Books : The Name of the Wind (The Kingkiller Chronicle, Day 1)

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Author name: Patrick Rothfuss

 : The Name of the Wind (The Kingkiller Chronicle, Day 1)
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Type of bind: Mass Market Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN num: 9780756404741
ISBN number: 0756404746
Label: DAW
Manufacturer: DAW
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 736
Printing Date: April 01, 2008
Publishing house: DAW
Sale Popularity Level: 1433
Studio: DAW




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Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
The riveting first-person narrative of a young man who grows to be the most notorious magician his world has ever seen. From his childhood in a troupe of traveling players, to years spent as a near-feral orphan in a crime- ridden city, to his daringly brazen yet successful bid to enter a legendary school of magic, The Name of the Wind is a masterpiece that transports readers into the body and mind of a wizard. It is a high-action novel written with a poet's hand, a powerful coming-of-age story of a magically gifted young man, told through his eyes: to read this book is to be the hero.

Amazon.com Review:
Amazon.com's Best of the Year...So Far Pick for 2007: Harry Potter fans craving a new mind-blowing series should look no further than The Name of the Wind--the very first book in a trilogy about an orphan boy who becomes a legend. Full of music, magic, love, and loss, Patrick Rothfuss's vivid and engaging debut fantasy knocked our socks off. --Daphne Durham


10 Second Interview: A Few Words with Patrick Rothfuss

Q: Were you always a fan of fantasy novels?
A: Always. My very first non-picture books were the Narnia Chronicles. After that my mom gave me Ihe Hobbit and Dragonriders. I grew up reading about every fantasy and sci-fi book I could find. I used to go to the local bookstore and look at the paperbacks on the shelf. I read non-fantasy stuff too, of course. But fantasy is where my heart lies. Wait... Should that be 'where my heart lays?' I always screw that up.

Q: Who are some of your favorite authors? Favorite books?
A: Hmmm.... How about I post that up as a list?

Q: What are you reading now?
A: Right now I'm reading Capacity, by Tony Balantyne. He was nominated for the Philip K Dick award this last year. I heard him read a piece of the very first novel, Recursion, out at Norwescon. I picked it up and got pulled right in. Capacity is the second book in the series. Good writing and cool ideas. Everything I've like best.

Q: How did Kvothe's story come to you? Did you always plan on a trilogy?
A: This story started with Kvothe's character. I knew it was going to be about him from the very beginning. In some ways it's the simplest story possible: it's the story of a man's life. It's the myth of the Hero seen from backstage. It's about the exploration and revelation of a world, but it's also about Kvothe's desire to uncover the truth hidden underneath the stories in his world. The story is a lot of things, I guess. As you can tell, I'm not very good at describing it. I always tell people, 'If I could sum it up in 50 words, I wouldn't have needed to write a whole novel about it.' I didn't plan it as a trilogy though. I just wrote it and it got to be so long that it had to be broken up into pieces. There were three natural breaking points in the story.... Hence the Trilogy.

Q: What is subsequent for our hero?
A: Hmm..... I don't really believe in spoilers. But I think it's safe to say that Kvothe grows up a little in the second book. He learns more about magic. He learns how to fight, gets tangled up in some court politics, and starts to figure unravel some of the mysteries of romance and relationships, which is really just magic of a different kind, in a way.




Patrick Rothfuss's Books You Should Read

The Last Unicorn

Neverwhere

Declare

Beatrice's Goat

Blankets

See more recommendations (with comments) from Patrick Rothfuss







Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Surprising brilliance for Fantasy Lovers
The book begins by dropping you into a story that feels like you've missed a volume, then it gathers speed and you're in the race. As a fantasy fiction lover, the slightly sci-fi bent to it is fascinating, disturbing, irritating and with time completely normal. Not realising that this is a trilogy made the race to the end of the book very intertesting. It is full of intelligence, intrigue, clever and lyrical description and it wound it's way, no doubt via wizardry magic into my daily life so that reading it became the goal of the day.

While the ending (the last 100 pages) is slightly less absorbing, simply needing to find the climax and resolution pulled me through, but I did find it a little '$2 ending' as I like to call the quick and cheap endings of movies, as was the case of this book. But none the less, I immediately jumped on line to research this author and to my delight discovered the triology.

Lovers of lyrical and passionate story telling will indulge greatly in this. A fine read and a wonder to let the imagination journey on. You can't help but wonder at those of us, Patrick Rothfuss namely, how may have already enjoyed a lifetime surrounded by this magic in the real.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Gripping fantasy debut
It's taken me a while to get around to reading this, but it was worth the wait.
Kvothe comes from a travelling troupe, a bit like a mini circus, but his family are slaughtered by the mysterious Chandrian and as a young boy he sets his sites on gaining magical skills and finding out more about the Chandrian. How do we know this? Well we are presented to an older Kvothe who is managing a small village inn who is convinced to tell his life story to a biographer. So we hear how a typical legend of fantasy books came to be that legend and eventually, we presume, we will find out what brought him to a small inn....
This is the very first part of a trilogy and takes us from Kvothe aged about eight to about sixteen, the majority is spent in 'The University' where he learns skills, makes enemies and finds love, all set against his drive to find out more about the Chandrian.
This is original and an engrossing read over about 650 pages. A good start for those who have not read this kind of stuff, and also good for those of us who have read a great deal of fantasy and want a twist on the usual.
It does end abruptly just as you are drawn into Kvothe's life and it is a shame we have to wait until April 09 for the subsequent part of the story...



