The Dragon Reborn: Book Three of 'The Wheel of Time' (Wheel of Time, 3)
K**N
Wonderful.
Not enough rand. Enjoyed the building of the other characters. Loved faile. The action is wonderful. Looking foward to book 4
T**B
Great read!
So many great things about this book!Friendship and loyalty: The bonds between characters are tested throughout the story. Highlighting the importance of friendship and loyalty in their journey.Good vs. Evil: the ongoing battle between the forces of light and shadow is central to the plot.Power and responsibility, identity and destiny. Read this book for yourself!
H**R
The weaving of the Wheel intensifies,
The first two books were good-if you could get past some rather slow pacing at times. This is the best of them so far, though. Who knew that dropping the hero for most of the book would make the story move so much faster?The book is mostly told from the POVs of Egwene, Perrin, and Mat. Those three characters pretty much divide the books between themselves, each having between 25 and 33 percent of the book. Rand sets off on a quest to find and recover the legendary sword Callandor, and only glimpses are seen of him during this endeavor. Meanwhile, Perrin chases after Rand with Moiraine, Lan, and a crazy girl they meet along the way. Egwene remains at the White Tower with Elayne and Nynaeve, searching the tower for the Black Ajah. Mat, after finally being released from his curse, heads to Andor, and afterwards for Tear. Eventually, the various POVs converge in the capital city of Tear, where the crystal sword is hidden inside a vast fortress the size of a small mountain.The lessening of the focus of Rand-who had about third-quarters of the first book and half of the second to himself-gives Jordan the opportunity to develop the rest of the characters, an opportunity that he definitely doesn't waste. There are a few negative things that can be said about the Wheel of Time, especially later on, but not giving sufficient attention to every character and subplot is not one of them.The pace of the story tightens in The Dragon Reborn, the world is developed further, the characters continue to develop and reveal their various personalities(except Nynaeve, who's still the same), old questions are answered and new ones are raised, the dialogue is much better than in the Great Hunt, and the plot and resolution are the strongest yet in the series. The story is well-structured and advances towards a definite culmination point, where the various separate stories converge in an excellent finish. The intense magical duel in the final chapters is spectacular, with the only problem being that it ended too soon.The Wheel of Time has it's moments, but this book boasts the best one yet when Egwene is in Tel'aran'rhiod: She encounters Rand and attempts to subdue him with the One Power when he dismisses her as a disguised enemy. Seconds later, Egwene gets owned and forced to retreat. Priceless. Other memorable moments include: Mat's epic duel against two swordsman with only a quarterstaff, the massive Sa'angreal-powered healing scene, the Aiel showcasing their deadly fighting styles at several points, Rand conjuring the fantasy-equivalent of a lightsaber and slicing an assailant to bits, Mat's incredible gambling exploits, and the triumphant moment where Rand holds Callandor and accepts his role as the Dragon Reborn. Even though he has relatively little time, Rand's role is undoubtedly the centerpiece of this book.Jordan corrects about half of the problems within the Wheel of Time in this book, and plays to his own strengths, namely good prose, a fine attention to detail, strong characters, an interesting and complex magic system, and excellent worldbuilding. Though the pacing could be better, the story itself is great. Few fantasy series are as ambitious as the Wheel of Time, with such an expansive and ambitious scope.I'd consider this point, at the Dragon Reborn, to be the beginning of the "Golden Age" of the Wheel of Time, when the series is at it's best and before it starts to go downhill.
P**N
Grown on me on me
The 3 book of this epic tale is very good. Here Mat starts to come in to his own and even tough Rand is not in the book that much what time he gets is well used.As i named my review this book has hrown on me in when reading it again.Sofar Jordan has kept the stort pretty tight but going forward i think that he coukd do better editing but this is a very good book.
D**D
the best series ever
Full of adventure and great storytelling. The Wheel of time turns on and on in this book. Rand rocks the world.
B**D
One of the major strengths of this installment was the time that it spent developing our cast outside of Rand.
Between 4 stars and 5 on this one, but I'm leaning upward because of the overall enthusiasm I have for The Wheel of Time at this point. I'm really sinking in.So, coming off the well paced novel that was the Great Hunt, I zoomed through the early portion of The Dragon Reborn. Things began to slow during the middle however, as there were many moving pieces to arrange the novel's climax, and our cast spent a lot of time traveling. Not a bad thing in itself, their time travelling was eventful, and full of interesting run-ins.One of the major strengths of this installment was the time that it spent developing our cast outside of Rand. For reasons that I won't reveal for any future reader's sake, Rand does not receive a lot of screentime in The Dragon Reborn. While I was initially put off by this, I think it actually did wonders for the rest of the cast. Specifically the girls (Egwene, Nynaeve, and Elayne), Mat, and Perrin. While none of these characters were ignored in the first two installments, by any means, they really had their time to shine here. Each had their motivations fleshed out, their relationships with the characters around them tested, their personalities deepened. I enjoyed it immensely. Perrin especially stood out to me, and I was surprised at how much I enjoyed Mat's POVs, after being annoyed with him for much of the first two books (this was purposeful on Jordan's part I think, and don't get me wrong, Mat went through a lot.)So props to Jordan. He is building a very large cast here, so deepening the reader's relationship with his core group was crucial, and ultimately really well done. Beyond the characters the plot remains sweeping, and engaging. This is traditional Fantasy done right. I've spoken on it before but Jordan's detail is second to none. When I sit down and get in the zone with these books, I'm right there man. You can all but smell it. I'm excited to see where this goes. I'll take a quick break with a palette cleanser book, and then it's on to book four.'And his paths shall be many, and who shall know his name, for he shall be born among us many times, in many guises, as he has been and ever will be, time without end. His coming shall be like the sharp edge of the plow, turning our lives in furrows from out of the places where we lie in our silence. The breaker of bonds; the forger of chains. The maker of futures; the unshaper of destiny.'
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