EINAR'S RAGNAROK

by Nora Louise Syran

Iceland 1000AD. Midsummer's Eve. While the Christians and the Pagans are fighting, Einar--a poet who cannot write--turns to the magical power of stories. Discover the frightening, sorrowful and hilarious world of norse mythology. Ragnarok is not the end, but the beginning.

Raghnild's monologue has been included in the Smith & Kraus Best Women's Monologues of 2023 collection.
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This story takes place between...

Iceland 1000AD. Midsummer's Eve. While the Christians and the Pagans are fighting, Einar--a poet who cannot write--turns to the magical power of stories. Discover the frightening, sorrowful and hilarious world of norse mythology. Ragnarok is not the end, but the beginning.

Raghnild's monologue has been included in the Smith & Kraus Best Women's Monologues of 2023 collection.
---
This story takes place between two worlds: Asgard, the home of the gods, and Midgard, where men live. It is 1000AD. At the Althing, Iceland votes to become Christian. The world is changing and to change with it, Einar is learning to write down the old stories. Funny stories of Thor and his hammer and sorrowful ones like the death of Baldr. But the bad is always balanced by the good and we learn that Ragnarok is not only the end, but also a beginning.
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Ragnarok are the events that result in the end of the world signalled by the god Heimdallr sounding his horn. Then Yggdrasill, the tree which holds the nine worlds together, will fall and the trickster god Loki's wolf Fenrir and the World Serpent will destroy the gods of Asgard. To hold off Ragnarok, the gods do everything in their power to fight fate: Freyja's handmaidens ask the cosmos to protect Odin and Freya's son Baldr, Idunn keeps the gods young with her magic apples, Thor fights giants with his hammer, a wall is built to keep themselves safe and Loki is finally punished, held beneath the earth below a giant snake, dripping poison.

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EINAR'S RAGNAROK

Recommended by

  • Daniel Prillaman: EINAR'S RAGNAROK

    More than any other Pantheon, the Norse gods have always had a unique penchant for buffoonery in their wanton violence. The Greeks are so dramatic they could never. Syran not only perfectly nails this tone, but deftly captures the turmoil and uncertainty of a people transitioning faiths. True or no, the stories we have, the ones told to us as children, the same ones we share and tell again as we age, they are what define us. A moving, beautiful exploration of cycles, beginnings and ends, family, and how everything is more or less Loki’s fault.

    More than any other Pantheon, the Norse gods have always had a unique penchant for buffoonery in their wanton violence. The Greeks are so dramatic they could never. Syran not only perfectly nails this tone, but deftly captures the turmoil and uncertainty of a people transitioning faiths. True or no, the stories we have, the ones told to us as children, the same ones we share and tell again as we age, they are what define us. A moving, beautiful exploration of cycles, beginnings and ends, family, and how everything is more or less Loki’s fault.

  • Mike Byham: EINAR'S RAGNAROK

    Nora Louise Syran provides an entertaining education of Norse mythology in EINAR'S RAGNOROK. Whether you're somewhat familiar with the gods and their tales or have no knowledge of them, you will certainly enjoy the craftmanship of Syran's story-telling. Cleverly using a time period and setting that bridges the pagan "then" to the Christian "now" at an Althing gathering in Iceland, the presentation of the mythology is woven into the fabric of the transition itself. Very well done. I would love to see this staged.

    Nora Louise Syran provides an entertaining education of Norse mythology in EINAR'S RAGNOROK. Whether you're somewhat familiar with the gods and their tales or have no knowledge of them, you will certainly enjoy the craftmanship of Syran's story-telling. Cleverly using a time period and setting that bridges the pagan "then" to the Christian "now" at an Althing gathering in Iceland, the presentation of the mythology is woven into the fabric of the transition itself. Very well done. I would love to see this staged.

  • Morey Norkin: EINAR'S RAGNAROK

    Over great periods of time old beliefs and customs are replaced with new ones. But to preserve the ancient stories, it often takes a poet to capture the essence of a time and its people. In this play, Einar is that poet, but in fact the true poet is playwright Nora Louise Syran. Here she lovingly weaves a tale of Norse mythology and Icelandic history to pass on to students, teachers, parents, or anyone else lucky enough to share in this experience. Entertainment and education in one beautiful package.

    Over great periods of time old beliefs and customs are replaced with new ones. But to preserve the ancient stories, it often takes a poet to capture the essence of a time and its people. In this play, Einar is that poet, but in fact the true poet is playwright Nora Louise Syran. Here she lovingly weaves a tale of Norse mythology and Icelandic history to pass on to students, teachers, parents, or anyone else lucky enough to share in this experience. Entertainment and education in one beautiful package.

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Development History

  • Type Reading, Organization ASEICA, Year 2020

Production History

  • Type High School, Organization ASEICA, Year 2022