Posts tagged Robert Jordan

Review: A Crown of Swords by Robert Jordan

My Kindle re-read of Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time continues with A Crown of Swords.

This was the termination of my initial read-through of the series — at this point Path of Daggers wasn’t out yet, and I was in for a long wait for the next volume in the series. I remember being particularly bored and disillusioned with the Wheel of Time by this point, particularly with the Ebou Dar storyline. I’ve found that on my second reading of the book some 13 years later that I enjoyed it a great deal more than during my original reading — particularly (and ironically), the arc centered around Ebou Dar and the hunt for the Bowl of Winds. Mat Cauthon is increasingly becoming my favorite character in the series and seeing him finally getting treated with the respect he deserves by the Aes Sedai was satisfying, as was Elayne and Nynaeve’s dealings with the “real” sisters and the Kin.

Although more significant events take place in Lord of Chaos, A Crown of Swords is shorter and therefore unburdened by its predecessor’s many filler chapters. Not to say that there isn’t filler here — the central storyline of A Crown of Swords is a bit of a cul-de-sac for the series, as the struggle to fix the world’s broken weather is nothing more than a distraction from the Last Battle. I found it to be a relatively brief read, and although it doesn’t further the story significantly, the character movement was satisfying, and Mat’s cliffhanger is still as strong as I remembered. Tangential though the story may be, it comes down to whether or not you like the characters — I happen to be fond of them, so spending some time with Mat, Elayne and Nynaeve in Ebou Dar wasn’t a bad way to spend a week and a half of reading.

However, on the negative side, the pacing of Rand’s arc was especially uneven. The showdown at the end seemed to come out of nowhere, given that the chief antagonist was barely mentioned in A Crown of Swords before the climax. It does show that Jordan was able to move the story when he wanted to and could have resolved many of his story lines within a few chapters. However, in this case the lack of any kind of build-up to the fight left me a bit bewildered. The ending itself is incredibly rushed, the payoff seemingly unearned given the similar ending (and better set-up) featured in The Dragon Reborn. This is something I remembered from my first read-through, and my opinion has changed little on the second.

At this point, readers know whether or not they’re invested in the series — if you like Mat, Elayne and Nynaeve, then A Crown of Swords will be a worthy read. But if you’re plowing through the series eager for the start of Tarmon Gaidon, you are setting yourself up for disappointment.

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Review: Lord of Chaos by Robert Jordan

When I first read Robert Jordan’s Lord of Chaos back in 1997, I remember it being a grueling read that sapped my enthusiasm for the series. In many ways, it sets the formula for its successors — hundreds of pages of inertia punctuated by an event at the end. Now that I’m older and am better at deconstructing an author’s intent, successful or not, I do appreciate what Robert Jordan was trying to do with the book. The payoff is neatly executed based on themes set-up throughout the book, it’s just that it necessitates making the women of the book — particularly Nynaeve and Elayne — extremely unlikable.

Lord of Chaos is fundamentally about Rand’s relationship with the Aes Sedai, which in turn is a proxy for the relationships between men and women in general. In Fires of Heaven, Moiraine told him never to trust another Aes Sedai — Rand understands the argument, but naively underestimates the two delegations that come to him. He chooses to trust the wrong delegation, and that in turn forces a series of events that culminates in the Battle of Dumai’s Wells, perhaps one of the most visceral and exhilarating action sequences in the series. The final moments of the story proper also bring about the natural resolution for Robert Jordan’s major themes — his view of the politics between men and women, and in particular, the manipulation and humiliation of men at the hands of women and ultimately the need for women to submit to men.

I’m not sure if I would describe Robert Jordan as a sexist, necessarily, and he’s definitely not a misogynist, but he takes the “Women are from Venus, Men are from Mars” approach to an embarrassing level. The women of the book do not treat its men very well — indeed, Rand is literally tortured for being a man that can channel (though one wonders if he’s tortured for simply being a man who stands up to powerful women). This has been a problem for me throughout the series, but I find it especially troubling in Lord of Chaos. Gender is treated as a see saw, tilting the balance of power between one side or the other. There is no equality, only a struggle for dominance.

I want to continue my re-read of the series to get to Brandon Sanderson’s contributions, but I wonder how much more of this I can take. It’s especially a shame because the earlier books were so entertaining. Alas, I must grit my teeth and soldier on to the end, although each volume grows more tedious than the last.

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Book Review: The Fires of Heaven by Robert Jordan

Moiraine Sedai

When it was announced that Brandon Sanderson was tapped to complete the Wheel of Time after the untimely passing of author Robert Jordan, I suddenly had my interest in the series piqued after many years of apathy. So, I began the somewhat titanic undertaking of re-reading the Wheel of Time, a task that I am still in the midst of while alternating between one Wheel of Time book and books by other authors.

My favorite books in the Wheel of Time series remain The Great Hunt and The Shadow Rising — although The Shadow Rising does start off particularly slow. The first four volumes remain by and large coherent works that while being part of a bigger series still introduce and resolve certain plot elements within their own pages. The Fires of Heaven is the first book to make the transition from a traditional volume in a series that stands somewhat on its own, to the “super-novel” approach adopted by later books.  This is when the action begins to slow down and pages and pages are spent describing clothes or going round and round through the characters’ fears and insecurities. This is not to say that important things don’t happen in The Fires of Heaven — Moiraine’s fate, Rand’s growing madness, Mat’s transformation from an archetypal trickster into something a bit more and developments in Salidar are all important to the series.

Yet, one of the most important confrontations in the novel — the battle against the Shaido — has key moments occur off-screen, while much time is spent for a final confrontation with one of the Forsaken that is not built up much through the course of the book.

The Fires of Heaven is by no means a bad book, or the worst title in Jordan’s classic series (the dubious honor falls on the completely worthless Crossroads of Twilight). But it does remind me why I gave up on this series so long ago and why some volumes are going to be a slog to get through. Luckily, it’s high points outweigh its low points. But that won’t always be the case as the series marches towards the Last Battle.

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