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The Way Of Kings By Brandon Sanderson Price comparison
The Way Of Kings By Brandon Sanderson Price History
The Way Of Kings By Brandon Sanderson Description
The Way Of Kings by Brandon Sanderson: A Comprehensive Overview
Welcome to the world of epic fantasy with “The Way Of Kings” by Brandon Sanderson. This novel is a cornerstone of Sanderson’s acclaimed series, “The Stormlight Archive,” which has captivated readers since its release on August 31, 2010. With its rich narrative and intricate world-building, this hardcover edition stands as a must-have for any fantasy enthusiast.
Key Features of The Way Of Kings
- Publisher: Tor Books
- Language: English
- Hardcover: 1008 pages of captivating storytelling
- ISBN: 9780765326355
- Item Weight: 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions: 6.6 x 1.85 x 9.5 inches
- ASIN: 0765326353
Intricate World-Building
Brandon Sanderson masterfully crafts a vibrant universe filled with rich lore, complex characters, and a unique magic system. The story unfolds in a world ravaged by storms and inhabited by various kingdoms. Readers are drawn into epic battles and political intrigue that will leave them on the edge of their seats.
Engaging Characters
The characters in “The Way Of Kings” are multi-dimensional, each with their own struggles and motivations. From the noble Kaladin Stormblessed to the enigmatic Shallan Davar, their stories interlace to form a tapestry of heroism and adventure. This depth allows readers to connect deeply with the characters’ journeys.
What Readers Are Saying: Customer Reviews
The reception of “The Way Of Kings” has been overwhelmingly positive. Many readers laud Sanderson for his intricate plot lines and character development. Here are some highlights from customer reviews:
- Many fans appreciate the detailed storytelling and expansive world, suggesting it sets a new standard for the fantasy genre.
- Several readers noted the pacing of the book, with some stating that it takes time to build momentum before the action intensifies.
- Some critics mentioned that the length of the book could be intimidating for new readers. However, they emphasized that the rich narrative makes it worthwhile.
Comparative Pricing Insights
When it comes to purchasing “The Way Of Kings,” prices can vary significantly across different suppliers. Our price comparison tool shows the latest offers from major retailers. Here are some insights:
- Amazon often has competitive prices, especially for Prime members, including occasional discounts and offers.
- Independent bookstores may have unique sales and events that can result in better pricing, especially when bundled with other purchases.
- Discount retailers may occasionally carry this title, but availability can be inconsistent.
6-Month Price History Trends
Our price history chart reveals an interesting trend: while there was a peak in pricing during holiday seasons, significant dips occur during clearance sales and special promotions, especially around back-to-school seasons. Keeping an eye on these trends can help savvy readers get the best deal.
Related Media: Unboxing and Reviews
If you want to get a better sense of what to expect, several YouTube channels offer unboxing videos and thorough reviews. Watching these can provide insights into the book’s physical attributes and reader experiences. Check popular channels that discuss fantasy literature for engaging content surrounding “The Way Of Kings.”
Why You Should Read The Way Of Kings
This novel is more than just a story; it’s an experience filled with philosophical themes, a reflection on leadership, and the moral dilemmas characters face amidst turmoil. “The Way Of Kings” stands as an exemplary entry point into Sanderson’s work or the broader genre of epic fantasy.
Final Thoughts
Whether you’re already a fan of Brandon Sanderson or discovering him for the first time, “The Way Of Kings” promises an enchanting journey. With its engaging narrative, rich characters, and enchanting world, this book deserves a spot on your shelf.
Ready to dive into the adventure? Compare prices now to find the best deal on “The Way Of Kings” by Brandon Sanderson!
The Way Of Kings By Brandon Sanderson Specification
Specification: The Way Of Kings By Brandon Sanderson
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The Way Of Kings By Brandon Sanderson Reviews (7)
7 reviews for The Way Of Kings By Brandon Sanderson
Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
Johanna –
Allt jag kan säga är “Ha tålamod”. Det tog mig nära på ett år att ta mig igenom denna och det var värt det i slutändan. Väldigt bra men skulle säga att det blir riktigt bra först mot sista tredjedelen av den. Ska ta en paus i serien men komme läsa nästa bok också
ibrahim al shutwi –
حقيقة كنت مستعد للكتاب بشكل كبير وتوقعاتي كانت عالية خصوصا إني قريت ميستبورن قبله، لكن الكتاب فعلا كان افضل من توقعاتي (للامانة قريته مع الاوديوبوك فممكن لو قريته بدون الاوديوبوك يكون الموضوع صعب) بدايته كان ثقيلة مرة للامانة لكن مجرد ماوصل للمئة بديت ادخل جو ، انصح بالهاردكافر لأني شريت الماس بيبر باك ثم شريت الهارد كفر بعدها والهارد كفر اويح واحلى بكثير
DF7 –
no se si cuente esto como spoiler pero spoiler!!!!
