Rating: Summary: It's awesome!!! Review: This book is great for readers who like pure science fiction books. After taking a month to read this book, I read the next two in only two weeks!!! I am on the fourth book now. If you like J.R.R. Tolkien or David Eddings, you will love this book!!!
Rating: Summary: Well worth the time Review: I greatly enjoyed Eye of the World. I have, as now, only read the first four in the series, but I consider it one of the best I've read. Although you need some momentum to get through some of the middle of the book, where it get slightly bogged down, the rest of the book is well worth the time it takes to read.
Rating: Summary: I love it!!!!!! Review: I'm with the reader from Indianapolis on this. I think this is way better than Tolkien (I didn't like Lord of the Rings either--maybe it's a Hoosier thing). I love all of the details and the fact that all of the books are so long. One can take up a whole Saturday. I have read all seven five or six times and keep finding things I missed. I can't wait to read number eight.
Rating: Summary: stunning Review: Robert Jordan has written a sory that comes to life right in front of you. The way you feel that you are write their is breathtaking. You feel every emotion the characters feel. I predict this series will be one you pick up and never put down.
Rating: Summary: Enter at Your Own Risk... and tremendous Enjoyment Review: An amazing hook into an equally amazing series. I'm not one to become a fanatic... really I'm not... but I'm making an exception for the "Wheel of Time". Jordan creates complex characters and places them in cultures rich with traditions, values and prejudices. I've found the struggles of the characters (internal and external) to be very relevant to today's "culture clashes".
Rating: Summary: Better than most, but definitely not Tolkien. Review: Jordan's character development is what makes this work stand out against the other books of this genre. His tone is very conversational and he writes good dialogs, so this book is easy reading, which is fortunate because he's too long winded and takes seemingly forever to get to the point. Once he finally reaches a climax in a section of the story, he races through it so fast it becomes almost anti-climactic. Also, the map of his world is way too contrived. Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings" was rich in color and had an other-wordly air because it centered on non-human characters. In comparison, Jordan's work is blase and seems like "more of the same" because humans are central and non-humans are incidental. Still, overall, Jordan is much better than most of the other current authors. So this book is worth reading.
Rating: Summary: Blah blah blah Review: I'll spare you the drivel that others put forth. read the book and judge for yourself, the first 4 are better than the later ones. I will say this. Jordan does more than he should in the given amount of books. There is too much going on in too few books. The old conflicts are never resolved and new ones come with every page. It is some of the best stuff i have read in the genre, but that is only after weeding out the undesirable elements.
Rating: Summary: A Classic! Review: I have read just about every series out there and the 'Wheel of Time' series is by far the best. I have read each book about 3 times now and each time I find something new. There have been a lot of comparisons to Tolkien, and rightfully so. However I think The Eye of the World is like a second generation of this genre continuing Tolkiens style where he left off. I highly recommend this to anyone. It will leave you thinking about it and wanting more even after your finished.
Rating: Summary: You have to read this! Review: Anyone who is inclined to puruse the realms of fantasy must read this book, for it is simply the beginning of a most wonderous tale of the conquest of good vs. evil, with everything thrown in. I have read it five times and will read it again.
Rating: Summary: Good, and not as tough to read as the page count suggests Review: Jordan's first entry to this series is good--but not great inmy eyes. It's lengthy but a page-turner...there's no labor togetting through the book, which was a great relief to me. Much of Jordan's drama seems to rely on conversations which real people would never allow to happen--if one or two characters stood up and said "Wait a second, I'm not finished yet" or "Perhaps I might offer my opinion here" there would be much less of a book. Of course, fiction is supposed to deal with human failings, but it gets a bit ridiculous. The characters are fairly stereotypical--I've seen these people before and liked them better in other contexts--but not unredeemable. The pace is good and the scenes fairly vivid without getting too verbose. As an alternative, consider Zelazny's Amber series--you'll have read through all the good books in the same page count as this one, without being tied to reading 6+ sequels... END
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