"The Waking of Angantyr"
Hervor splashed through the cold surf onto the rocks of the beach, resisting the urge to look over her shoulder. By now the ship would be underway again, putting out to sea as fast as it could. How she would get off the island was a problem for later. She was lucky to have made it this far.
I fondly refer to this story as "the bastard child of my senior thesis." At the end of college, I wrote an archaeology-and-folklore honors thesis on weapons in Viking Age Scandinavia. One of the things I read for it was a poem titled "The Waking of Angantyr," which immediately fired my imagination. I started a hunt for the saga it came from, and in the meantime, I wrote a short story.
Well, the saga (known by various names, including Hervor's saga and The saga of King Heiðrek the Wise) turned out to be a disappointing mess. Not that I expect novel-esque plot coherence out of something written down in the thirteenth century, but even by saga standards, this one doesn't hang together at all well. Which caused me to think, "Hell, I can do better than that," and I promptly wrote a novel.
Someday I may revise that novel and publish it, but for now, you get the original incarnation -- if I can use the word "original" for a draft produced eight years after I first tried to tackle the story. "The Waking of Angantyr" appeared in the second issue of Heroic Fantasy Quarterly, and can be read online for free.
Reviews
Keanen Brand, Adventures in Fiction -- A piece of heroic fantasy starring a woman is a nice surprise; this one is also a ghost story. As with "The Hand of Afaz", a weighty choice lies at the core of the action, and the reader is left with a story that is only just beginning, and is yet complete. Well done.
Jeff Draper, Scriptorius Rex -- The Waking of Angantyr has a plot of revenge and ghosts and blood magic and hot chicks with magic swords; all the things that make for a rousing tale that not even the Bard could have come up with.
Bill Ward, personal blog -- Based on the saga legend of the cursed sword Tyrfing, Brennan uses poetic language to achieve a moving tale of familial responsibility and destiny. Another winner.
E. London Setterby, LJ -- HFQ is an e-zine to watch, especially if it continues to take on stories that reinvent the heroic fantasy mold as well as Brennan's. Brennan's story achieved what I always seek in my writing--epic fantasy with a striking, unusual world that still feels relatable.