The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2003, Side 51

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2003, Side 51
Vol. 58 #2 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 93 Waiting for the South Wind By Valgardur Egilsson Rekjavik: Leifur Eirfksson, 2001 Reviewed by Nina Lee Colwill This is the story of Valli, living on a farm in Eyjafjordur in the 1950s, waiting for the south wind, waiting for the golden plover, waiting for spring. This was his kindergarten, it was forty square miles of landscape. The kindergarten was open twenty four hours a day and a thousand years back in time; ahead was the future as unforeseeable as always. Valli lives with his parents and five brothers and a sister, in a world in which Jesus and God intermingle with the old gods. His father is a devoted reader of the sagas, his mother a devout Christian who abhors the pagan content of these ancient tales. Thus is formed Valli’s evening ritual: listening intently as his father brings life to the old gods from the pages of the sagas, then addressing his bedtime prayer to “Our Father Who Art in Heaven.” Even the farm names are a theological paradox. Valli’s forebear, Helgi the Lean, called the farm itself Kristnes (Christness) a millennium earlier; but the sea-bound northern bound- ary of the property he called Reynisnes, from reynir, the holy rowan tree of the pagan religion. And overarching these con- tradictions are beliefs about the elves and the huldufolk. The site for their home was chosen for its protection by the Elf Knoll, a protection that was given freely when the avalanche came. And in return a shovel is never taken to the knoll, and hay is never cut there. Valli also lives in the paradox created by his two very different families. His father is one of the Stonechurchers - a tall, strong, and silent people who never give or take advice, but are always ready to help. His mother is one of the Lake Folk, an attractive, fair-haired, joyful people known for their love of song and their quick recov- ery from sadness and anger. Only when the situation requires it, is Valli’s father driven to speech; and only in the depth of misery does Valli’s mother fail to sing at her work. Life on an Eyjafjordur farm in the middle of the twentieth century was a dif- ficult life. Valli’s parents had moved the family out of town and into the country- side to teach them love and respect for the land, its plants, and its animals. But that choice means that Valli must learn his lessons from his older brothers and go to school only to write his exams. And that choice means hard work for Valli: breaking down snow bridges over the freezing spring river to protect the ever-curious

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