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Rent: Wizard's First Rule (The Sword of Truth)

By Terry Goodkind

Overview & Description

Basis for the television series Legend of the Seeker, launching in Fall 2008!

Millions of readers the world over have been held spellbound by this valiant tale vividly told.

Now, enter Terry Goodkind's world, the world of the Sword of Truth.

In the aftermath of the brutal murder of his father, a mysterious woman, Kahlan Amnell, appears in Richard Cypher's forest sanctuary seeking help ... and more. His world, his very beliefs, are shattered when ancient debts come due with thundering violence.

In their darkest hour, hunted relentlessly, tormented by treachery and loss, Kahlan calls upon Richard to reach beyond his sword-- to invoke within himself something more noble. Neither knows that the rules of battle have just changed ... or that their time has run out.

This is the beginning. One book. One Rule. Witness the birth of a legend.

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ISBN 10: 0765362643
ISBN 13: 9780765362643
848 pages.
First Published:8/15/1994
List Price:7.99
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Categories this title is in
Science Fiction & Fantasy, Fantasy, Epic, Magic & Wizards, Series

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Reviews:


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writes,

I ripped right through the book and all and all, enjoyed it. Here is some of my input:

1. I found that the story moved along well and that I was always entertained. The main hero is a bit Frodoian, and perhaps a bit Arthurian, but it is its own unique story and an entertaining cast of characters.

2. The story sometimes gets a bit twisted with torture, rape, bad guys who like young boys, overly bad bad guys. The training and torture chapter was beyond what I was comfortable with, but making it through that, there was enough good stuff left to make me forgive him for this portion of the story.

3. Does the author's picture bug you a little like it did me? Mr. Kungfu, yogi, mastermind, serious guy.

4. I have to admit that there were some excellent and emotional moments in the story where great and wonderful things happen. Our hero is one good man and the love story with our heroine is also nice. They make one whale of a couple!

5. I was a bit disappointed to see so much awkward writing, typos, hard to read printing, etc. Is the publisher a bit lame?

6. There were many likable and well characterized secondary players. In general, I liked all of them except that a couple of the evil ones, like Princess Violet, were too ridiculously bad.

7. The author needs to be more subtle. There are too many great big hints about what is going to happen. The bad guys are way too bad and it is fairly easy to guess the outcome. Nevertheless, for a time, I wasn't sure.

Read the book without high expectations. Don't re-read and dwell on thing too much. The author describes the little things several times so you'll never have to wonder what happened. If you are a fast reader and want a fairly entertaining quick ride, this will work. If you are a perfectionist and very careful reader, I think this one will bother you a little bit.

writes,

I was drained at the end of this book and disappointed. The events, creatures, and characters throughout the story are very difficult to imagine in your head, which does not make anyone enjoy the flow. There was too much packed into this story which made me want to skip pages.

I loved certain storylines in the book like the whole Rachel saga, and the description of the Confessor getting her "extra power" was very strong in my mind. I love the dragon character. But the torture part towards the end of the novel was totally ridiculous and it literally made me sick where I couldn't sleep that night. The most disappointing aspect was that with such a thick book, there was no feeling of a big epic story. The underlying plot of the novel is not out of the ordinary. The end gets very predictable and I had known who the "villian" was right at the start of the book.

Basically this is a story kids would enjoy but it is told in a grossly masochistic adult way.

writes,

I'll admit that when a coworker first handed me Wizard's First Rule, insisting that Sword of Truth was a fantastic series, I was a bit skeptical. I had a hard time getting into Wizard's First Rule and even when it started picking up after the first few chapters I expected to read this one and never bother with the rest of the series. Well, Wizard's First Rule ended up grabbing my attention after all-- there were plenty of cliches and such that seem to run rampant in fantasy novels but there was more than enough to make up for it. Terry Goodkind certainly doesn't shy away from shockers! This first book ended in such a way that I thought to myself 'Well, I guess I'll try the next one, too...'