
I understood Egwene pushing back and refusing to be dealt with like a child anymore, but that didn’t explain everything Nyanaeve was doing – which came across as general bad mood for no apparent reason. something? Nyanaeve in particular seemed to be acting very weirdly this book. I have little idea what was going on between Nyanaeve and Elayne, and they seemed to be fighting and angry over…. No Perrin at all, after being a major character last book (and a good one with a clear goal to work towards.) Min starts off the book, then is largely forgotten. Once more, characters are just not present. It’s not satisfying because you can’t work out if the characters have made progress towards overall goals as they’re not defined and then things feel like they’re happening just because at the ending. Stuff happens in the last 100-odd pages that doesn’t feel set up at all and almost like there was a “I need action here to finish the book” motive behind it. It also then makes the endings feel even more out of no where. It’s not personal and it doesn’t feel like there’s something at stake. If you don’t know, even vaguely, what the characters are heading towards and reaching for, it just makes the book feel like a little ramble through the world with the odd attack from faceless monsters here and there.

The lack of clarity there really sinks any chance of tension, of forward momentum. What is Rand’s general, overarching goal for this series? Maybe not go mad until he’s had a chance to face the villain? Why? Because he has to as the chosen one? In this book, what is he doing? Heading after the Shaido to stop them because they’re claiming to be the chosen one instead? The characters rarely seem to have goals, and when they do, they’re either incredibly specific and small or vague and little progress made towards them. Goal – clear, attainable, measurable character goals. I think, five books in, I’ve worked out why the pacing for these books always seems all over the place for me – and why that makes them feel so long.



Even the Aes Sedai, ancient guardians of the Light, are riven by civil war.īetrayed by his allies, pursued by his enemies and beset by the madness that comes to the male wielders of the One Power, Rand rides out to meet the foe. Rand al’Thor, the Dragon Reborn, knows that he must strike at the Enemy, but his forces are divided by treachery and by ambition. The Forsaken, immortal servants of the shadow, weave their snares and tighten their grip upon the realms of men, sure in the knowledge that their master will soon break free. The bonds and wards that hold the Great Lord of the Dark are slowly failing, but still his fragile prison holds.
