The Eye of The World: The Wheel of Time Series Book One by Robert Jordan
A Review of the First Novel in the Wheel of Time Series by Marissa
Writing: 3.75⭐️/5
This is a 1600-page first novel of a fourteen-book-plus-a-sequel series. Sometimes, the writing is nearly outstanding. At other times, it feels redundant and repetitive. It’s like a love-like-don’t-like smoothie of writing. Overall, it’s adequate, bordering on good. I applaud Jordan’s ability to work within Tolkien’s conventions, nearly calling him into the novel without actually doing that. As a Tolkien fan, I appreciate the nods to Lord of the Rings you can see here and there as well. These incredibly cute Easter Eggs were appreciated.
Characters: 4.5⭐️/5
I like the characters, and I like that – as far as this one goes – they do feel relatively different. I could feel the intention Jordan put into his characters, even minor ones, even near-NPC ones. I felt deeply that if he’d had the time or the desire, he could have written a whole tale on each of the people the crew meets along their journey with ease. Despite relying on a few sexist and/or misogynistic tropes to propel attributes of his female characters, Jordan also created compelling women. Moraine, Nynaeve, and Egwene are all wonderful to read about and have in this tale.
Plot: 4⭐️/5
Think Lord of the Rings, but not. We have a chosen group – an unlikely band of heroes – who embark on adventure after a party goes wrong, compelled to chase after the Dark One, a presence threatening the entire world. It’s a sweater made from LOTR material, but it fits differently. The world's complexity is just as thought out as LOTR, branching into its tale in the details. A few qualms I had with the plot: the predictability of the Chosen One made me hope Jordan was going to “pull one over on me” (he didn’t) and the final battle felt odd in pacing. Also, the reliance on “the Pattern” or “the Wheel” felt far too convenient, almost pulling at the threads of our story and unravelling it into a bundle of “so what?” When the Pattern dictates everything, then what’s the point of the story?
All in all, I enjoyed reading it, and I am excited to start book two.
Who Should Read This Book?
Fans of LOTR
Fans of lengthy high-fantasy novels
Fans of Sanderson, who don’t mind a bit more exposition in their worldbuilding
Someone without commitment issues (fourteen books and a prequel require commitment)
Content Warnings?
War, blood, injury, injury detail, gaslighting, gore, murder, sexism, misogyny, grief,
Post-Reading Rating: 4⭐️/5
Let’s start book two!
Final Rating: 4⭐️/5
*This review was written in October of 2023*