The Wise Man's Fear

, #2

Paperback, 1008 pages

English language

Published March 1, 2011 by Gollancz.

ISBN:
978-0-575-08143-7
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OCLC Number:
819142530

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5 stars (11 reviews)

Sequel to the extraordinary THE NAME OF THE WIND, THE WISE MAN'S FEAR is the second instalment of this superb fantasy trilogy from Patrick Rothfuss. This is the most exciting fantasy series since George R. R. Martin's A SONG OF ICE AND FIRE, and a must-read for all fans of HBO's GAME OF THRONES.

Picking up the tale of Kvothe Kingkiller once again, we follow him into exile, into political intrigue, courtship, adventure, love and magic ... and further along the path that has turned Kvothe, the mightiest magician of his age, a legend in his own time, into Kote, the unassuming pub landlord.

Packed with as much magic, adventure and home-grown drama as THE NAME OF THE WIND, this is a sequel in every way the equal to its predecessor and a must-read for all fantasy fans. Readable, engaging and gripping THE WISE MAN'S FEAR is the biggest and …

25 editions

reviewed The Wise Man’s Fear by Patrick Rothfuss (The Kingkiller Chronicle, Day 2)

Review of 'The Wise Man’s Fear' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The Wise Man's Fear leaves me rather torn. It was a very pleasant reading experience, but it left me dissatisfied. I wanted to hug the writing, that's how much I enjoyed it, and yet having finished the book, I am left wanting for more from the book. I expected a brilliant continuation of The Name of the Wind, and only got a good sequel, not an excellent one.

TWMF continues Kvothe's story in 1000 pages, and my major issue is that despite the amount of pages, very little progress in the overall story was made. Maybe I am to blame for actually not knowing what the overall story arc might be. I don't know how an additional book will wrap this up. In TWMF, Kvothe is still a 17 year old boy, and so the gap from Kvothe to Kote will have to be filled somehow. I don't know!

We …

reviewed The Wise Man’s Fear by Patrick Rothfuss (The Kingkiller Chronicle, Day 2)

Review of 'The Wise Man’s Fear' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Great read, better than the first one.
Lots of awesome 'Taborlin the Great' moments.
The interludes (scenes at the inn), however, left something to be desired.
Pretty much all the action takes place in Kvothe's story, there's almost no reason to set it at the inn (unlike the first book).
It feels like there is so much left to do, I can't imagine how [a:Patrick Rothfuss|108424|Patrick Rothfuss|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1226875325p2/108424.jpg] will finish it in one more book.