Thursday, 16 April 2015

Towers of Midnight - Trollocs a-plenty!

Towers of Midnight, by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson is the penultimate book (and number 13) in The Wheel of Time fantasy series. There is, at long last, real pace and a great sense of urgency running throughout this part, something which had been lacking in books 7-11. Everything and everyone is being pulled together in readiness for The Last Battle ... which will determine the fate of the entire world. The Dragon Reborn - Rand Al'Thor - has finally defeated his inner demons, and has flowered into a calm, but determined, leader. His power is truly awesome, but he is no longer in danger of being distracted or tempted away from his main goal which is to defeat The Dark One, once and for all, and free the world of such evil. Most of the world is barren, food is scarce and mostly rotten, the weather is awful ... except for when Rand appears - then the sun shines and the food tastes good once again, and people start to hope once more. However, the grizzly Trollocs - the endlessly vicious creatures sent to cause suffering and mayhem throughout the land - are more widespread and numerous than ever. Desperate skirmishes are taking place everywhere to try and prevent them from over-running the entire world. And even Rand cannot defeat such hordes by himself. And so, we find that all those companions who were with him at the very beginning - Mattrim, Perrin, Egwene and Elayne - start to gravitate towards the same place, at the same time. And, amazingly, Moraine, the Aes Sedai who first recognised Rand and his friends for what they are, is found alive and is bravely rescued from captivity. She will no doubt have a vital part to play in the denoument. It's not going to be plain sailing, there is still disagreement with Rand about how to tackle The Last Battle, and there are powerful people still determined to try and manipulate him for their own gain. Despite this, nearly all the pieces are in place for what I'm really hoping is going to be a cracking finish to this epic of all epics!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 861 print pages.
Price I paid: Free, borrowed from local library.
Formats available: print; audio download; audio CD; ebook.

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