Welcome to KIWIreviews - product reviews
•  click here to return to the homepage  •
Welcome visitor.Join us or log in
  YOU ARE HERE : Home > Categories > Books > Fantasy > The Kingkiller Chronicle : Day One : The Name of the Wind
  ProdID: 2136 - The Kingkiller Chronicle : Day One : The Name of the WindWritten byPatrick Rothfuss Product Score: 9.3 
The Kingkiller Chronicle : Day One : The Name of the Wind

Price : $29.99
Supplier :
Available : April 2009

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.
Value for Money
Level of Realism
Rereadability
Lose Track of Time
anistasya   Review #3029 - Dated: 15th of June, 2009
  Author: anistasya

Despite the apparent similarities to another well known orphan magician (by the incredibly original name of Harry Potter), the experience of reading the 'Name of the Wind' was completely different. Darker, older and much more serious. One of the best things about this story is it's incredible realism. Magic is just like physics with specific rules. As I was reading, I found myself trying to work out what ingenious way he would think to link the elements around him together to get out of the fix he'd inevitably found himself in.

Having said that, it did take me a while to get immersed into the world Ruthfuss had created. I am a bit biased. I find reading stories with zero female characters inside the first 53 pages a little difficult to identify with, especially when the men are all very angsty and violent. Still, by page 54, young Kvothe had suddenly appeared and charmed me the rest of the way through the story.

The world is immense and yet fully managable. The names are easy to read (mostly) and I came away trying to practice some of the mental exercises that Kvothe had been given in the university, just to see if I could do them (I couldn't... my brain obviously isn't insane enough).

I am not sure if I want to read the other two in this series, the main character ends up too depressed and I am not morbid enough to want to know why (actually, I have a sneaky suspicion his girlfriend will die and I hate when that happens). But if you like high action and fantasy worlds that actually make sense, and bad guys that are intriguing and more than worthy of their inevitable defeat, this book should be high on your 'to read' list.

User Comments
 

Printed at 11:48:56pm on Thursday 28th March 2024