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Women's Fiction
The Eye of the World (The Wheel of Time, Book 1)

The Eye of the World (The Wheel of Time, Book 1)

List Price: $15.30
Your Price: $10.40
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read for a fantasy lover.
Review: The book "The Eye of the World" is more than just a great piece of writing, it is a look into a vivid world laid out intricately by a complex mind and thought process. The characters in the book are developed very well, which pays off in later books. You come to know them quite well through this book, yet are left with some intriguing questions with them which urges you to keep reading. The plot development is fantastic, as well as the enviroment created throughout the story. If you love fantasy, or possibly even if you don't, you will love Jordan's work in "The Eye of the World."

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Fine Fantasy Tale
Review: Some people compare this novel to Lord of the Rings, and it is easy to see why. But I do not see that as a determent. Through the 800+ pages of text you meet many different and fascinating characters while our core is basically defined in the first hundred and expanded throughout. There are many typical fantasy elements. The naive group sent on a chase or being chased never having enough time to wonder about what is happening to them. However as noted by a few other reviews here, Jordan knew what he was doing when he wrote this. He introduced you to a few characters and let them slip by, and you know you will see them again in one of the (as of now) 8 sequels. All in all the only real difference between this and all other fantasy novels I have read is the strong presence of women as warrior/leaders. The novel is finely written and if you truly enjoy it, it will take up more than a few evenings to reach the climactic ... well it doesn't really end, so much as it runs out of room. If you are a fan of fantasy I highly recommend this one, if you are not a big fantasy fan, perhaps you should start on something lighter.
Thanks For your time.
T

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Dark, Evil, and more Dark
Review: The book was ok,I guess, but It was way too dark. There are no uplifting aspect or morals. The story and characters were very addicting and attractive, but there are like four good guys in a world with a million bad guys. I guess if you like reading about overwhelming evil all the time, then you would like it, but for something more balanced, I would suggest you turn to other fantacy authors like Brooks, Tolkien, Mc.Kiernan, and so on.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: This book was not meant for me
Review: I have given up telling people I like fantasy books any more.

After three friends recommended this book to me, I decided to read it (this reading was about three years ago, so please bear with my faulty memory). When I pick a book up, I finish it. I have tackled The Lord of the Rings, War & Peace, the Aubrey/Mataurin series and many other long individual and series works. I got two-thirds of the way through this book, went to my local used book store and sold it, never to look back.

Why?

Nothing happened. In something like 300pp there were people running. They started running. Sometimes other groups of people who were also running joined them. Then some of these split off to run somewhere else. There was ever so much running. There were a couple of battles, but I didn't know why. I never saw the world because everyone was in such a hurry to get through it I could never see the trees for the forest. I never got a sense of individual characters. Mostly they were "just human and scared". I kept waiting for a hero to arrive and take the group (or whatever part of it remained on that page) by the hand and lead them somewhere, perhaps in the process letting me know /why/ everyone was running.

I was told by my friends that I should give the series a chance. "How much?" "Oh, it really picks up in the third book."

In one book of equal length (War & Peace) I gained an understanding of the human condition in general and life in Russia during the Napoleonic Wars (filtered through the late 19th century); I learned of human goodness, human frailty, god, aetheism, mathematics, society, peasantry, and what it is like to LIVE. In the Harry Potter book "Goblet of Fire" (again nearly equal length) I learned about fear, heroism, honesty, choices, gut fears, and loyalty. With many other books I have carried something away that lives in my heart.

