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Bon, depuis Winter's Heart, tous les romans de La Roue du Temps ont eu droit à leur propre sujet, en dehors du fuseau global sur le cycle dans son ensemble.
Je ne vois pas pourquoi il n'en irait pas de même avec celui-ci, sachant que le sujet "ultime tome" sera toujours là pour ce qui touche à la promo/à l'actualité des deux suivants. 
Mais pour ce qui est du contenu... En attendant de recevoir mon exemplaire, attention aux spoilers en rafales !
Tor a écrit:
Spoiler:
Happy drop date, WOT fans!
Today marks the official U.S. release of the long-awaited twelfth novel in the Wheel of Time series, The Gathering Storm—the finest merchandise this side of the river Jordan, on sale today! Come on down, heh heh.
But you probably knew that. About time, eh?
Consequently, as promised, I have here my second and infinitely more spoiler-laden review of the book. This will also, coincidentally, provide you with a place on Tor.com to discuss your own spoilery thoughts and reactions to The Gathering Storm, because we love you and we want you to be happy.
So have at, but remember: please confine all spoilers for the new book to this post. There are many readers out there who for whatever reason are not able to obtain and read the novel on the day of release, so out of courtesy to them, please keep the spoilers concentrated in one easily-avoidable spot, mmkay? Thanks, y’all are rockalicious.
Also, this is obvious, but just for the record: There are GIANT, MASSIVE, BOOK-DESTROYING SPOILERS for The Gathering Storm under the cut. And you can bet that whatever I don’t spoil in the post, will get spoiled in the comments. Read at your own risk.
For what it’s worth, I strongly advise WOT readers to avoid this post until they have read the book. I know some of y’all have low willpower on this score, but I’m seriously telling you that you will miss out if you ruin the ending (and the middle, and all the other parts) for yourself before reading the actual book. Also, since I’m not going to be explicating the details of every last event I bring up, if you haven’t read the book first, some of the things I’m going to say may not make sense to you anyway, which is yet another reason to wait.
As someone with a terminal allergy to spoilers before the fact, that’s just my opinion, of course, and I ain’t your mama, but presumably you’re here because you semi-care about my opinions, so there you have one.
So, there’s all that. For those of you looking for a totally spoiler-free and yet also somehow-massively-verbose review of The Gathering Storm, go here. Honor to serve and alla that.
And now, having gotten all warnings, caveats, and stern remonstrances out of the way, click though to get to the meat. IF YOU DARE.
Just so you know, this is not going to be an exhaustive dissection of the book. For one thing, that would take too damn long, and second, I’m going to eventually be doing a very detailed recap of The Gathering Storm (henceforth abbreviated TGS) anyway, just like all the other books, so I have to save some gems of wisdom here.
*deep breath* Hokay. So, I guess the best way to go about this is to basically expand upon my little “list of scenes that made me react in some way” from the non-spoilered review, right? Right. It should be noted that several scenes fit several categories, so there will be some repetition in here.
It should also be noted that I’ve actually only done one complete read-through of TGS thus far, and that at Ludicrous Speed, so some of my memories have of necessity gone to plaid. I’m working on a second (much slower) read-through as I write this, but time constraints being what they are, I may not get to everything before this has to go up. We Shall See.
Anyway! The scenes. In the order I deem most coherent(ish):
Scene of partial *headdesk*ing: Was actually more of a “*headde*- wait. DAMMIT”, because it was when Cadsuane had her Moment of Awesome in besting Semirhage – and she did it with spanking.
*wibble*
That was ON PURPOSE, WASN’T IT, TEAM JORDAN. It’s a plot, I tell you. A PLOT AGAINST ME. I’m going to go curl up with a blankie now.
(Over-inflated sense of importance? Moi?)
Scenes that made me go “Aww”: When Siuan (finally!) bonded Bryne, and later on when he asked her to marry him. Aww. Their interaction in general in TGS was just sweet, which is something I don’t get to say too often about romantic relationships in WOT. Plus, one long-hanging prophecy down, whoo!
