Ratings1,353
Average rating4.4
Told in Kvothe's own voice, this is the tale of the magically gifted young man who grows to be the most notorious wizard his world has ever seen.
The intimate narrative of his childhood in a troupe of traveling players, his years spent as a near-feral orphan in a crime-ridden city, his daringly brazen yet successful bid to enter a legendary school of magic, and his life as a fugitive after the murder of a king form a gripping coming-of-age story unrivaled in recent literature.
A high-action story written with a poet's hand, The Name of the Wind is a masterpiece that will transport readers into the body and mind of a wizard.
Featured Series
2 primary books6 released booksThe Kingkiller Chronicle is a 6-book series with 3 primary works first released in 1 with contributions by Patrick Rothfuss. The next book is scheduled for release on .
Reviews with the most likes.
Me daba mucho miedo empezarlo debido a sus 872 páginas y al final he acabado amandolo. Ahora esperare a leerme el segundo para hacer un descanso 😄😄😄
TLDR: shallow fictitious world and a few words about magic does not a fantasy book make. This is a story about an orphan that is forced to live on the streets, then he has to make money to put him through college, then he meet the woman of his dreams. NOT FANTASY. And without that, a pretty ordinary tale.
I really wanted to like this book. I've been giving up on too many books after reading just a few chapters and I really made an effort to finish this one. It sounded like the kind of book I would like, with the promise of exciting adventures about “the most notorious wizard his world has ever seen”.
I expected notorious to mean the best, most intelligent, most interesting. I wanted to see battles of wits and wondrous displays of magic power, and perhaps that just might happen in the second or third book of the trilogy. This book however, is just too boring. The obstacles the hero has to overcome are poverty and the ill will of others.
I enjoyed the writing style, the author uses easy words and simple scenes. The first person narrative helps a lot and not much attention is need to follow the story, perfect for audio-listening while doing something else. What appears to be the main plot, “genius kid learns magic to seek revenge against mysterious magicians who killed his parents”, could be very interesting, but it is not developed at all in this first book.
The following is a complete summary of the story, as such contains some overall plot spoilers, nothing specific. Skip to END OF SUMMARY for my analysis.
The book tell the story of Kvothe, a young trouper (like a gypsie) who has an savant capacity for learning things. He understands anything he is though in the first try and has a photographic memory. His family and his troupe travel around performing theatric plays of a Shakespeare like quality and complexity, together with other entertainment acts you would expect from a traveling circus.
His life is changed when he meets an Archanist, a wise man knowledgeable in all fields of inquiry, such as Medicine, Astrology, Quimics, Psychology, Alchemy and Magic. Kvothe becomes fascinated when he sees the man performing an act of magic in front of him, and from that moment on, he decides that is what he wanted to do.
After a few years of learning, his life takes another turn, as his family and his whole wandering troop is brutally murdered by a group of mysterious men, who decided to spare his life. Shocked and with nowhere to go, the young orphan spends his next 3 years living in the streets of a nearby city.
When opportunity presents itself, he manages to get enough money to take him to the University, a place with many thousands of books and practitioners of magic. He barely manages to pay for his expenses through his music, and is faced with some of the same hardships he met on the streets, like bullies and hunger.
The next turn in his life happens when he meets the woman he falls in love with. At first she is presented as a very mysterious woman, desired by many men, but possessed by none. She doesn't stay around much, disappearing for long periods of time after each encounter with the protagonist. Later they meet by accident in a side-quest adventure, and become more familiar with each other.
END OF SUMMARY
My problems with how the story is told:
- The world's most intelligent person meets an infinite source of knowledge. Things are bound to get interesting. Instead, for the next three years (and 1/3 of the book), he lives in the streets, begging for food and struggling to stay alive against the hardships of the world. He makes no use of his learned talents as a skilled musician or anything else he learned for that matter.
- When he finally arrives at the University, he again is met with the opportunity to learn everything he ever wanted to know. Yet, he is banned from the University library, makes enemies with one of the teachers and one very rich and influential student, and again must struggle to survive in this harsh environment. He has no money for food, clothes, the University tuition and not even have a place to sleep.
- The very few exceptional acts that could make the book interesting are purposely downplayed:
- he is in a quest to find out about the men who killed his family, yet that is barely mentioned in the book. - in the beginning it is told that he is known as "Kvothe the Bloodless", which is dismissively explained with a scene where he is public whipped and sheds no blood, but because unbeknown to others, he had taken a herb that increases blood coagulation. - he finally manages to use his music as a means to make money, he is probably the worlds greatest musician, yet his rival makes sure no ones hires him to play. - he is confronted with hired assassins, and supposedly had fought them off with lightnings and fireballs, which turns out to be nothing of the sorts. Something like he just set someone on fire with a lamp and used another simple trick to make it look like the used a lightning spell. - the mysterious woman that keeps disappearing? Is she some sort of angel, goddess, noble woman seeking an adventure or something? No, she is just another poor soul struggling to survive in this harsh world. She disappears because she keeps looking for small jobs she can perform to make some money, and skips on some tavern bills. - there is this huge monster that expels blue fire through its mouth, that turns out to be a harmless herbivorous creature(the Draccus). They also find a suspiciously murdered man in the woods, possessing an unusually expensive weapon. Turns out he was a drug dealer, probably killed in a bad drug deal. Where is the fantasy in that? There is 3 chapters dedicated to this side plot.