With Jordan all I have is a desire to by cross-trainer shoes.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This Was the First Fantasy Book I Ever Read!!
Review: This book frickin rocks! IT is non-stop with an incredible ending. I was always scared off by fantasy until I started this series, but it really doesn't read at all like fantasy. I couldn't make my way through the Lord of the Rings series, and reluctantly tried this book after seeing an ad at a movie theater. WOW! I'm glad I started, I'm halfway through the second installment in the series, and it just keeps getting better and better and better. If you want a nice, easy, fun, compelling, interesting, heart-grasping, kick-but book to read then this is your choice. I love it and highly recommend it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The book that converted me to reading fantasy.
Review: When my husband bought this book for a flight that we were taking I was totally not interested, being stuck in the rut of romance novels. Unfortunatley, those novels don't last long, and I found myself hungry for something that requires more brain funtion and picked this up.
I did something that was unusual for me at the time, I read the glossary first. This was a really good idea, and I have done so with every new release from this series. Trying to read a book that uses characters and powers that are not explained in the text is really hard but reading the glossary first was a big help. Though Jordan gets very detailed about some things, he keeps your interest by having this reference to turn to so his plot doesn't have to get suffocated by The little things.
I liked the writing. The form kept my interest without bogging me down. It kept flowing. Because there is so much information in this book and he is sculpting an amazing and long adventure you cannot receive the fullness of this book without reading it several times.
I recomend this book to anyone who has passed highschool reading level. Though younger people may be able to read it, there are many nuances that they may not see or understand.
I have at least one copy of all the books in this series and have bought this one at least four times, because I keep giving it away and getting other people hooked.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Wheel of Time: A Tightly-Wound Epic
Review: I rarely read fantasy, being generally unable to suspend disbelief in the presence of wizards and talking lizards with invisibility rings. Robert Jordan's "Wheel of Time" series is one of the only three exceptions, the others being Zelazny's Amber books and Terry Goodkind's "Sword of Truth" series. The first book in The Wheel of Time, "The Eye of the World", begins in the remote village of Emond's Field. It is a sleepy and mundane town, content in its isolation. Once in a while a traveling merchant makes his way into the village, bringing tales of the mystical Aes Sedai and the epic wars being waged across the continent.

Jordan is a rare author who is capable of handling with detail and class a number of characters at once, without ever losing track of the nuances of their individual personalities. The most notable characters in the village of Emond's Field are Rand al'Thor, a young man destined for greatness; Perrin Aybarra, the introspective blacksmith's apprentice; Matrim Cauthon, a perpetually gambling and mischievous yet charming friend of Perrin and Rand; Egwene al'Vere, Rand's love; and Nynaeve al'Meara, a spirited, aloof, and defiant girl who seeks to learn the art of healing. After the arrival of Thom Merrilin, a merchant and consummate entertainer, these youth are sent through circumstance into the gloriously romantic and heart-rendingly tragic affairs of the intricate and colorful world of Jordan's creation.

Jordan is a master of characterization and exposition, but his greatest feat is the astounding degree of integration in his books. Every event is foreshadowed, sometimes many books in advance. The progression is so logical, the actions and developments so perfectly intertwined, that it almost reads like a mystery - the reader does not so much observe the action, but thinks along with the characters, to see what they see and try to step ahead of the plot. Even if you manage this formidable task, it won't get you far, because every one of Jordan's short chapters contains large plot developments. There is never a dull moment - this is Romantic fiction (but not romance!) at its best, stripped of all things accidental and unimportant.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: BORING!!!!
Review: I got this book because I heard that this series is great, I read(suffered)through two-thirds of the book and I stopped. I never once got excited about reading this like I do with so many other books. How many times do the characters say something about the "light". I also thought that it was predictable. Pass this one up. Only read it if you need something to put you to sleep at night.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Eye of the World
Review: -={Great start to an even greater series}=-

Robert Jordan's world he creates in the Eye of the World is defiantly unforgettable. I loved all the characters in the book, they all fit into place perfectly. Jordan makes the three main characters: Rand, Matt, and Perrin, all necessities to the victory of good over evil. Some say that Jordan puts too much detail in the Wheel of Time novels, but the detail he uses makes the book come to life. It may seem like some of the journeys they make from city to city drag out for a long time, but without the detail it would not seem as real. The evil in the Wheel of Time seems unstoppable, but with Rand as the Dragon Reborn, the light has one last hope. Without the Dragon Reborn, the Shadow would over take the pattern of the Wheel and the Dark One would rule the world in his image.
I would extremely recommend this novel to anyone who loves a great fantasy adventure with an immense world and characters that you feel like you know in person. This is a great start of one of the best series I have ever read. Once you start reading it, you just can't stop. If I had three hands, I would give it three thumbs up.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The start of a good series
Review: In the first book of the wheel of time series, Robert Jordan introduces us to a land rich with history and magic. Set in a medieval world that is just a shadow of its once glorious past, Rand seeks his destiny. In Jordan's world there are two types of magic, the prosperous female side, and the repressed and uncontrallable male side. Rand, suffuring from the male side of the magic, travels away from his small hamlet to a more industrial and busy cities. In the company od an Aes Sedai, Rand and his friends witness things they would never have even dreamed about.

Robert Jordan obviously spent a great amount of time on character development. Unlike many of the fantasies today (David Drake) Jordan has characters that actually have intense feelings and emotions. Throughout the book Rand matures and becomes a different character.

The setting of this book is another achievment in itself. Loaded with detail, Jordan spends a great deal of time in his book to explain the world in which Rand finds himself.


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