(As a side note, those Seanchan Black Ops kamikaze guys (I forget what they were called) really didn’t live up to their hype, did they?)
Scene that managed to profoundly irritate me at the exact same time I was going “HELLS, YES”: The (second) dinner scene in the Tower. Even as I was cheering Egwene’s verbal excoriation of Elaida, for it was unquestionably a Smackdown of Eloquent Awesomeness, I found it extremely difficult to believe Elaida wouldn’t have shut her up before she got more than two sentences into it. Plus, I have issues with Elaida’s character derailment, which sort of precedes TGS but really goes nuts here. I mean, she was always an incompetent martinet with delusions of grandeur, but in TGS (and especially in this scene) she’s practically twirling her moustaches and tying damsels to railroad tracks. Enh.
“Wait, what?” scenes: a number of them, really, including the manner in which Elaida was disposed of – not so much how she went (which was only appropriate, all things considered), but that we didn’t get to see her in the battle up to that point, at all. I don’t know, it was just kind of abrupt and “Oh, hey, we forgot all about her! Whoops, bye!” I just felt that as such a major antagonist, she sort of deserved a more detailed exit.
That being said, I devoutly hope that we will never ever see her again. If any part of Book 13 is concerned with mounting a rescue for her I may have to throw a tantrum.
Another “wait, what?” scene was the death of Sheriam. Though the scene in which she was exposed as Black Ajah was beyond awesome, I was like “That’s how Min’s viewing is fulfilled? Really?” I can’t decide if the viewing thing was clever or cheap, actually; it could really go either way. Of course, I may be a bit personally biased, as that whole thing torpedoed one of my favorite pet theories, that Sheriam was going to go down in a blaze of glory taking out Halima. Crap, I really liked that theory. Oh, well.
(Also, what, no thirteen on thirteen trick? Is that EVER going to come up? And Sheriam would have been so appropriate thematically for it! Man...)
And the big “wait, WHAT?” thing (but in a good way) was Rand channeling the True Power to escape Semirhage. Holy jumping Jehoshaphat, but I sure as hell never saw that coming. Not to mention, I believe the applicable category here is Very, Very Bad Things. Ai yi yi. Nothing Good Can Come Of This, y’all.
That scene is also the one that upset me so much I had to walk away for a while. This is my schizophrenic scene reaction, because while it was probably one of the most tension-filled and dramatic (i.e., well-done) scenes in the book, possibly in the series (certainly in the latter half of the series), I can’t say that I loved it. In fact I hated it, because it was so frickin’ terrible for Rand and Min. But you see the distinction: I didn’t hate it because it was awfully written, I hated it because it was as exactly as awful as it was supposed to be. So it was a great scene, but I hated it. Does that make any sense?
Speaking of which, Rand’s entire plot arc in TGS contains something of that schizoid reaction for me. I believe I am on record somewhere stating that I thought TPOD (Book 8, The Path of Daggers) marked Rand’s low point (both emotionally and in terms of my liking for the character); well, I was so, so very wrong, you guys. THIS was Rand’s low point, on both counts, and I was frankly shocked at what a terribly low low it was.
I’m not saying that it wasn’t necessary to have happened, storywise; if you view Rand as being the equivalent of an alcoholic (or anyone locked into a downward spiral of self-destructive behavior) who has to hit bottom before he can begin to climb back up again, it was totally necessary. And I’m not saying Rand didn’t have valid excuses either, like, oh, I dunno, the Head Evil Dude In Charge LEAKING INTO HIS BRAIN, but knowing all that did not make it any easier to read. I honestly kind of loathed Rand through 95% of his screen time, which, yeah, I’m really not happy to be made to dislike a protagonist so strongly. (In case you can’t tell, in general I am not a fan of antiheroes.)
Especially a character I had previously liked so much; Rand may not ever have been my absolute favorite character in WOT, but TPOD aside he was nearly always in the top five, and usually the top three. So while I’m sure his arc was probably very well done in a technical sense, I have a difficult time gaining enough objective space from my own extremely negative reaction in order to admit that.
