THE WHEEL OF TIME


'''The Wheel of Time''' (abbreviated by fans to 'WoT' or less commonly, 'tWoT') is a bestselling fantasy book series written by Robert Jordan. It is known for the extreme density of its plot, the intricate detail of its imaginary world and constructed languages, and complexity of relationships and interactions among . There are 11 books in the series so far. Books 8-11 have each reached #1 on the New York Times bestseller list, and most of the books have been on the list at one time or another. The series has spawned several games and a soundtrack.
Robert Jordan has repeatedly said that the main sequence will conclude with the twelfth book, with a working title of ''A Memory of Light''. Numerous times he has said he will hold to this statement even if it has to be 2000 pages long. At some point in the future Jordan plans to write two more short prequel novels, an encyclopedia, and possibly two or three other side-plot novels. [1] However, Jordan's illness (amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy) may interfere with these plans.

Contents
The premise
Books in the series
Literary concepts
Eternity or infinity motif
Religious parallels
Offshoots
External links

The premise


In the beginning, the Creator made the Wheel of Time, which spins the Pattern of the Ages using the lives of men and women as its threads. The Wheel has seven spokes, each representing an age, and it is rotated by the True Source from which the One Power, a source of energy, is drawn. The One Power is divided into male and female halves, ''saidin'' and ''saidar'', which work in opposition and in unison to drive the Wheel; those who can use this power are known as ''channelers.'' One organization of channelers is the ''Aes Sedai'', a name meaning "Servants of All" in the Old Tongue.
The Creator imprisoned Shai'tan, known as the Dark One, a powerful, evil being, at the moment of creation, sealing him away from the Wheel. At some point, however, the Dark One was given purchase in the world through the machinations of people who unwittingly opened his prison by drilling into it, using the One Power, and began his efforts to conquer the world, creation, even the Wheel itself. In response to this, the Wheel spun out the Dragon, a channeler of immense power, to be a champion for the Light.
Due to the cyclical nature of the Wheel, there can be no definitive victory for the forces of the Light; the war has been fought innumerable times since the dawn of Creation. The Dragon would defeat Shai'tan and seal him from the Wheel, only to be reborn and repeat the process several millennia later.
Robert Jordan's novels concern themselves with one particular incarnation of the Dragon. About 3000 years have passed since the last war between Shai'tan and the Light. This war ended when the Dragon, then born as Lews Therin Telamon, led a daring raid to Shayol Ghul and sealed the breach in the Dark One's prison with the help of a group of other male channelers known as the ''Hundred Companions''. Female channelers had refused to assist, believing the risk of backfire too great to chance. Indeed, though the Dark One was re-imprisoned, he managed to spread a taint on ''saidin'' itself, bringing madness and a wasting sickness to any who channeled it. The taint quickly overcame every male channeler in the world, including Lews Therin and his companions, with catastrophic results that radically changed the face of the world - referred to, in the book, as 'Breaking of the World'. From then onwards, Lews Therin was also called the "Kinslayer", as one of the last results of his madness was to destroy everyone who carried his blood as well as everyone he loved.
For these reasons, the return of the Dragon is a cause for both hope and fear amongst the general populace. On the one hand, the ''Dragon Reborn'' is the only person capable of defeating Shai'tan, who is once again reaching beyond his prison. On the other, the Dragon Reborn will still be prey to the madness caused by the taint of evil in ''saidin''. The only man who can save the world is also the man most likely to destroy it.

Books in the series


#TitlePgs.Chs.Wrds.1st EditionNotes
n/a''New Spring''33226121,815January 2004
1.''The Eye of the World''83253305,90215 January 1990
2.''The Great Hunt''73650267,07815 November 1990
3.''The Dragon Reborn''70456251,39215 October 1991
4.''The Shadow Rising''100858393,82315 September 1992No Prologue
5.''The Fires of Heaven''99256354,10915 October 1993
6.''Lord of Chaos''102455389,26415 October 1994First with an Epilogue
7.''A Crown of Swords''89641295,02815 May 1996
8.''The Path of Daggers''70431226,68720 October 1998
9.''Winter's Heart''80035238,7897 November 2000
10.''Crossroads of Twilight''86430271,6327 January 2003Also has an Epilogue
11.''Knife of Dreams''7933711 October 2005Also has an Epilogue
12.''A Memory of Light''(working title)

All page totals given are for the most widely available paperback editions.
There is also a prequel novella, ''New Spring'' in the ''Legends'' anthology edited by Robert Silverberg. Jordan expanded this into the standalone novel ''New Spring'' that was published in January 2004.
In 2002 the first book, ''The Eye of the World'', was repackaged as two volumes with new illustrations for younger readers: ''From the Two Rivers'', including an extra chapter (''Ravens'') before the existing prologue, and ''To the Blight'' with an expanded glossary. In 2004 the same was done with ''The Great Hunt'', with the two parts being ''The Hunt Begins'' and ''New Threads in the Pattern''.
There is a short story available on the web, "The Strike at Shayol Ghul", which predates the main series by several thousand years. That story is also found in ''The World of Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time'' (ISBN 0-312-86219-9), an official guide to The Wheel of Time published in November 1997.
'Prologue ebooks'

★ ''Snow: The Prologue to Winter's Heart'' (September 2000)

★ ''Glimmers: The Prologue to Crossroads of Twilight'' (July 17, 2002)

★ ''Embers Falling on Dry Grass: The Prologue to Knife of Dreams'' (July 22, 2005).

Literary concepts


Eternity or infinity motif

Jordan's Wheel of Time concept and art, while fictional, recalls common circular motifs from world religions and folklore. Buddhism has the Wheel of Rebirth, Hinduism the Wheel of Law (as on India's flag). Taoism and other major and minor religions make use of the wheel symbol, in the round or twisted, to symbolize eternity. The snake or dragon swallowing its tail is found in folklore as a hoop snake and in fiction and elsewhere as oroborus. In a similar borrowing, Jordan's symbol for the One Power is similar to the taijitu, a Taoist icon representing the harmony of opposites.
Religious parallels

Jordan's intricate religious, philosophical, political constructs can be interpreted, if one is so inclined, as parallels to real world religious beliefs. Jordan's recurring fight between good and evil echos common religious and folkloric themes of recurring conflict and resolution. Jordan retells the legend of Armageddon or the Last Battle, a religious or folkloric final confrontation between good and evil. His Creator, Dragon Reborn, the Dark One echo God, Messiah and Devil. The Children of the Light (Whitecloaks) share many similarities with the officers of the Inquisition of the Roman Catholic Church. In the books the stages required for Aes Sedai induction share names with the stages of induction into the sisterhood of Roman Catholic nuns.

Offshoots


The online game WoTMUD is the oldest authorized game based on the series (started 1993), and various commercial game adaptations have also been spawned, including a video game released by Atari for the personal computer, and a role-playing game based on d20 rules released by Wizards of the Coast. There is also a soundtrack album. There was a collectible card game based on the books, but it has been out of print since 2002.

External links



Official website

Robert Jordan's blog



Wheel of Time FAQ

Encyclopaedia WoT

Wheel of Time Concordance v3.1 (PHP version) (Text version)

Chronology of The Wheel of Time

Wheel of Time websites Past and Present

Wotmania reference desk. Includes Chapter summaries, PoV Index, and other handy tools.

World of the Wheel A Wheel of Time Role Play Site.

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