple, echoing Guðrún Ósvifursdóttir's fourth marriage, to Þorkell Eyjólfsson, in ''Laxdæla saga''.


Reviews

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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lion Has Many Ears, The 2010 novels Icelandic novels Novels set in Iceland Icelandic-language novels