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Winter's Heart

Winter's Heart

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Mind numbingly boring...
Review: Wait until Jordan decides to finish this series. I am not wasting any more money on the WOT until it's finalized.

Stick a fork in it already.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Robert Jordan has returned!
Review: "The Eye of the World" through "Lord of Chaos" (books 1-6) were, as the editor said: topnotch, where-have-you-been-all-my-life books filled action, suspense, and set in an immense world with laws and customs and powers that are mind blowing in depth. Although I liked both "A Crown of Swords" and "A Path of Daggers" (books 7-8), I must say that neither were really up to Jordan's potential. They were slow, they had a lot of filler, and definitly too many sniffs. Winter's Heart (book 9) returns us to that action we were expecting. Many critics say that Mr. Jordan has gone over to the "cash-cow" and is milking the series dry, trying to spred it thin. Personally, I think he might have tried that at books 7 and 8, but soon realized that he would loose all fan base if he kept it up. Yes, Perrin doesn't do much in 9, but I believe it's more character developement between Perrin and Faile. I believe Robert Jordan is really finally coming out of his two book slump. I think that "Lord of Chaos" was so mind blowingly awesome (in my mind, LoC is THE best fantasy book ever with the exception of Lord of the Rings) that we expected so much from 7. But whatever the reasons, Robert Jordan has returned! The ending to Winter's Heart is second best only to "Dumai's Wells" in "Lord of Chaos". And Rand is really getting to be very cool. I loved the cycle of emotions that Robert gives us with Rand. First he's a farmboy; then a reluctant and fearful ruler; then an angry, hard, and cold king, and now, in Winter's Heart he beings to grow softer, realizing he must balance ice and fire, strength and mercy, love and hate. It is beautifully done, and I must say that Rand al'Thor is fast becoming one of the most well written characters in all fantasy. So all in all, the 2 book escapade in which very little happens is finally over, and it seems that Mr. Robert Jordan is coming around with some real meat. I think that Winter's Heart sets up book 10 to possibly be better than "Lord of Chaos", and that is quite a feat.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't get too excited over this book . . . .
Review: . . . . The worst is yet to come.

I was actually impressed that something significant happens at the end of this book. I won't spoil it, but I would like to in order to save you the time and money. Besides the last chapter or so, NOTHING happens in this book. And if you are stoked about this Event happening at the end, do not, I repeat, DO NOT read the tenth book. You think that the plot is really going to pick up in the next book, but it does not. I thought it would, so after I finished the ninth book, I waited eagerly for Ten and I am still traumatized from the utter disappointment. So save yourself from the pain by not reading this book and especially not the tenth book.

If you want something interesting and really funny, read the customer reviews--I mean bashings--for Crossroads of Twilight. You get a summary of this book and the next all for free told a hundred times better than Robert Jordan ever could.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Getting Better
Review: Crown of Swords marked the begining of a comeback for Jordan. It's so hard to keep track of all the characters and I(a big Robert Jordan fan) think it's quite annoying. But this Winters Heart does a great job for Jordan, making this one of my favorites. The plot doesn't change to much and there's more characters to keep in track with, but he's writing the script a lot tighter in stead of long wordy thoughts.

The ending of this book is awesome. It's the best ending so far in the series and Robert Jordan does a pretty good job it most of his endings.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The Begining of the End of My Enjoyment
Review: Unfortunately for me, I received the majority of these books as a holiday gift. The end result is that I've had the opportunity to read through much of the series (I'm an avid speed reader, and I enjoy going back and re-reading books in case I missed something.) in the span of a month.

For the two books prior to `Winter's Heart', I started to get the sense that Mr. Jordan was either bored with the characters in this series or was lost in all of his inane subplots. I had thought that those books were a slump, and a friend had advised me that important things happened in this book.

I did not enjoy this book. One critique I have of Mr. Jordan, is that his writing has holes that indicate that he never fully developed the background materials. Unlike Mr. Tolkien, whom spent decades crafting his fantasy world and how it works, the `Wheel of Time' introduces major concepts that are notably missing from the earlier entries into the series. This flaw is less of a problem in a series like `Dune', which takes place over the course of centuries, in which it is possible such changes can occur.

