I do not have a history
as a re-reader of fiction. Nonfiction, certainly. But there the point of
re-reading is obvious. To check a date, to confirm a fact, to pursue a deeper
understanding. But fiction? I do not feel the need to recheck fictional facts
or fictional dates. And, for that matter, if I didn’t understand it the first
time through, I only read it because of some obsessive-compulsive need to
complete the damned book once I started it and I surely was not going to start
it again. There are too many good novels out there and too little time. And I
have not historically considered fantasy very high in that endless list of good
novels.
But something is
different about The Wheel of Time. The
first time I read it, I was in such a hurry to find out what happened next that
I missed the construction of the plot. I did not consciously appreciate the character
development. I was only dimly aware of the author drawing me into an addictive
relationship.
The story-line is
straight forward. The hero grows to young adulthood in The Two Rivers, a simple
agrarian society. An egalitarian culture that respected work and common sense. Where
social status was determined by an individual’s contribution to the community. A
narrow society that had little contact with the wider world. The hero and his hometown
friends are pulled away from their comforting and comprehensible way of life
and thrown into the fascinating, exciting, and always dangerous rest of the
world.
The fourteen volumes of
the series add up to one long chase scene. The author chivvies us along as the
characters flee certain death or chase dangerous villains. From battle to
battle with no time to rest, until we miss our reasonable bedtimes and delay
our real-world duties. Until we get to Tarmon Gai'don, the final battle, and
find out if the good guy wins and preserves The
Wheel of Time and saves the whole world.
Simple. Typical
American, Abe Lincoln story. No high-born hero necessary.
But the plot. It’s only
during this re-reading that I appreciate the true superhero of this story. It’s
the author, Robert Jordan. Not only did he construct a coherent world, invent
characters in numbers of which Cecil B. De Mille would have boasted, and
imagine more daring exploits and dire circumstances than I can comprehend (even
after having experienced them vicariously during the first read through) but he
got me to read fourteen volumes of fantasy.
His characters are
introduced in the first book. So many that during my first reading I forgot
their names and their faces until they appeared again and again throughout the
story. Now as I read, I remember what they will do, who they will prove to be.
I see how the author has drawn them in 3D and full-color. It’s no wonder I
cared so much about them.
Their own individual stories
weave and wind, over, around, and through each other. When I read it before, I
would be frustrated when Jordan left whatever character we were following to
follow another. And then again, when he would leave that character to follow
yet another. And then again and again, until they came together only to move
apart again. A dance of stories, sometimes a stately minuet, but more often, a
square dance that I would have to follow without a caller to say what the next movement
would be.
This time, I do not
worry about what will happen next. I watch the intricate steps and recognize
the changes in rhythm. I see the story as though it were a dear friend’s face, at
once familiar. And still intriguing as the light plays across angles and planes
reflecting all manner of thought and emotion.
When asked in the past
to name my favorite novel, I would say John Irving’s A Prayer for Owen Meany. But I think now I must say The Wheel of Time is my favorite novel,
though it be fourteen books long.
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