This is what I was referring to as possible risks on Brandon’s part. Though obviously I know that Jordan outlined what was to happen in more than just a general sense, somehow the extremity of the depths to which Rand is sunk in TGS rings more to me of Sanderson’s demonstrated willingness to push the fantasy trope envelope (i.e. how horrible can we make the protagonist/hero/Messiah figure before he is riiight on the edge of irredeemable?) than Jordan’s more traditional adherence to, er, tradition.
Of course, I don’t know this is true for sure; I’m just guessing. Maybe this is exactly what Jordan planned all along and I have no idea what I’m talking about. But that’s the feeling I get, so there you have it.
(Aaand I now have a mental picture of Brandon chanting “How low! Can you go!” My brain, ladies and gentlemen.)
Whichever the case, Rand is the cause of both times I wanted to hurl the book across the room: once when he was reunited with Hurin, and when he finally reunited with (and then almost killed) his father Tam. (And a near third, when he offhandedly commented to Nynaeve that Lan’s death would “serve him well” or some such UTTER MORIDIN-LEAKING BULLSHIT. Gah.) Oh my God but I wanted to beat Rand senseless during these two scenes – actually more over the Hurin thing than Tam. Tam at least was sort of trying to provoke a reaction from Rand (if not remotely the one he got), and plus Rand was actually doing pretty okay with Tam – right up to where it all went to shit of course – but all poor adorable Hurin wanted was a kind word from “Lord Rand”. He was all so excited! And instead he got treated like dirt. Two, count ‘em TWO of the reunions I had been wishing and hoping for, and that’s how they go? GRRRRRR LEIGH SMASH.
Again, this is not me disparaging the scenes on their merits, so much as me expressing my feelings about what actually happened. Rand had better apologize to Hurin in the next book, is all I’m saying. Fortunately it looks like he might actually be in a headspace to do so, thanks to the ending.
And speaking of headspace: HAHAHAHAHA Lews Therin is gone. And in a way that STILL doesn’t definitively settle the “real or not real” question!!
Heh. Hah. HAH. HEE HOO HAH HAHAHA HAAAAAAH. I cannot figure out how I feel about that whole scene in general, but I tell you I chortled for like five minutes over the Lews Therin thing. I win again, Lews Therin! Except you don’t care, because you’re not here! HAH hee hee. You may all feel free to hate me now. Heh.
As to the end at large: I... really don’t know, you guys. I have to read it again. If I get to it before this goes up I may expand upon this, but otherwise I’ll let you guys argue about it, because I am well and truly divided. On the one hand I was like “THANK YOU JESUS, maybe Rand can stop being an asshole and I can like him again”, and on the other I was... feeling a bit anticlimactic about it all. I know it’s kind of insane to call a scene where basically Rand talks himself off the ledge of destroying the frickin’ world “anticlimactic”, but I think the operative word there is “talk”. I don’t know if this is unfair of me or not. Like I said, I’ll have to read it again.
Speaking of scenes that left me divided (not to mention stunned speechless): WHAT THE HELL, RAND, with the balefiring of an entire city. Or city-like compound, whatever. My reaction was seriously just, “Uh. So... wow, that... happened.” By all rights this should have infuriated me far more than the Hurin thing or the Tam thing, but I was just so shocked by it, I couldn’t even summon up any book-throwingness. Jeez.
Watch, I bet Graendal wasn’t even there, you guys. Yes, I know, the Compulsion on Whatshisname was gone, but you know the rules: we didn’t see a body! And on the one hand, if she wasn’t there, that makes what Rand did just that much worse; but on the other, if she was there, well, damn, because that means Graendal got an even lamer exit than Elaida did. We didn’t even get to see her! My reaction, she is torn!
Um, what else. Oh, right, the big one: my duly appointed Awesomely Awesome Scene of Awesomeness.
Which would be – Dah dah-dah DAH! – Verin’s Last Hour.
