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$4.07The Story
From Icelandâs Nobel laureate, an essayistic tale of the unlikely miracles that return a churchâfated to disappear over & again throughout timeâto the same hillside
1882. In the still of morning, Ălafur sharpens his scythe on the bone-dry pavestones that separate his farmhouse from the rest of Mosfell Valley, where life revolves around sheep. The sound of his hammer rings out like a high-pitched bell over the tussocky fields. Across the valley, perched on a hill that hoards more sunshine than others, stands Mosfell Church. Nearby, the parish priestâs maid Gunna pours her âslosh,â a weak cup of coffee. Further afield in ReykjavĂk (âdown southâ as the locals say) the general assembly decides to revisit an old plan to cut costs by consolidating small parishes, and calls for the demolition of Mosfell. Yet today a church stands on that same hillsideâits sharp steeple silhouetted against the clouds, its crown bell hanging to the left of the altar. In A Parish Chronicle, celebrated novelist HalldĂłr Laxness combs through the minutest details of historyâfrom the location of the ancient burial mound of national hero Egill SkallagrĂmsson down to the latter part of the 19th century, when weak-sighted Ălafur and bawdy farmhand Gunna will each play an unlikely role in the parishâs stubborn survival. An intimate ode to the way of life in Laxnessâs home valley, and a shrewd commentary on how history bends to the quirks of certain individualsâA Parish Chronicle abounds with life.
Paperback |120 pages | 6.07" x 7.00"
Description
From Icelandâs Nobel laureate, an essayistic tale of the unlikely miracles that return a churchâfated to disappear over & again throughout timeâto the same hillside
1882. In the still of morning, Ălafur sharpens his scythe on the bone-dry pavestones that separate his farmhouse from the rest of Mosfell Valley, where life revolves around sheep. The sound of his hammer rings out like a high-pitched bell over the tussocky fields. Across the valley, perched on a hill that hoards more sunshine than others, stands Mosfell Church. Nearby, the parish priestâs maid Gunna pours her âslosh,â a weak cup of coffee. Further afield in ReykjavĂk (âdown southâ as the locals say) the general assembly decides to revisit an old plan to cut costs by consolidating small parishes, and calls for the demolition of Mosfell. Yet today a church stands on that same hillsideâits sharp steeple silhouetted against the clouds, its crown bell hanging to the left of the altar. In A Parish Chronicle, celebrated novelist HalldĂłr Laxness combs through the minutest details of historyâfrom the location of the ancient burial mound of national hero Egill SkallagrĂmsson down to the latter part of the 19th century, when weak-sighted Ălafur and bawdy farmhand Gunna will each play an unlikely role in the parishâs stubborn survival. An intimate ode to the way of life in Laxnessâs home valley, and a shrewd commentary on how history bends to the quirks of certain individualsâA Parish Chronicle abounds with life.
Paperback |120 pages | 6.07" x 7.00"













