The only thread dedicated to this series last received a reply back in 2005, so it's fair to say that it's time for a new thread.
I often read half-joking remarks regarding the length of the series and the hope that the author would live to see it through, but I'm sure that the people who uttered such remarks never thought that their comments would, at least in part, ring true. For those of you who don't know, the author who wrote under the pen name Robert Jordan passed away last week. I for one didn't expect it - though I knew that he was undergoing treatment for a serious and ultimately terminal condition, I was under the impression that he would at least live to see the final volume of the Wheel of Time series published. It was in search of information regarding the state of the final novel that led me to visit dragonmount.com and see that Robert Jordan had succumbed to his illness.
My first thought at reading the news was "bloody hell, if not for the largely irrelevant Andoran and Rebel Tower tangents, the series may have ended long ago," but given his condition, Robert Jordan had the foresight to ensure that the novel's plot details would survive his possible passing, so at least we will all see the now overly long narrative end in an authoritative manner.
Well, that's about it.
I often read half-joking remarks regarding the length of the series and the hope that the author would live to see it through, but I'm sure that the people who uttered such remarks never thought that their comments would, at least in part, ring true. For those of you who don't know, the author who wrote under the pen name Robert Jordan passed away last week. I for one didn't expect it - though I knew that he was undergoing treatment for a serious and ultimately terminal condition, I was under the impression that he would at least live to see the final volume of the Wheel of Time series published. It was in search of information regarding the state of the final novel that led me to visit dragonmount.com and see that Robert Jordan had succumbed to his illness.
My first thought at reading the news was "bloody hell, if not for the largely irrelevant Andoran and Rebel Tower tangents, the series may have ended long ago," but given his condition, Robert Jordan had the foresight to ensure that the novel's plot details would survive his possible passing, so at least we will all see the now overly long narrative end in an authoritative manner.
Well, that's about it.