The Fires of Heaven

English language

Published March 7, 2001 by Tandem Library.

ISBN:
978-0-613-17635-4
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The bonds and wards that hold the Great Lord of the Dark are slowly failing, but still his fragile prison holds. The Forsaken, immortal servants of the shadow, weave their snares and tighten their grip upon the realms of men, sure in the knowledge that their master will soon break free... Rand al' Thor, the Dragon Reborn, knows that he must strike at the Enemy, but his forces are divided by treachery and by ambition. Even the Aes Sedai, ancient guardians of the Light, are riven by civil war. Betrayed by his allies, pursued by his enemies and beset by the madness that comes to the male wielders of the One Power, Rand rides out to meet the foe.

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Oh, man, this one was rough. And by scanning a lot of the other reviews, it seems like I had the same problem a lot of other readers did. Namely, the women. And I don't know if this is a reflection on me, the writer, or the characters themselves, but boy, were they pretty awful in this one.

You spend a lot of time Nynaeve's head, and she is judgmental, spiteful, petty, mean-spirited, and just an all round jerk. I don't know what Elayne's deal was, she seemed to act out of character for most of the book. Egwene goes on and on about Rand's arrogance and big head(totally oblivious to her own galactic ego and superiority), but none of that is supported by the text. Nothing Rand does indicates any outsized ego, at all. In fact, he spends most of the book being pushed around by the women surrounding …

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