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Solidly Good.
I tend to avoid High Fantasy these days. With a few notable exceptions, I tend not to like it very much at all. When done well, it's a lovely lovely thing. When done badly, it's more tired than tired and hardly entertaining.

I picked up The Name of the Wind because it seems to be loved by-- well, by everyone. The book starts with three pages in tiny print of rave reviews, all from very Serious Names in Fantasy. Generally speaking, anything this well hyped disappoints me, but some of those raves were from people I like well enough to give it a try.

I'll say one thing for sure, I really enjoyed it. I stayed up all hours reading it and was honestly pretty disappointed to find that the subsequent book isn't due out until April. And that only in hardcover.

I don't, however, love it as much as many of its fans seem to do. I found it extremely good, but not great. To me, there were a number of flaws which seriously diminished my experience of the novel.

First, the Prologue annoyed the spit out of me, and very nearly caused me to put the book down. Rothfuss is a very rich writer, and it tends to be well done and not overdone in the rest of the book. But the pompous mystery around the three silences was too much-- a much simpler opening would have been better in keeping with the book, I found. As a result, I found myself suspicious and waiting to pounce on any purple prose for the very first long section of the book.

Second, I did get a little bit tired of Kvothe-the-Prodigy-at-Everything. Although in places this worked very nicely to set us up for genuine humor, in others it merely felt trying. It also didn't play very well together with Kvothe's economic circumstances, of which so much is made during his school days. I had the feeling that Rothfuss had to do some pretty heavy-handed things with the plot (Rich Boys Are Evil!) to explain why someone as talented, musical, etc. etc. as Kvothe can't seem to earn a buck. Prodigies do exist, for sure. However, I think that they're more interesting when their bounty in one area is a study in contrast to what they lack in others.

Third, Denna seemed to me to be utterly unappealing. Perhaps this is because I'm a woman, myself. I found her more unreal than affecting-- kind of a fantasy Nadja-- and that made me trust the other characters just that little bit less.

These flaws shouldn't talk you out of reading the book. Particularly if you like Epic Fantasy, this is a very good current example of the genre. Rothfuss writes well. I wasn't particularly put off by the length. The outsider-goes-to-academy theme is tried & true, and this is a decent example of same. I'm certainly interested enough to pick up a copy of the subsequent book in the series.

I will admit that I'm a little perplexed by all the gushing praise. But different strokes for different folks, right?




Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Compelling world-building and magical system
He's a humble inn-keeper--despite his blue hair. Or so he tells the world. But Chronicler knows better. Kote was once Kvothe, a mage and hero. With monsters on the prowl again, the world may need Kvote the hero rather than Kote the innkeeper. But first, he's got to awaken himself--and maybe telling his history is a good start. The bulk of the story in THE NAME OF THE WIND is just that--Kote recalling his life for Chronicler.

Kvothe has had an interesting life--starting with his childhood in an acting troop, his studies under a mage, the destruction of his dreams by forces supposedly out of fairy tales, his living on the streets of Tarbean, and finally his endeavor to gain admission and sucess at the University and its famous archives.

Author Patrick Rothfuss delivers really strong world-building and a fascinating story of a young man's attempts to survive and to find his place in the world. With a full range of mythology, a host of monstrous creatures, plenty of plants that pay off through the story, and a consistent magic system, I had a hard time doing anything but read this story.

Although THE NAME OF THE WIND makes fascinating reading, in many ways it feels like a prequel. We know that Kvothe is the Kingkiller, but we don't actually get to see him deal with any kings. That, perhaps, is reserved for the follow-up volume. Also, although telling the story from the standpoint of the older and more cynical adult Kvothe adds poignancy and sets up a powerful scene at the end, I really wanted to know more about why we needed the hero Kvothe back--and why he refuses to emerge from the shell he's created for himself. Finally, while Rothfuss did an excellent job with his male characters, his female characters seem one-dimensional.

I'm amazed that Rothfuss was able to pull off such a complex and compelling piece of story-telling in his very first novel. I'll definitely be looking for the sequel--with the confident hope that it'll provide a great payoff for all of the (wonderfully written) setup through THE NAME OF THE WIND.




Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Splendid
Let me just say that this book is a work of genius. It is really all you need to entertain yourself for a while. The story is so good and just keeps getting better as you read, through all 700 pages. At the end I literally felt like I wanted to read about 2000 pages more of it. And for anyone who starts reading now, you don't have very long to wait for the second book. Believe me, you WILL be waiting for the second book.

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