I’m sorry, I meant Verin’s Last Hour OF AWESOME.
I mean, come ON. That was frickin’ gorgeous, y’all. Seal, clapping like a. Oh, yeah.
I am so freaking vindicated in my love for Verin, you guys. For Indeed she did show herself to be the veritable Zen Master of Sneakiness to the very end, with the culmination of her Seventy-Year Project of Tying Up Like Fifty Plotlines In Twenty Pages. I ask you, what other WOT character has done so much for one fandom? NONE, that’s who, thank you, goodbye. Not to mention, she fooled EVERYONE – and that includes the readership at large!
Sure sure, there have always been those who believed she was Black, and I’m sure there were even a few out there who hit upon the exact Sidney Bristow Double Agent formula here (though now I’m picturing Verin in an electric blue rubber minidress, which is all kinds of wrong, and now you are too. You’re welcome), but I’m in a fair ex-WOTFAQ-editing position to say that the vast majority of the fandom never hit upon it. For we were most skillfully misled, you guys.
Most readers (including me) were of the opinion that she was not Black, but had removed the First Oath so that she could lie, with various iterations of Purple Ajah/Second Foundation Ajah/Very Old Verin Theory curlicues tacked on for effect. Read the FAQ article if you don’t believe me; the very fact that her article isn’t even in the “Black or not?” section speaks volumes.
We were so close to being right, but we weren’t, y’all. Not exactly. Because Verin (and Jordan) were just that sneaky. Too. Frickin. Brilliant. I sigh contentedly in their general direction!
So, yeah, I think it’s safe to say I hearted that scene. I will love it and hug it and squeeze it and call it George, oh yes. And I’ll fight any one of youse wiseguys what says different, see? Putemup, putemup!
(Okay, not really, because that means I would have to fight Jason Denzel, who I already know disagrees with me over which TGS Scene is Top Most Awesome. And, he’s a pretty nice guy, who also owns a fair amount of medieval weaponry, so I’ll let it go. JUST THIS ONCE.)
Incidentally, this is also one of the two scenes that made me choke up. Verin’s death was about as awesome a WOT character death as can well be imagined (certainly one of the most useful in, like, ever), but that made it even more upsetting that she had to go. I won’t lie, I had to get a tissue.
The other scene that made me tear up was, shockingly, the little vigil Faile and Co. held for their erstwhile protectors/propositioners while being held by the Shaido. Considering my virulent hatred for that entire plotline, getting mushy over Rolan et al was about the last damn thing I would have expected, and yet there I was. I don’t know, maybe it’s just that I’m more sensitized to expressions of grief than I used to be. Growing up sucks, sometimes.
Oh, yeah, which reminds me: Mat and Perrin were in this book.
And I can’t let a spoilerriffic review of TGS end without bringing up the Plot Arc of Total Awesomeness, only slightly eclipsed by Verin’s Hour of Awesome (which was really part of the arc anyway, so), which is of course the entire Battle for the White Tower.
Not just the actual battle part with the Seanchan, though that of course was beautifully done (excepting the lack of Elaida, natch), but the entire campaign Egwene wages from within to reunite the Tower, bring Elaida down, and finally at long-goddamn-last effect a Black Ajah Purge. Or, to put it another way, the awesomeness is encompassed by every single second Egwene is on screen. Basically, she rocked from start to finish, and as of this moment is in firm first place as my favorite (living) WOT character.
Our Ooh! Ooh! Girl is all grown up, y’all. I’m so proud! *sniffle*
And thank God she was there, y’all, because if the whole of TGS had been Mat and Perrin being irrelevant and Gawyn being an idiot and Rand being a giant city-balefiring jerk, I really would have thrown the book through the wall. On its merits, even.
But fortunately Team Jordan is savvy enough to figure out that we must leaven the sourness of bottom-hitting-avec-vague-promise-of-future triumph with the sweetness of actual triumph, and thus I am sated. At least until Book 13! In which Rand had better gain back his awesome, zallumsane.
