Fantasy Aficionados discussion

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The Prose Edda
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Which edition of Norse myths?
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The Hatto and Edwards have notes, introduction, appendices as you'd expect. Hatto has translated masses of medieval German fiction, he's great but he's not perfect, I find he can be old-fashioned in his notes. A friend of mine who knows this stuff told me both the others are worth getting, the new Cyril Edwards, but also the old D.G. Mowatt he said he likes the most out of the translations. And that's cheap.
Forgot to say, these three are prose.

I have this newer translation by Carolyne Larrington, with lots of notes, in Oxford World's Classics: The Poetic Edda
I also have an older translation by Lee M. Hollander: The Poetic Edda
The Hollander tries to mimic the style of the original, not always happily, to my eyes. At random:
The ill-minded man [gap] who meanly thinks,
fleers at both foul and fair;
He does not know [gap] as know he ought,
that he is not free from flaws.
In the Oxford it's:
He's a wretched man, of an evil disposition,
the one who makes fun of everything;
he doesn't know the one thing he ought to know:
that he himself is not devoid of faults.
Easy, modern, less authentic. Whichever style you like.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Poetic Edda (other topics)The Poetic Edda: Stories of the Norse Gods and Heroes (other topics)
Trouble is, there seems to be so many editions of these texts.
Looking for recommendations for editions of:
the Norse Edda
Völsungasaga
The Thidrekssaga
the Nibelungenlied
Needs to be an English translation (though not necessarily modern).
Should be a "good"/respected translation.
Cheaper is better, but not required.
Doesn't have to be scholarly, but if it has supplemental materials all the better.
Not a bowdlerized or children's version.
Prefer prose over verse, but verse is OK.
Prefer e-book, but not required.
Should be in print. Don't want to have to hunt for OP or rare editions.
Anyone have some ideas?