Enchanting tale Odd's father dies whilst on a Viking expedition, then, when chopping wood Odd crushes his foot and ends up with a limp and needs a crutch to get around. Now the winter seems to be going on forever. Will his bad luck ever end? Then Odd runs away from home because his stepfather is cruel to him, and beds down in his father's old log cabin. There he meets a bear, an eagle and a fox that are all under an enchantment. Together they have to try to beat the Frost Giants in order to bring the endless winter to a... more info
One of Gaiman's most enjoyable Neil Gaiman really, really likes writing about gods, and that's okay. If American Gods is the solid, upstanding one that works hard and takes its job seriously and Anansi Boys is its younger brother that pops by in the middle of the night with some beer and a couple of friends, Odd and the Frost Giants is the youngest brother of all, the third child who goes around climbing into magical wardrobes when the others aren't looking (it wouldn't shut the doors properly, mind, because Odd is the type to know that... more info
From Midgard to Asgard, and back A review by Hank Wagner, co-author (with Christopher Golden and Stephen R. Bissette) of the upcoming Prince of Stories: The Many Worlds of Neil Gaiman, due out from St. Martins in October 2008: Gaiman wrote Odd and the Frost Giants as his personal contribution to World Book Day in the United Kingdom, which exists purely to inspire children to read. It's an annual event where a group of authors write books for nothing and publishers publish them for nothing. These books are then sold for £1 each... more info