Book Name: The Eye of the World
Author: Robert Jordan
First Published: 1990
Author Robert Jordan (born James Oliver Rigney, Jr.) was born in the late 1940s in Charleston, South Carolina. As a child, he was fond of reading, especially the books of Mark Twain and Jules Verne. As an adult, he served two tours of duty in Vietnam as a gunner with the US Army.
Returning to the States in the early 1970s, Jordan went back to school at the Military College of South Carolina. He studied the sciences and after gaining his degree started work as a nuclear engineer for the Navy.
Writing had always been his passion and in the late 1970s, he began to write novels of various genres, under different pen names. Robert Jordan was his final pen name in which his fantasy books were gathered. His most famous fantasy series is The Wheel of Time which has sold 44 million copies globally and was the basis for a role-playing game, soundtrack album, and a computer game. The ideas and title of the series were inspired by Hindu mythology.
Jordan had many other concepts to write in the fantasy genre; he was waiting to start them once he finished The Wheel of Time. However, fate was not kind to him. In March of 2006, he announced publicly that he had cardiac amyloids, a rare blood disease. He was given four years to live. He underwent chemotherapy and took part in a study for a new drug that might have helped him. It was all to no avail. Jordan passed away in September of 2007 with his Wheel of Time series unfinished.
After his death, his wife selected Brandon Sanderson, an up and coming epic fantasy author, to complete the Wheel of Time series based on the notes that her husband had left behind. Robert Jordan had written the epilogue and a few chapters, but little else of the final book. Sanderson took up the challenge but found that the story was so complex that he needed three rather long books to finish the Wheel of Time properly.
“As the Wheel of Time turns, places wear many names. Men wear many names, many faces. Different faces, but always the same man. Yet no one knows the Great Pattern the Wheel weaves, or even the Pattern of an Age. We can only watch, and study, and hope.”
― Robert Jordan, The Eye of the World
The Eye of the World is the first book of the long fantasy epic series that features a cast of main characters instead of a single hero. The story unfolds, chapter by chapter, via the viewpoint of a different rotating protagonist. It is a complex tale with many twists and turns.
The story begins in a land known as the Two Rivers which has been all but cut off from the rest of the world for at least a thousand years. It is a rural place of small villages and isolated farms. During the spring festival, young Rand al’Thor notices a stranger watching him: a man whose cloak doesn’t move in the wind.
During the village of Emond’s Field’s Festival Rand hooks up with two friends: Perrin, the apprentice to the village blacksmith and Mat, a comedic prankster. They both mention that they have seen this same stranger watching them. Rand and his father return home after the festival, but are attacked by creatures known as Trollocs. Rand’s father is wounded during the attack. In his delirium, he tells his son that he is adopted, a foundling he picked up on a mountaintop during the Aiel War. Rand takes his injured father back to the village in the hope that the Aes Sedai Moiraine can use her magic to heal him. She does, but she tells Rand, Mat, and Perrin that the Trollocs are after them and that Rand’s father got in the way. The strange man who watches them is a Myrddraal, a creature of darkness, and the three must leave the village for their own safety and that of their people. The three decide to leave with Moiraine and her Warder Lan. At the last minute, Rand’s friend Egwene joins them. She desires to become an Aes Sedai and this is a good excuse to leave Edmond’s Field. A wandering minstrel named Thom also comes along.
In the village of Baerlon, the boys begin to have dreams where a man clad in black names himself Ba’alzamon and tells them that they will serve him and the Dark One. Moiraine wishes to bring the boys to the city of Aes Sedai, known as Tar Valon, where they can be better protected. She uses her channeling magic, called The One Power, to scare off soldiers in Baerlon who wish to harm the boys. When the inn they are staying in is set on fire, the party escapes.
Away from Baerlon, the group is forced to seek refuge from the Trollocs in an abandoned city called Shadar Logoth. In the city, the boys go exploring and meet a man called Mordeth who casts no shadow. Mat steals a dagger from him. The boys manage to get away from the man, but this episode worries the Aes Sedai and her Warder enough that they decide to split the party up.
Perrin and Egwene cross the river to make their way to Tar Valon on their own. On the way, they encounter a man who can talk to wolves. He claims that Perrin has this ability too. As they continue to travel, Perrin and Egwene come to a stedding, which is the home of Ogiers, giant-sized people who live incredibly long lives. Their home has magical protection from Trollocs.
Nynaeve, Lan, and Moiraine depart Shadar Logoth together. Moiraine senses that Nynaeve also has the one power and can channel it, but she is untrained as a magic user. Without the schooling of the Aes Sedai of Tar Valon, she may die. Nynaeve resists the idea, but agrees to go to Tar Valon with Moiraine. Nynaeve casts her eye on the intrepid Warder Lan and the two begin to fall for each other, which causes complications for Moiraine who is bonded to the man via the one power.
Mat, Thom, and Rand leave Shadar Logoth in a boat and eventually arrive in the city of Caemlyn. Mat becomes increasing paranoid on the journey. Unknown to the boys, he is being magically poisoned by the dagger he stole from Mordeth in Shadar Logoth. In Caemlyn, Rand meets a young Ogier named Loial, who at first mistakes him for an Aiel and tells Rand that he must be a ta’veren, a man whom fate wraps itself around. Rand is eventually taken to see Queen Morgase where a seer has a foretelling that Rand is at the center of all the destruction that is to come to Caemlyn. While it is commented that Rand looks like an Aielman, his accent is that of the Two Rivers. The Queen decides that Rand may go free since she is familiar with the people of the Two Rivers and bears these people no ill will. Moiraine and her party arrive in Caemlyn and connect with Rand and Mat. The group learns that the Dark One plans to use an object known as The Eye of the World. They must confront Ba’alzamon there, or all will be lost.
I was first introduced to The Wheel of Time saga by gaming friends that were hooked on the role playing game based on the novels. In order to play the game, it was necessary to read the books. It did not take me long in The Eye of the World to become completely hooked on this series and I soon read the rest of the novels. Jordan creates a world with powerful women magic-wielders that rule their world. While the protagonist is male and the books do not lack from a male point of view, the balance of compelling female characters makes this series remarkable.
I had an opportunity to hear Robert Jordan read from his final work-in-progress novel, the one that would eventually turn into three volumes written by Brandon Sanderson, at the San Diego ComicCon a few months before his death. The room was packed with hundreds of breathless people, waiting to hear Jordan read from his much-anticipated book. He was seated and did not wish to move about much due to his illness, but his voice was strong and clear. The words captivated the audience.
When he died with the final book unfinished, I was one of those heartbroken fans that wondered if I would ever hear the end of the tale by one of my favorite authors. When his wife commissioned Brandon Sanderson to finish the series, I was uncertain if this young author had the chops to write The Wheel of Time. I checked out one of his first novels, Elantris, and saw the quality of his work. I had nothing to worry about. Sanderson has gone on to become one of the top writers in the epic fantasy genre today.
The Wheel of Time Saga
The Eye of the World (1990)
The Great Hunt (1990)
The Dragon Reborn (1991)
The Shadow Rising (1992)
The Fires of Heaven (1993)
Lord of Chaos (1994) Locus Award nominee, 1995.
A Crown of Swords (1996)
The Path of Daggers (1998)
Winter’s Heart (2000)
Crossroads of Twilight (2003)
Knife of Dreams (2005) Final novel completed by Robert Jordan.
The Gathering Storm (2009) Completed by Brandon Sanderson.
Towers of Midnight (2010) Completed by Brandon Sanderson.
A Memory of Light (2013) Completed by Brandon Sanderson, epilogue by Robert Jordan.