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The Wise Man's Fear
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notw: So the good stuff is in book two?
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The second book has some interesting bits but also some ridiculous bits as well.



I'm not even sure I knew at the time I read NOTW if it was only going be a trilogy, or thought it might be a longer series, so it didn't bother me that the ending was of a smaller scale then going after the Chandrian. While the 2nd book continues the story, and expands the world significantly, it also doesn't have any Huge resolutions. In fact it just leads to more open questions. I would not let that stop you from reading it, just know it going in.

There is a lot of world building and stuff about the every day life of the Kvothe. But he doesn't really put in any effort to do anything about Chandrian after people make fun of him for thinking they're real in the first book.
About the biggest resolution in book 2 is Kvothe becoming financially secure.
I'm not sure how much resolution we'll get in book 3 either. More questions, more world building, some plot lines tied up certainly. But ultimately things go very badly and book 3's flashbacks end with Kvothe and Bast buying an inn in a small village in the middle of nowhere.

The Chandrian are almost nonexistent in book 2. He spends far more time investigating his own sexuality than he does the Chandrian. I don't blame him since he still isn't in their league and would certainly die.


The Chandrian are almost nonexistent in book 2. He spends far more time investigating his own sexuality than he doe..."
You are probably right in your assessment that he isn’t powerful enough to deal with them we think. Truth is we don’t know much about them and neither does Kvothe. So far we have attributed two massacres to them. The motivation was seemingly to keep important information out of the hands of for lack of a better word mortals of this world . How do the Chandrian know that something important or dangerous needs to be acted on? After all they are hardly unknown in this world. For example they are featured in children’s songs and are used as bogeyman to keep said children in line. Kvothe’s father had been collecting stories from all over the place to produce his song. Chandrian stories aren’t rare and they are still known by the common man even if most people think of them as legends.
After hearing Skarpi’s account of the Chandrian that spurred him out of the downward spiral of Kvothe's prior three years he does precious little to find out more about them. True that was partly due to circumstances of being banned from the Stacks but Kvothe was clearly passive in regards to something he supposedly has a burning desire to elucidate. So I was looking for some sort of reveal in regards to the Chandrian but that did not happen.

Hmmm that really does not make me want to read tome 2. I might wait to see book 3 drop before I determine whether to go forward with the series.

For me, Book 1 is very interesting in that it turns a fantasy world into a normal world. Kvothe the kid has his head full of magic stories, only to learn in a very real and hard way that the world is not like in the stories. In a way is very refreshing, and I liked it even more because of it. And yet, you know that there is magic and supernatural - but it is really hidden, magic for the people in the four corners is as much as mistery as it is for us.
Book 2 then is the coming into magic book.
As for other criticism... Kvothe is between 14-15 years in Book 1, financially broke, emotionally abandoned... and yet everyone wants him to blindly follow the track of the Chandrian? I think the description is a very real one..."yes I have a burning desire to avenge my parents death, but first I need to make ends meet or I will starve to death".
In a way is a deconstruction of classic heroes... Kvothe exploits are so adorned by the local people, that the real story of a real boy/man is lost. Kvothe tries to show that heroes are normal people, that their futures were not always as clear, and that the groundworks of a story are always more mundane and gray that the fairy tale we weave around them.
As for the sex bit on Book 2... yeah is a rather large chunk, but then again is not such a big portion of the overall book. Was perhaps longer that needed be, but is not (by any strech of imagination) of what book 2 is about.


If you didn't like the lack of progress in the overarching plot in the first book, the second book will also frustrate you, and all indications are that the third will infuriate you. From the first book alone it's pretty clear that we're not being set up for a satisfying ending. But if you liked any of the stuff in the first book, the second is even better.

Take into account that the University events in Book 1 seem long, but is less than a years time - in research, specially into a subject that its actively concealed, is not much time at all. You kinda have to wait for a lucky break.



Also, when you are trying to make a place for yourself in the world, spending obvious time searching for children's tales isn't going to help you. He even has to approach the issue obliquely with his friends, but he did actually do great deal in achieving his goal in the second book.

That I agree with wholeheartedly.


You aren't fooling anyone Luke Burrage.


Thanks for the heads up about the reread thread. I have avoided so far for the reason you stated. I saw that Jo Walton had a reread and avoided it for fear of spoilers. I really enjoy reading her fiction criticism in general and well its making me waver on when or if I read the second novel if only to have a reason to read her articles.

The Wise Man's Fear meanders even worse than this did, I think. You could probably extract 600 of the 1100 pages of it and what's left would be significant-ish and fluffy still.

It makes me wonder whether Rothfuss was just too clever for his own good, with so many of his readers missing this the first time around. Because the rereader's thread has Lord of the Rings-level analysis and it all seems quite and very plausible.

The Chandrian are almost nonexistent in book 2. He spends far more time investigating his own sexuality than he doe..."
BEHOLD THE SEX GOD!
It was the worst aspect of book 2 IMHO. There was a definate streak of adolecent (small f) fantasy in book 2 where he learns to please ladies and becomes a badass.
It is a real tribute to PR's skill that the thing was a good read and did not crash and burn dispite this.
Skip wrote: "Yes, there is sex in TWMF, but it isn't at all a major theme."
I would disagree
(view spoiler)

While the journey in NotW and TWMF may not be to LOTR's standard, it is still a journey I felt worth the effort. The operative statement there is, "I felt...". I understand that these books may not be for everyone and that shouldn't diminish the enjoyment by others. However, what I'm getting at is the first 2 books are about the journey of Kvothe, not his destination. If what you want is to get to the Chandrian battle, it isn't going to be found in these pages. There are some clues about them, but these 1st two books are more about Kvothe growing up and into Kvothe the Kingkiller.
Having said that, if you find Kvothe a loathsome character or just not one you like, then the story probably isn't going to be for you. I don't like everything about the character (more flaws, less arrogance) but I do like enough to enjoy the books.
TLDR: The 1st two books are about the story of Kvothes early years. Don't like Kvothe, you probably won't like the books. And that is perfectly fine. Don't sweat it and move on.

You do not have to like the characters to like a book.


Bast would argue that.
Kvothe's had what, weeks or months in-between. Bast had an afternoon.

I would disagree
(view spoiler) "
I guess we had a difference sense of the weight of sex in TWMF. Unlike the Chandrian who aren't seen but always present, the sex is definitely present, but not as important as what else was happening.
(view spoiler)

I don't expect Day 3 to be much different as far as resolving everything, having him defeat the seven, etc. I think he'd get his ass kicked no matter how great he is at embellishing his own story.
For me, Kvothe's story is about his journey of self-discovery as he tries to find out as much as he can to get some kind of closure on what happened to his family. I'm going to be satisfied if we get that in the third book.

That changed my expectations of the story so much that I suddenly found I was enjoying it a lot more. It's the part in the middle of a video game where you go and do all the side quests, and meet companions.



Authors mentioned in this topic
Jo Walton (other topics)Jo Walton (other topics)
Maybe I am being unduly harsh since I am judging a story that is only one third of the way through and maybe the Chandrian are more prominent in book two and three. Also I guess the King killing is in the forthcoming novels as well. The Name Of The Wind to me feels like a giant prologue. Setting the scene and wetting the appetite to the upcoming excitement which is unfortunately in the upcoming novels.
Despite that I did enjoy the novel but I was not wowed by it. Maybe my expectations were too high given the adulation Patrick Rothfuss has received recently.