The comparison of Glowell's picture of Beowulf and Gardner's Grendel's Grundel, John Gardner's novel Grundel is quite different from Beowulf's epic. Grendel is a nonhuman with human qualities. In every talk, there is no indication of the kind of Glendell and what Glendell is like. The only idea about the reader's view about Glendell is the little advice given by the author. We know that he stands like a human being, we know he is covered with hair, and we know he is a giant .
John Gardner 's Grundel is a revised heroic epic Beowulf, but the view changed. Beowulf 's opponent and Gardner' s work - Glendell 's nominal features, Glendell' s opinion. In Glendell, Gardner is personalizing Grundel by emphasizing the similarity between Glendell's life and human life. Beowulf 's hero "... Devil" (Heaney 100) makes this seemingly opposite, strange character easier to understand through Gurdel' s human emotions, human development, and human reflections on Godner 's reflection on human defects. These words explain Monster Glendell which is truly evil entity. Only magnificent heroes with strength, courage and confidence can beat this powerful enemy. The name of the hero is Beowulf. He showed them all through the epic. Beowulf's first magnificent heroic character is confident. Beowulf was confident in talking to Unferth at Heorot Hall. Beowulf says, "But I can see that he is different from myself, I will teach him the shape of the guitar.
The comparison of Glowell's picture of Beowulf and Gardner's Grendel's Grundel, John Gardner's novel Grundel is quite different from Beowulf's epic. Grendel is a nonhuman with human qualities. In every talk, there is no indication of the kind of Glendell and what Glendell is like. The only idea about the reader's view about Glendell is the little advice given by the author. We know that he stands like a human being, we know he is covered with hair, and we know he is a giant .