The `Wheel of Time', however, introduces ideas and characters that the writer never worked into the larger whole nor fully understands. For example, the duality between male/female is handled far better by Frank Herbert or James Clavell, especially in terms of how members of each gender uses/maintains political power. In Mr. Jordan's hands (perhaps this is because of his past experience with the `Conan' series), the issue of men and women become nothing more than one gender completely dismissing the other gender or personal quirks (it would be nice if the viewpoint of the determined whether we have to know details of the clothing...I doubt if Perrin would notice some details that Elayne would see).

Other issues abound, especially concerning channeling (this series' system of magic), that makes me feel as if the writer has dropped the ball. In Mr. Jordan's hands, what started as a new way of viewing spell casting has deteriorated into an overdrawn system of whom is stronger than whom. Gender plays a role here, but rather than taking a more interesting view of channeling as a whole, Mr. Jordan simply reinforces the existing status quo in the real world. For example, I think it would be more interesting if women were stronger in the Power on average then men. Imagine how Rand would deal with being the Dragon Reborn in a world where he is not exceedingly powerful, yet was the most important individual to the Wheel of Time. Certainly not necessary, but it occurred more than once in my mind.

I would say that the title is more descriptive than some readers (most likely the ones awarding this book more than three stars) would point out. The majority of the plot hibernates until the last two chapters. Unfortunately, the last chapter does not make up for the rest of the book.

Counting four plot developments in total, this book shows the continuation of a pattern Mr. Jordan has fallen into, where the plot seems to stagnate in favor of including scenes and descriptions to the detriment of overall pacing, this book falls flat.

I give it 1 out of 5 stars; some plot developments are certainly welcome, but my interest in the characters and setting has definitely waned as the storyline seems to have lost its steam. An editor is needed to tighten the wording and ensure that extraneous subplots don't start overtaking the larger story.


Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Waste of Time and Money
Review: The Wheel of Time series is "New Age" fantasy. Channeling, a new age technique, is the only form of magic in this series. The series GARBAGE! I've read much better fantasy than Robert Jordan. For example, Terry Goodkind's Sword of Truth series is 100 times BETTER than the Wheel of Time! I wasted my time reading the 1st 6 books, and I am glad I had the sense to stop there! Don't waste your money buying JUNK! Don't waste your time reading this JUNK!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Very Poor
Review: WoT has become Waste of Time and Robert Jordan seems to be stringing these along for no other reason other than more books equals more $$. I struggled through even finishing this one. I'd suggest trying another author like Feist, Eddings, or George RR Martin.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Winters Heart (The Wheel of Time grinds to a halt)
Review: I'm most definitely a WOT addict at this point. I picked up Book 1 and was excited about this new engaging and mysterious World, which seemed to hold so many new secrets, that I could not wait to pick up the book again once I had set it down. Things kept getting better until around Book 3 at which point we reached a crescendo. After Book 3 things started to slow down. Robert Jordan kept introducing new secretes and mysteries at the same breathtaking pace, but I no longer cared to remember these little subplots, since in the long run, they didn't seem to matter anyway. The story also started to focus more on one character and their setting (some kind of city, which was linked with some sort of intrigue or quest, which tended to drag on over several chapters) There is a nice map on the cover of each book, but it would be good of Robert Jordan to include all the character names as well as a list of plots and subplots for those of us who have been reading these books for the last 5 or 6 years. I'm reading book 9 at this point in time and am almost finished. I'm sure the last hundred or so pages will be excellent and the battles and plots will come to some kind of conclusion. I hope the ending in book 9 is better than the less than stellar ending of book 8. The book has its ups and downs like most books I read. Rand seems to be having trouble overcoming the negative effects of using the power. Aviendha, Min and Elayne finally figure out what needs to be done about their situation with Rand, and we find out what happened to Matt at the end of Book 8. While this story is not bad, it doesn't seem to move around much like Book 1 did, and characters seem stuck in the same boring setting through the entire Book. Most new characters are still introduced matter-of-factly as if we should know who they are and old characters, which resurface, are not reintroduced so that we can remember their importance. All in all, not much happens throughout most of the book, hopefully something amazing will happen towards the end. When will we finally get to the last battle! R.J. said he had other ideas or stories which he wanted to write, I suppose he depends on WOT for his livelyhood, but I think we all deserve some kind of a conclusion. Most of my friends and family who are reading this book have told me they dont think they can read WOT anymore since there is no end in site.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: So it continues...
Review: There's really not that much different in this book than any of the others in the series. Thankfully a few characters who were dropped from the last one have returned. The author has branched out on so many subplots certain characters are in every other book.
There is one issue I would like to address regarding to the reviews. There is a large amount of people who love the books and put down five stars, and yet spend the entire review insulting the intelligence of readers who do not think its great. Contrary to their opinion, we aren't idiots. In fact, it takes very little intelligence to follow these books. No more than you would use in watching a soap opera. I read an average of a book every 1 to 2 days, and have read a lot in my life. Frankly, I've seen most of this before. Fantasy tends to repeat itself. I just happen to see problems with the series. There was an excellent review a couple books ago that pointed out numerous grammatical and writing errors. The characters are fairly stereotypical, and are interchangeable. The author uses the typical cliches over and over again. We are constantly bombarded with Jordan's favorite sayings and phrases. "In stories heroes never..." and who could forget the tongue twister "the Wheel weaves as the Wheel wills." Actually try saying that out loud. It reminds me of the constant may the force be with you in star wars. How many of people out there are tired of skirts being smoothed? Before I started #9 I seriously considered counting how many times Nynaeve pulls that braid. When I reread the series (if) then I will put tally marks on my bookmark and see just how many times that braid gets tugged. Girls are always pretty, plump, or not quite pretty but handsome. Every girl is about the exact same. They are rude, stuck up, spoiled girls who have temper problems and act like pre-teens. There is not one shy, respectful, reserved female in the series. The author has lost control of all his subplots. If certain characters, especially main characters, can only get fit in every 1 to 2 books and yet the plot still isn't finished it shows something. We've got plots hanging over from ages ago. They recently reintroducted Elyas, but this Slayer thing was from book 5 and that hasn't been resolved, Gawyn is still hanging out there somewhere mooning over Egwene, Morgase still hasn't done ANYTHING productive, Faile, Bain and Chiad are still captured, etc... It goes on. The clothing descriptions are unbearable. It's been a lot better since he stopped using the World of Dreams as often. He does automatically assume you know everything about his world when he throws you in the first book. Using the glossary is the best advice to give a newbie.
The Forsaken is another matter. There used to be the little required Forsaken per book to kill. What on earth is he trying to do by bringing them back? He brought 3 or 4 back already, which means how many more books? Unless they start dropping like flies it's going to take another 8 or 9 books to finish the series up.
I finished the book and yet, what happened? I can think of a few things. 1) Mat seems to have finally gotten out of the city. 2) Rand has been bonded. 3) Saidin was cleansed. Sheesh, I couldn't see that coming. cough. 4) wait... let me think... is there a number four? I don't think so. Nothing really happened with Elayne or Egwene. Thank the light the search for enchanted tupperware is over. No, nothing else really happened. How many pages did that take?
Don't get me wrong, I've really enjoyed the series thus far despite its many many problems. It is far from being great literature. I hope Jordan finishes now before the series goes down too much farther.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Winter's Heart
Review: Winter's Heart
By Robert Jordan
In the ninth book of the Wheel of Time series Rand al'Thor and his companions again find themselves upon the brink of failure. The constant threat of the Forsaken and Shadowspawn lurks around ever corner and even within the ranks of Rand's followers. The forces of good continue to battle to unite the world before the Last Battle between good and evil comes.
It is simply amazing how Robert Jordan's creative mind can not only continue his works but can surpass his past work. For fans of the series this book is one that they will definately want to read, but for those not familiar with Jordan's past work, they will be thrown into the plot with almost no comprehension of the storyline or vocabulary. Jordan does include a glossary of terms, people, and places in the rear of the book but the glossary only includes the most central characters plus information that has only been presented in this book. I strongly suggest that if you have not yet read the Wheel of Time series in its entirety up to Winter's Heart, don't read the book. Instead, pick up The Eye of the World; the first book in the series. Winter's Heart is full of plot twists and unexpected happenings and is sure to delight readers. Only Jordan could continue to add detail to this seemingly real world. With thousands and thousands of pages already complete, Jordan is continuing his writing in what is one of the most fantastic fantasy series ever created.



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