ok, si has leido mistborn trilogy, probablemente has encontrado los comentarios que dicen que este libro es muy bueno el mejor de todo los libros de fantasia y demas, y no lo niego, pero vamos primero al punto que quiero tomar.
el libro esta muy bueno ( todavia no llego al climax de la historia pero enserio) no esperen un libro como mistborn que es facil de dijerir y facil de entender.
the way of kings es demasiado “complejo” en terminos de el mundo, sociedades, religiones e incluso palabras si estas leyendo el libro en ingles… buena suerte ;3
la historia va muy lenta (que no es malo) y los personajes cada uno te lo representan demasiado bien que tienes miedo de que vaya a pasar con ellos.
pero como lo vuelvo a mencionar, mistborn es demasiado facil de entender, pero es muy probable que cuando leas el libro The Way of Kings (sin importar el dialecto que lo leas) no entenderas nada, absolutamente nada de nada. y si, es normal, muuuy normal, mistborn te lo presentan con la protagonista(V) y el protagonista (K) y te describen los mundos ( si me permiten decirlo) como el mundo en que vivimos
pero que sucede con the way of kings?
es JOD*DO de AMADR*ES (osea que es dificil de entender) no solo te enseñan que pasa cada cierto tiempo, que pasa cuando utilizas una cosa que te ayuda (si lo has leido sabras que es), como se utiliza y cual es su efecto (recuerda a D)
mistborn te enseña que todo tiene reglas y bases como diria K “Every action we take has consequences, V,”
pero TWoK te enseña que esto es si una historia del cual hablar.
has sentido que sabes que pasara con las peliculas, series o inclusive musica, ese pensamiento de :”creo que ya se como acabara”, con mistborn no lo lograras o no lo lograste (si ya lo has leido)
con the way of kings sera como si estuvieras jugando ajedrez con un AI del primer mundo(osea windows 7 xd)
tl;dr: deberias comprar The Way of King…… absolutamente si, si, si, si, si
ojo, es mucho pero muuuuuucho “mundo para construir”(me refiero que tiene muchas cosas que tienes que enterarte para que puedas seguir la historia como los “chulls” o los “cremlings” o inclusive las groserias xd)
ander k. –
El worlbuilding de este libro es una locura, lo recomiendo 100%
Chris Gladis –
There are times when I hate having grown up to be a fantasy fan. Most of the time it’s when I pick up a book that seems promising – maybe because it’s from a familiar author, or because you heard from a friend of a friend that it was good – but it turns out to be disappointing. Stock characters, old and tired plotlines, and a world that’s basically Tolkien with some greasepaint and false noses added on. Given the number of people who write fantasy, the odds of coming across a truly interesting world with compelling characters and a story that has some surprises is difficult indeed.
Fortunately, it looks like Sanderson has managed to pull it off.
The world of Roshar is a strange and tempestuous place. The seasons come and go in unpredictable ways, sometimes bringing with them great highstorms that are so powerful that even the plants of this world have evolved ways to hide from them. It is a world filled with spirits, ubiquitous beings called spren, which pop up for almost any reason. There are the spren of nature – windspren, firespren, rotspren, riverspren and the like. There are spren that seem attracted to humans, like alespren, gloryspren, anticipationspren and logicspren. No one really knows what they are or why they exist, but they are everywhere in this world.
The greatest kingdom in Roshar is that of Alethkar, which is barely a nation at all. A loosely bound alliance of ten high princes, the people of Alethkar are a hostile, ambitious, violent folk whose first and greatest love is battle and winning. Since the assassination of their king by the savage Parshendi, they have been involved in a seemingly endless siege of revenge on the great Shattered Plains.
The greatest warriors of Alethkar – or any nation – are those who wield the amazing shardblades. Swords that seem to condense out of mist, the shardblades can cut through anything, though if they cut through a person their effects are a little more subtle. A warrior armed with a shardblade, wearing shardplate armor, can use the incredible power of stormlight to achieve feats that no normal man could survive. Bound within glowing gemstones and restored by the howling winds of the highstorms, stormlight is Roshar’s greatest treasure.
Within this world we follow an ensemble cast which, while adhering to certain fantasy archetypes, still is made interesting and worth watching. Dalinar, the brother to the dead Alethi king, is searching for a way to hold together the weak nation that his brother formed. He has been learning of the old ways, the teachings of the vanished and reviled Knights Radiant, in the hopes that they can help hold his people together.
On the other end of Alethi society is Kaladin. Once a promising young surgeon, Kaladin joined the army in hopes of being able to fight on the Shattered Plains. He made it there, but not as a soldier – as a member of a bridge crew, one of the most expendable resources in the entire war. He became the lowest of the low, forced to find a reason to stay alive.