Aaaand I’m spent. I know there’s tons I didn’t even get to, and I ended on kind of a weird note, but the madness must stop somewhere, and I’m sure you guys will be more than happy to lambaste my wrongness fill in the gaps in the comments.
(That’s how “lambaste” is spelled? Really? Huh.)
Anyway, we presume you have enjoyed your ride on TGS Spoiler Mountain, as we see you have managed to refrain from blowing up the planet theme park planet at the summit. Good on ya, Guvnor! Remain seated, please (Permanecer sentados, por favor) until the ride comes to a full stop. Then go forth, laugh, be fruitful, and multiply the comments! Peace out, G!
Leigh Butler is a writer and blogger for Tor.com, where she *headdesks* frequently for the amusement and edification of others, and also conducts a Re-read of the Wheel of Time series, which is currently completed through Book Six, Lord of Chaos. She currently lives in New York City, which is only appropriate.
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Ca c'est du spoiler 
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Merci Gillo, je ne viendrai sans doute pas parcourir ce sujet très souvent, parce que tout le monde ne sera pas aussi prudent que toi
(n'est-ce pas les affreux qui se sont lachés sur le sujet De Cape et de Croc
)
mais il est bon de savoir que certains sont proches du Graal
et pourront en parler entre eux
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J'espère bien que si, la bannière spoilers n'est pas pour les chiens, sans vouloir relancer un vieux débat. 
A priori, j'ai fait le tour des premières critiques qu'on trouve sur le net, dont celle de notre ami Pat,
et elles tendent généralement vers le positif, sans pour autant crier au chef d'œuvre. 
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Bon, j'ai mis les pattes sur le book (sans lancer de débat je trouve dommageable de ne pas avoir de suite une version "poche"... mais bon) et j'ai commencer a lire. Sans vouloir lancer de débat, j'ai trouvé le prologue (c'est tout ce que j'ai lu pour le moment) très fidèle au style "Jordan". Après, vu comment commence le prologue, la suite peut être très bonne voire excellente.
Pas de spoil pour le moment, juste 2-3 appréciations (mais je les caches comme ça tout le monde est content
):
Spoiler:
1) Rand est devenu un vrai "badass" ou c'est moi?
2) Moridin et ses complots sente trés bon. Graendal quoi...
3) Faile gagne 10000pt de charisme avec 3 phrases... C'est fort.
Voila
.
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Sans vouloir lancer de débat, j'ai trouvé le prologue (c'est tout ce que j'ai lu pour le moment) très fidèle au style "Jordan"
Sauf erreur de ma part, il me semble avoir lu que le prologue est entièrement de Jordan.
Sinon qu'un mot à dire Moridin : grrrr !
Personne ne devrait avoir le droit de le commencer avant moi ! Surtout qu'Amazon m'annonce une date de réception au 10 novembre.
Je crois que je vais dorénavant éviter le sujet pour la frustration qu'il peut engendrer et également les éventuels spoilers.
Comme je ne suis pas rancunière, je vous souhaite une très bonne lecture à tous 
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Le prologue est entièrement de RJ.
Pour le reste, c'est bien, mais il y a quand même pas mal de lacunes. TGS a beaucoup en commun avec WH. . .
Et le Mat que l'on aimait est bel et bien mort. Sanderson est incapable de l'écrire. . .
Pour le reste, et bien c'est à vous de voir!
Patrick
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pat5150 a écrit:
Et le Mat que l'on aimait est bel et bien mort. Sanderson est incapable de l'écrire. . .
Quoi?!?
La c'est le drame! Le reste a interret à être bien parceque dans KoD Mat est quand même un gros morceau, et largement impliqué dans le fait que cet opus est meilleur (a mon gout
) que les précédents!
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pat5150 a écrit:
Le prologue est entièrement de RJ.
Pour le reste, c'est bien, mais il y a quand même pas mal de lacunes. TGS a beaucoup en commun avec WH. . .
Et le Mat que l'on aimait est bel et bien mort. Sanderson est incapable de l'écrire. . .:(
Pour le reste, et bien c'est à vous de voir!
