Rating:  Summary: Not my money, not my time Review: Let me qualify my review with the fact that I did not, and will not read the book. I will explain. For years I have been reading this series, and for many of those years the series was good. Then Jordan started milking the story and dragging it on. There is now no end in site. He has shown that he can write a whole book that takes place in the last 5 minutes of the previous book. Ladies and Gentlemen Robert Jordan has sold out. To cash in even more on the story that people have to read to see how it all would end (the man is still a talented writer afterall), he has released a prequel. Jordan should have put this time and effort into finishing the series at hand. I think Jordan has lost a great many readers in the past few years, and I think this book will encourage more migration. Read Martin's Song of Fire and Ice series instead.
Rating:  Summary: A good read but, why? Review: I have never read the original New Spring, nor do I even know what "Legends" is, but after having read the literary train wreck that was Crossroads of Twilight, I didn't think I would find myself ever buying Jordan's work again. As it happened however, when I bought CoT, I placed a pre-order on New Spring, and it turned out to be for the best. I've really enjoyed reading it, and it's quite interesting to see all of the familiar characters young and naive. Having said that, all the time spent reading it, my mind still cannot escape the fact that I know, ultimately, what is going to happen, and I'm always wondering why this book even exists. It is a good read, but my sentiment (which I think I share with most Jordan readers) is, "Who cares?"I certainly don't, it makes absolutely no difference in any way to me, how Lan and Moraine first met, I don't care to read about the Aes Sedai dying after giving the fortelling, and the list goes on. Provided it doesn't turn out like CoT I would much rather be reading Book 11. In any event, I would recommend buying this book, though perhaps waiting for the paperback would be in order (due to the price being so close to the rest of his books over 2x as long).
Rating:  Summary: Took the plunge! Review: Even though they've been reccomended to me about a million times I have resisted picking up a Robert Jordan book because I just didn't want to start a series that is already ten really fat books long. I'm not a huge fantasy reader but did recently reread Lord of the Rings and was looking for something else like that. When I saw an ad for New Spring that said it was a sequel and an entry point for the Wheel of Time series (and, only 334 pages and $22.95) I thought I'd give it a shot. It kept me up way past by bedtime because I couldn't put it down. If New Spring is any indication of what the rest of the series is like I have to say Robert Jordan deserves the hype. I am definitely looking forward to reading Eye of the World.
Rating:  Summary: Opinion of RJ's new book Review: Good book - more of Lan would have been nice. A question: when is Jordan going to finish the rest of Wheel of Time? As one of the reviewers below wrote, it appears that Robert is out of ideas and is stalling.
Rating:  Summary: Well written, quite exciting and on an epic scale Review: The war against the Aiel has been devastating, but it goes on as the forces led by warriors like the uncrowned king of a land that is dust Lan Mandragoran repel the dark clad enemy. The latest battle is currently just outside of Tar Valon. However, the key is not the bloody skirmish turning the snow red, but what is happening inside the city. An Aes Sedai channel of the One Power nears death prophesizes that a dragon is born, which means either the savior or the destroyer of the world has arrived. Lan accompanied by an Accepted future Aes Sedai Moiraine Damodred travel to Dragonmount to keep this child alive. The birth of the dragon also means that the Dark One is free once more. Only the dragon can confront the evil as destiny has predicted will occur in the ultimate Last Battle that is if the newborn can be kept alive to meet fate head on. Lan and Moiraine know that followers of the Dark One will try to kill the fledgling. Though well written and quite exciting, on an epic scale and while adding depth to the Wheel of Time mythos, this reviewer is not sure why this prequel was written now. The story line is typical of the sub-genre with plenty of exhilarating action and adventure starring heroic individuals, malevolent beings, and a support cast of thousands, mostly fodder. Fans of the series will enjoy this tale that patches up some issues and opens up new questions, but still feels out of sequential time with I think ten "wheels" already published and two or three spins to go. Harriet Klausner
Rating:  Summary: good read! Review: Yet another entertaining read from Robert Jordan. The first chapter alone is worth the price of the book.
Rating:  Summary: New Spring, same old thing Review: I was eight pages into this book when suddenly, in an unexpected and surely unwelcome intrusion, a vision of Jordan guffawing and pointing at me with one hand and cramming fistfuls of cash under his muu-muu with the other leapt unbidden into my head. It was enough to put me off my Jordan feed permanently, and luckily I was just standing in the bookstore at the time and hadn't paid for this book (with money, anyway). This book isn't just a retread, it is a retread of a retread. It is the expanded version of a previously published prequel to a series that is projected to end sometime around 2189 when Jordan's great grandchildren finally rediscover dignity. And all you have to pay for it is approximately the amount you could use to innoculate all the children in Gambia against yellow fever. Great! Do not buy this book. Do not recommend it to your friends. If you do, more and more and more will continue to appear, dooming you to an eternity of open plot lines and 3-paragraph descriptions of Aes Sedai dresses. If you do not, Jordan will be faced with two options: 1) write a good book, or 2) stop 'writing' and go bask in Bimini, secure in the knowledge he has perpetrated one of the greatest acts of authorship fraud ever known to the American people, even surpassing the ghostwriter stable comprising 'Tom Clancy's Op Center'. In either case, we will be better off.