In a city far from the fighting, young Shallan Davar has fought to become the ward of the great heretic scholar Jasnah Kholin. While she has ostensibly come to learn from the woman, her true purpose is to steal Jasnah’s soulcaster, a device which, if used properly, can turn something into something else – stone into smoke, glass into blood, a man into fire. With this, Shallan hopes to revive her family’s flagging fortunes after the death of her father. What she discovers with Jasnah, of course, is far, far more.
Then there’s Szeth-son-son-Vallano, truthless of Shinovar. Poor, poor Szeth. From a race of people known for their peaceful and easygoing natures, Szeth is the most powerful assassin the world has seen. He can harness the stormlight to manipulate gravity, making him able to do the impossible while he uses his shardblade to cut down anyone in his way. In truth, though, Szeth wishes only one thing – to find someone who is good enough to kill him, and end his tormented life.
As you may have guessed, it’s a complicated tale, and Sanderson doesn’t hold to this whole “Give the reader time to get used to it” style of writing. If you’re not paying attention from the beginning, you are likely to be very, very lost within the first chapter or so. But once everything settles down, the story turns into a fast-paced, multi-leveled adventure that takes place in a world that is imaginative and fascinating.
The characters are enthralling, too, with many levels and – most importantly – flaws. While Kaladin is a brilliant organizer and leader, he has to fight continually against the despair of realizing what his life has come to. The easy thing would be to allow himself to die, but he knows he can’t let himself do that. Dalinar, plagued by visions of what might be Roshar’s ancient past, is fighting centuries of Alethi martial tradition by trying to bring the high princes together and end the war, rather than allowing it to go on. He’s pulled between the love of his nephew, the king, and his frustration that the king won’t be strong enough to do what needs doing. Shallan, who left her home with a clear purpose, is finding that nothing was what she thought it would be. Jasnah isn’t an evil woman, despite being a heretic, and her plan to steal the soulcaster becomes less and less certain the more she learns.
All of these characters are at the front edge of thousands of years of history, much of it shrouded in uncertainty – legendary Knights Radiant who fought Voidbringers before giving up their duty and turning against mankind. What actually happened is unknown, and perhaps won’t ever be known. But the effects of those events echo to the present day, causing problems which our characters will eventually have to deal with.
Perhaps the greatest compliment I can give to Sanderson is that when I finished the book, I immediately went back to the first page and started reading again. There are very few books that have inspired me thus, but this one did – especially after the cascading Big Reveals at the end, which explain a lot, and cast a new light on a whole lot more.
What’s more, I found myself wishing that I had access to an animation studio while I read the action scenes. Fights can be hard to do in written form – there’s a tendency to either describe too much or too little, and very often the reader gets slowed down trying to visualize what’s happening in the story. Sanderson is very, very good at writing action, something I first noticed in Towers of Midnight. Even when Szeth is hopping from floor to ceiling to wall, flinging people around like toys, the action was very clear in my mind’s eye, and it’s something I would love to see animated, if not done in live action.
And yes, to get back to why I hate being a fantasy reader sometimes, it is the first book in a series, which means I’m likely to be following it for quite some time. There’s nothing truly wrong with that – there are plenty of series that I’ve followed in my day – but I never look forward to the waiting game that you have to play as the author works on the next book. To be fair, though, Sanderson is busy right now finishing up my favorite series, The Wheel of Time, so I think I can give him a little latitude.
In any case, if you’re looking for a dense, fun new series to read, definitely pick this up. I plan on getting into some of his other books, mainly in order to have something to do while I wait for the next one of these.
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“The purpose of a storyteller is not to tell you how to think, but to give you questions to think upon. Too often, we forget that.”
– Hoid, The Way of Kings
Rusty Dalferes –
As one of the most popular fantasy series of the last few years, it should be no surprise that the first book in this series sucked me in from the very beginning. It’s epic in scope, well-developed, and hard to put down with all of the action and political machinations and, of course, magic. Huge recommendation for fans of high fantasy.
It’s nearly impossible to summarize a 1200+ page book in a few sentences, as there are so many characters and sub-plots that run through the story, but the main characters stay consistent in their frequency of appearance in the chapters. Kaladin is a young former soldier of prodigious talent with a spear, who we discover through the book was betrayed by his commander and sold into slavery as a “bridgeman,” a worker whose sole purpose is to carry portable bridges to span the chasms on the plains where his nation is fighting a war against a strange race of human-like beings; Kaladin is a natural leader with a painful past, but an ability to encourage men to unite and better themselves. Dalinar is a middle-aged highprince, part of the light-eyed nobility of his nation, brother to a king who had been murdered by an assassin a handful of years ago, sparking the current war, and uncle and principle advisor/general to the current king; Dalinar is plagued with strange visions of the past featuring the Knights Radiant, a near-mythological group of ancient knights with magical weapons, armor, and abilities, some of which have drifted down through history to be held by regular individuals in the current age. Adolin, Dalinar’s son, is an excellent solider and duelist, and at times a spoiled prince, who tends to rebel against his father’s need to stick to outdated Codes outlining the honorable conduct of a soldier. Shallan is a teenaged girl blossoming into womanhood, left with the weight of saving her declining house from total bankruptcy after her father had lost all fortune and the respect of his peers; Shallan has a brilliant mind, a quick wit, and a true talent for artistry that seems almost supernatural, and seeks to gain the trust of Jasnah, niece of Dalinar and sister of the king, who is a respected and erudite scholar, and just maybe a bit of a heretic against her own culture’s religion. The cast of characters is voluminous, but most chapters revolve around these main ones, as they seek to understand the world and their roles in it, and possibly avert a world-changing disaster they’ve just become aware is brewing.