- When he started to spend more time with his love interest is where I stopped reading the book. It couldn't be more tedious. They keep talking about nothing, for many many pages. It is not an engaging dialog, nor it is witty or fun. The whole “Draccus” thing was just too much.
- He is trying to learn magic since a very young age, yet by the end of the book the most amazing thing he can do is to produce a spark big enough to light a fire on dry branches. In fact, the book could have exactly no mention of magic or anything of fantastical nature and still it would read the same.
This last point is may main grip with the book. Its not fantasy when you just invent a few names in your world, and says it has magic in it. This is a book about a boy who have his family murdered and is forced to live is a harsh world. He begs for money, he makes enemies, he falls in love. It's a pretty ordinary tale about a potentially interesting character.
I was hoping that the many overly long described scenes about mundane issues would have an impact latter on. Would he meet his former teacher, the Archanist again? Would he find revenge against his bullies when he lived on the street? Would he sought out those who helped him in the moments he most needed, and reward them with his new found magical talents? So many possible hooks left unused.
Read: 88%, 24:27/27:54 hours
ORIGINALLY POSTED AT Fantasy Literature.
You know how sometimes a book, or a movie, or a concert gets so hyped up in the press and you have such high expectations that when you finally get around to reading/seeing it, it disappoints? That's what I was worried might happen when I decided to read The Name of the Wind. I purposely came to it late, hoping to wait until Patrick Rothfuss was nearly finished with the trilogy before I starting it. But, the book has received so much attention that it became inexcusable for me, as the editor of a fantasy review website, not to read it. So I did – in two days. (It's a huge book.)
And I'm very happy to report that The Name of the Wind did not disappoint – I was completely enthralled. The pace was quick and never lagged. The plot was tight and had just the right amount of mystery – I always understood what was going on, but Rothfuss regularly added new elements, twists, and layers to keep me wondering where this was going and what would happen next. In fact, by the end of the book, there are more unanswered questions than answered ones. Throughout, the writing style was smooth and pleasant, with enough wit, humor, foreshadowing, and artistry to be intellectually stimulating, but never pretentious. Furthermore, the magic system in Rothfuss's world is thoroughly explained to us, bit by bit, and it is complicated and makes sense.
Perhaps most important, Mr Rothfuss writes excellent characters. I especially appreciated what he did with his hero. Kvothe's circumstances are familiar; he's an exceptionally bright kid whose parents are killed by something evil, nobody cares for him, he manages to get into magic school on long odds, he has trouble fitting in with both students and teachers, he makes two close friends and one rich and handsome enemy from a powerful family, he's obsessed with finding out about the evil people who killed his parents, he regularly gets punished for his exploits at school, he has no clue about girls, and he actually meets one who lives in the pipes under the school .... Hmmm... This does sound familiar.
But I'll bet that most people who read The Name of the Wind never thought of Harry Potter, because Kvothe and his world are new and refreshing. Kvothe is a product of his liberal education and a lot of time spent trying to survive on his own as a beggar. Sometimes he is selfish, sometimes he is cruel, sometimes he does the right thing. At one point in the book, while Kvothe was living on the streets, he had an opportunity to help someone in distress (a particular distress that Kvothe himself had experienced). I was nervous – worried that Rothfuss would ruin his careful characterization by having Kvothe perform a heroic deed too soon. But, no, Kvothe pulled a Kitty Genovese, which gave me a deeper respect for Mr Rothfuss. During Kvothe's maturation, we see him make more right choices and fewer wrong ones, but he is complex and inconsistent enough to make us lack confidence that he's going to turn out okay. And that makes for a very interesting story.
I'm very much looking forward to continuing this mystery; so much so that I'll pre-order the hardback of The Wise Man's Fear (something I rarely do). Patrick Rothfuss is a much-needed bright young star in the fantasy field. Let's hope that he can keep it up!
Read more Patrick Rothfuss book reviews at Fantasy Literature
Featured Prompt
51 booksMemorable characters can leave an impression as long as the story or plot. What characters stand out to you the most? These could be characters who you were able to identify with, ones that inspire...
Featured Prompt
3,356 booksWhen you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...