In Snowy Tower, Shaw gives a highly original telling of the grail epic Parzival. Dr Shaw claims the story as a great trickster tale of medieval Europe, offering a commentary that ranges from climate change to the notion of soul, erotic consciousness, what he calls “the hallucination of empire”, and a re-visioning of the speech of the ancient bards.
Snowy Tower is the second book in Shaw’s the Mythteller trilogy. A daring work, it offers a connection to “the genius of the margins”; that the big questions of today will not be met by big answers but by a myriad of mythic associations. After the eclecticism of A Branch from the Lightning Tree, Snowy Tower is a deep exploration of one central narrative.
Dr Martin Shaw is an acclaimed teacher of myth. Author of the award-winning Mythteller trilogy (A Branch from the Lightning Tree, Snowy Tower, Scatterlings), he founded the Oral Tradition and Mythic Life courses at Stanford University, whilst being director of the Westcountry School of Myth in the UK.
He has introduced thousands of people to mythology and how it penetrates modern life. For twenty years Shaw has been a wilderness rites of passage guide, working with at-risk youth, the sick, returning veterans and many women and men seeking a deeper life.
His translations of Gaelic poetry and folklore (with Tony Hoagland) have been published in Orion Magazine, Poetry International, Kenyon Review, Poetry Magazine and the Mississippi Review.
Shaw’s most recent books include The Night Wages, Cinderbiter, Wolf Milk, Courting the Wild Twin, All Those Barbarians, Wolferland and his Lorca translations, Courting the Dawn (with Stephan Harding). His essay and conversation with Ai Weiwei on myth and migration was released by the Marciano Arts foundation.
For more on Martin Shaw’s work: cistamystica.com | drmartinshaw.com | schoolofmyth.com | martinshaw.substack.com
Wild, poetic, beautiful, inspiring, challenging, unsettling.... everything I could want in a book, in fact. Highly recommended for Druids and anyone walking a bardic path.
One part nature writing, one part psychological commentary and one part his own version of the Percival legend, The Snowy Tower is the second book in Shaw's trilogy on storytelling. Though calling it a trilogy is misleading, this book stands entirely on its own.
Shaw's writing is rich, earthy, full of the playful abruptness and rhythm that show his decades of experience as an oral storyteller. His interpretation of the legend is strong, sticking very closely to medieval source in terms of narrative. His commentary is deep enough that I couldn't read the book quickly. Indeed, I made what I now consider the mistake of reading the appendix first, and thus consuming the whole tale of Percival in one go before going back and getting it in pieces interspersed with Shaw's thoughts. I would not recommend that! Let the story unwind at the same pace as the interpretation.
Ahh Percival. Shaw makes him far more relatable than de troyes ever did. It's a great story, slightly over filled with tertiary characters, that almost needs boiling down to its archetypal, mythic elements for the gold to be revealed. That's what this text does so well, and the decades that have gone into it are apparent- it has the potency of old, well matured port.
I'm a big fan of Martin Shaw, and the ending of this book is brilliantly empowering and inspiring. I love his language and the immediacy he brings to the Parzival story - with anecdotes, and other connections bringing the whole drama into our lives as part of our own progress. I'd give it a big 5 stars because the work is significant in bringing meaning that is beyond academic, historic, or psychological - but I can't give it to the book itself which is still screaming to be proofed one more time. For example, the beautiful cover has a random comma inserted into the title, and I'm not sure why. But none of that matters if you are like me and love Shaw's message.
Episodes of magical thinking (the author claims to have seen other places through stones, given alms to spirits, et al) clouded the intellectual integrity of this book for me, but as a whole it is original and intriguing, a retelling of the myth of Parzival followed with commentary by the author.
Even more delicious than A Branch from the Lightning Tree. This is one of those book the reading which will take you on a personal and mythic adventure from which you will return changed utterly in some deep reach of your self and your relationship with everything.