The plot is epic in all meanings of the word: big, lengthy, involved, full of emotions and motivations and purpose, stretching to all points of the world that Sanderson has created out of whole cloth. It’s clear that the author has spent a great deal of effort planning the millenia of backstory that predates the setting of the novel, and that plan is detailed and rich. There are multiple independent systems (or sources) of magic, each with its own rules and users, some seeming to be created from nature, others seeming to be fabrications of men and women. The history of the novel’s world is deep, and trickles out in small bits throughout the long story, such that once the reader feels the dominant religion/mythology is finally understood, a new bit of ancient history is revealed that shows just how that religion has changed over time and may not be fully grasped by either the reader or the religion’s current adherents. The characters are very well-developed, each with his or her own motivations and reasons for being where he or she is in life. All told, the plot is thick and convoluted, but in such a good way that the reader feels each character is growing and developing, while the action and plot still move along at a quick pace. This is one of those books that is incredibly hard to put down, so you may find yourself up all night reading.
I really did struggle to find something to criticize in this book, but I did find a few things. While I know the author has his main characters trying to build a better world while battling their society’s own shortcomings, there is still a startling undercurrent of racism to the culture being described: the main opponents of the war on the Shattered Plains are a mostly dark-skinned race seen as primitive, whose more docile cousins are used by the other nations as slave labor and described as all looking alike, which is viewed as normal and almost necessary for the culture of the mostly light-skinned and -eyed, and supposedly more noble, race on the other side of the war. At one point, the author made the surprising use of the word “moolie,” which shocked me — its use was as a pejorative nickname for a mute, and not a racial slur, but still it’s a choice that the author made that perhaps wasn’t well thought out and struck me as unnecessarily offensive when he could have used literally any other existing or made-up word.
There was also the problem that I find all too pervasive in many fantasy books, a genre I love: there is a stark overuse of names using the letters A, K, L, and N (e.g., Kaladin, Dalinar, Adolin, Adalar, Elhokar, Navani, Jasnah, Shallan, etc.) — after a while, all the names seem to have come from a standard Boggle tileset with only a few letters or syllables to choose from. I know that this may be passed on as distinctive for the racial/linguistic setting of the novel, but its similarities to many other names in many other fantasy series leaves me with the taste that such overuse of certain syllables is derivative, rather than original. Also, a surprising number of these names, when combined with the character’s family name, follow a strange rule that Aleister Crowley (the occultist) set out that the best-sounding names are a dactyl (three syllables with emphasis on the first syllable) followed by a spondee (two syllables of equal emphasis), as if they were all created specifically for fitting in a certain poetic meter — I’m not sure if I’m impressed by this, or if I view this as another example of derivative names.
As for the writing mechanics, the book is incredibly clean. Sure, there are a few split infinitives and a handful of examples of “most everyone” or “most all,” but in a book more than 1200 pages long, the number of grammatical or syntactical errors is actually miniscule compared to a lot of books out there these days. I enjoy Sanderson’s writing style, which hints at both “high” fantasy writing and colloquial conversational banter. It’s nice to read such a long book without wanting to throw it against the wall every few pages because of an egregious writing error.
Overall, I’m excited to be into this series at long last. I understand it’s intended to be a 10-book series, and so far there are only 3 released (with a fourth maybe coming later this year?), so I fully expect to be enjoying this rich world Sanderson has built for another few years. A huge recommendation for anyone who even kind of likes high fantasy series.
Anon –
Absolutely out of this world.
I’m not so much worried about the destination when the journey is this good. Nuanced characters with depth. Action scenes with bite, that at the same time question morality.
Characters that leap off the page as all too human while like most of us as we grow, asking of ourselves hard questions.
On the surface an epic fantasy of magnificent scope.
Inhabited by people that may touch too close to home for some.
Not to be missed, for epic fantasy fans a must.
For those new to the genre, feel assured the development of characters miss not a single beat.
Neither a wasted moment nor a wasted page.
Tied up nicely with room to grow.
5 out of 5 stars.