Rating:  Summary: Good writing, mediocre value Review: In a sentence, Jordan's latest shows exactly why he has sold so many books - and frustrated so many people. The first half of the book is Jordan at his best, beginning with exploring Tar Valon at the time of the infamous Foretelling by Gitara Sedai in the Amyrlin's presence of the birth of the Dragon Reborn. The exploration of the backplot in the Tower by Moiraine and Siuan's eye is almost as interesting as Rand's trip through the portal to visit his ancestors - and as far less sophisticated than they appear in the later books, finally getting inside the two Accepted and later Aes Sedai heads is equally interesting. Jordan's skill at writing POV commentaries is as good here as in any of his books - you can go through 3 pages without seeing a spoken word and not realize it. Equally fufilling is the revelation of how Aes Sedai become, well, Aes Sedai, with the Oath Rod, ceremonies, and choosing of Ajah deliciously done. Other characters play a minor role here, but there are some amusing cameos - almost to the point where you wonder if Moiraine can go back and say, 'yeah, you were in the class of 3763 AB with me and I remember when...' There's also a nice little cat fight between characters that begins the thread that ultimately ends up in the splitting of the Tower. Where I only give this three stars is on the value proposition. Jordan basically cuts and pastes the story from Legends (which originally appeared in eformat elsewhere to begin with) as the second half of the book. As a result, the value proposition here is atrocious. $22.95 for 300 large type pages, only about 180 of which are original - you'll be stunned how thin this is - runs the same price as his main novels. Profiteering by stretching this series out has been raised by fans before. Instead, I thought it was Jordan trying to fill plot holes. This latest effort really makes me reconsider. Still, for hardcore Jordan fans not bad, and new readers to the series its a decent place to start.
Rating:  Summary: Curse Robert Jordan. Curse his eyes! Review: A word of warning: If you haven't started reading the Wheel of Time series, consider not doing so. I was given the same warning before I started, failed to listen, and have often found cause to regret it. Here's the problem with the series: The first three books are brilliant, stunning, Tolkienesque, some of the best fantasy ever written. The next three books are excellent. Starting around book seven, Jordan starts to be weighed down by the enormity of what he has started. Major plot points start to get further and further apart. By book nine, there only seems to be one resolution while more than a dozen loose ends are added to the increasingly unwieldly plot. Because each book tends to weigh in at more than 800 pages, by the time you realize this, you're stuck. You've read 5,000 pages and, if you're like me, you're determined to see it through, even if you're not sure whether you're watching the most extensive build-up to a grand finale ever or the literary equivilent of a twenty-car pile-up. So, with thousands of fans waiting eagerly to find out how the story turns out, praying that Jordan lives long enough to finish it, and doesn't give up, what does he do? He spends a year writing a prequel. That being said, it's a pretty good prequel. It's far more terse than anything he's written in a while. He doesn't have a half dozen plot threads to deal with at once or ten times that many that he's fastidiously ignoring. There is very little crossing of arms under breasts (Jordan's most overused mannerism.) I will also admit that it's good to see some old, familiar faces back. Some of the characters in this book are allegedly dead by book ten. Some of them are still in several major storylines, but you only hear about them for twenty pages out of every thousand or so. I will remain intentionally vague to avoid spoiling early books for anyone working their way through the series now. You have enough frustration ahead of you without that. Unfortunately, not only the characters are familiar. About sixty pages of this novel were already printed in "Legends," a short story collection that is another one of Jordan's increasingly habitual strayings from finishing the main storyline.
Rating:  Summary: Three and a half stars Review: My biggest disappointment with the book was that, as far as I could tell, the last 130 pages were just New Spring, the short story from Legends, reprinted with minor adjustments. This means that only a little over half of the book was really new material, which might damper the enjoyment of those who have already read the story in Legends. But still, it's a good read, especially for those who haven't yet read the short story. The plot moves quickly and purposefully. The characters do not take any tedious baths on-screen, and while Siuan and Moiraine do visit a seamstress, there is a point to the scene, which is brief and entertaining. Reading this book made me feel that Jordan's problem in his later novels is that he isn't sure where he is going, so he STALLS, as this certainly seemed like a return to his old style of writing, especially in its better moments. There's only one chapter of Lan in the first half of the book, which might disappoint some people, but Moiraine's POV was quite interesting IMHO. The political games she plays with the Hall as a newly raised Aes Sedai are what Elayne's struggles for the throne of Andor could have been, if they weren't punctuated by pointless baths with Aviendha and her harem of nubian Sea Folk babes. Also, her test for the shawl was EXCELLENTLY done- there was far more to it then either the reader or Moiraine herself had been led to believe (i.e. she didn't just stand there forming weaves while sisters beat the tar out of her) and Jewish readers especially might appreciate Jordan's use of the star of David as a directional tool. A number of Aes Sedai and Accepted are mentioned in the first half but thankfully, most are people we have already met. Also, I would suggest that dedicated fans bone up on just who is Black Ajah in the Tower prior to going into this book. Its creepier that way. But perhaps the most rewarding part of the first half of the novel was the insight it gave into Moiraine and Siuan's relationship. Jordan doesn't state flat-out that they are "pillow-friends", as they say in Randland, but it certainly seems that way. They do kiss, at one point, and one gets the impression that it's more than just a peck on the cheek, since the kiss itself is the climactic end of a scene between the two, though Jordan doesn't go into any real detail. Whether pillow-friends or not, it's clear that they care deeply for each other, and it's touching. If you're a fan of Jordan definitely read this book, as the writing is much better than his past few efforts, and the story is a welcome diversion from the tangled and tedious plotlines that the main story in the Wheel of Time series has become. Still, you might want to borrow it instead of buying it, especially if you've already read the short story.
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