The Icelandic horse has endured much during its millennium of service to a hard people in a cold land.
Blazing trails through lava fields, shuttling between far-flung fjords, starved, drowned and even brought back from the dead.
Here we see Iceland’s hardiest helper from every angle, the same beast who first set hoof on Iceland’s shores in the 9th century, through stories free from all the hype and schmaltz of the tourist brochures.
With their first book, Birds, Hjörleifur Hjartarson and Rán Flygenring dazzled us with Iceland’s fascinating feathered friends. Now they’re back in the saddle with their unique take on Iceland’s iconic equine.
REVIEWS
“Birds by Hjörleifur Hjartarson and Rán Flygenring, released in 2017, remains fresh in many people’s memories. Unlike other bird books, it examined the birds of the country from a unique perspective, achieving highly entertaining results. Horses aims for a similar approach, although, naturally, horses are quite different from birds in terms of use, capabilities, legends, and connections to humans. It includes a variety of interesting information about horses, our most essential servant, from the introduction of the ancestors of most horses 55 million years ago to Skugga-Sveinn from Hafnarfjördur, a horse that can count but gave up a career in mathematics for painting.
The book discusses horses from the beginning of their coexistence with humans, as horses seem to have been a part of most human societies for millennia and thus hold a place in the soul of many nations. It tells of mythical horses, where many religions feature horses, both winged like Pegasus and our eight-legged Sleipnir, and all the other horses featured in the Poetic Edda, the horses in the Icelandic sagas, and those in folk tales like Faxi from Myrká, attempting to enter his mind as he watches Garún ringing the church bells.
It narrates stories of horses with human intelligence, horses sent into battle, and more. Not all stories are comforting; one can even find a recipe for foal stew, making it clear that this book leaves nothing out. The beloved old horse Gráni by Megas, along with other horses in poems and songs, as well as topics on horse colors, gaits, riding gear, and equipment, idioms, and proverbs involving horses, are extensively covered.
Hjörleifur Hjartarson’s text is witty and readable, charming for readers of all ages. However, the story is only half told without Rán Flygenring’s uniquely entertaining, descriptive, humorous illustrations that greatly enhance both the narratives and the information. On some pages, the text is merely secondary, allowing the images to shine and tell their stories. In line with the importance of the illustrations, great emphasis is placed on the book’s appearance, with thick paper, an unconventional size, making it more of an art book than a text work. Above all, this is a book about horses for anyone with even a slight interest in these most faithful servants of Icelanders through the ages.
CONCLUSION: Horses is a beautiful and entertaining book that all horse lovers, story enthusiasts, and illustration fans will enjoy, regardless of age.”
BRYNHILDUR BJORNSDOTTIR, MORGUNBLADID DAILY
“This literally starts with a short history of humankind for beginners. Then, actually, how the story of the horse intertwines with human history. And then they move more and more into the story of the Icelandic horse and its uniqueness. They trace the whole damn thing… everything from Norse mythology and the Sagas of Icelanders… All of this is then adorned with these imaginative and lively drawings by Rán… incredibly joyful and playfully entertaining book. … Hjörleifur writes in such a fun style that appeals to a wide age group.”
SVERRIR NORLAND, KILJAN/ICELANDIC NATIONAL TV
“[The book is] incredibly entertaining and also because I have so much fun with personalities. Then there are horses with tremendous personalities. There are horses that save human lives, there is a horse that takes its own life. A very tragic narrative. There is a musical horse, and one grows to think very fondly of the Icelandic horse… It is a delight to read this book… it is written in an incredibly entertaining way and also how it makes gentle fun of us humans. A great book, for a very wide age group.”
KOLBRUN BERGTHORSDOTTIR, KILJAN/ICELANDIC NATIONAL TV
“This is the story of horses, not just in Iceland but right from the dawn of time. … Rán Flygenring is a masterful illustrator. The pictures are so entertaining and just the layout of the book is wonderful.”
EGILL HELGASON, KILJAN/ICELANDIC NATIONAL TV
“The text is clear and focused… the book is colorful and beautiful. The drawings are humorous and classic… an entertaining educational work that is easy to pick up anywhere and read a short chapter from, whether it’s from the beginning, the end, or somewhere in between, without worrying about a “linear” context.”
GYLFI THORKELSSON