Patrick
Je me permettrais une petite remarque. Matt est le perso le plus "compliqué" a écrite. Tant par sa "personnalité" que par ses maniérismes. De la à dire que Matt est "mort" c'est un peu tendancieux non :p .
De plus de manière plus général (pas pour toi Pat) je voudrais quand même "défendre" BS. Parce que c'est bien gentil de critiquer le livre, mais faut pas oublier que il finis une saga comprenant deja 11 livres. Donc des perso' deja "mature", ayant deja une personnalité ,ect...
Je prend le livre pour ce qu'il est, et du peut que j'en ai lu, il est en tout point comparable aux autres livres de la série.
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pat5150 a écrit:
Le prologue est entièrement de RJ.
Pour le reste, c'est bien, mais il y a quand même pas mal de lacunes. TGS a beaucoup en commun avec WH. . .
Et le Mat que l'on aimait est bel et bien mort. Sanderson est incapable de l'écrire. . .
Pour le reste, et bien c'est à vous de voir!
Patrick
Nooooooooooooooooon!!!
C'est mon personnage préféré.Je lis WOT presque que pour lui...
Au moins je suis prévenu.De toute manière, je doute que Sanderson salope la série,il a suffisamment de talent pour faire vivre cet univers.
Merci Gillo, je ne viendrai sans doute pas parcourir ce sujet très souvent, parce que tout le monde ne sera pas aussi prudent que toi smile (n'est-ce pas les affreux qui se sont lachés sur le sujet De Cape et de Croc angry )
Oui, merci pour un vrai spoil avec les bannières qui vont bien. J'avoue être marqué par l'épisode Cape et de Croc.
Dernière modification par Hisoka (29/10/2009 12:53:46)
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Infos sorties de la rencontre entre l'auteur et des fans préparant une séance de dédicaces :
Dragonmount a écrit:
Spoiler:
Some things we talk about at dinner: (I didn’t take proper notes but I believe the 4th Age Podcaster of our group was recording it so you can probably hear an edited version there)
1. Brandon refuses to confirm or deny that the One Power was used to kill Asmodean. He also mentions a Slayer scene deleted from the Shadow Rising which would have shown more about Slayer’s powers.
2. If he could pick a nationality from the Wheel of Time world, he’d belong to Malkier because he loves the lost kingdom story. He thinks all the Borderlands are cool, but would definitely NOT be a Saldaean.
3. He says he’d have to consult the notes to make sure, but he believes women can become “wolf-sisters.” We just haven’t seen any.
4. His favorite chapters to write from TGS were the concluding chapter and also chapter 22.
He also repeated things that he’s said elsewhere, like that Robert Jordan left extensive notes, though he does have the power from Harriet to override them for the interests of the story. Robert Jordan especially left a lot of specific notes as to who lived and who died in Tarmon Gaidin, and he wasn’t going to change any of that. So is there going to be a lot of deaths? The answer, of course, is RAFO.
I don’t remember if he said this during dinner or during the signings or both, but he was considering doing the outrigger and prequel novels, but that the decision was ultimately Harriet’s. Jordan left notes for that as well, especially the other prequels. If Brandon writes the other books, it will be after a pause at the end of the series. He definitely doesn’t want it to become ‘the McWheel of Time.’
He also said that the series’ ending puts certain threads in perspective. For example, Morgase, my least favorite character, apparently turns out to be less annoying than she appears. Also, fans will better be able to understand the importance of some of the lesser- liked books, like Crossroads of Twilight.
Puis pendant la séance elle-même, avec les lecteurs :
Spoiler:
Questions during Live Feed
Question: Will Rand eventually be united with his father Tam?
Answer: RAFO
Question: Would the True Source beat the True Power?
Answer: Okay. My gut instinct is going to say, yes. My gut instinct says yes, but that is not coming from the notes. If I was actually going to have to write it out I would have to go to Charleston and I would have to look in the notes but from what I’ve read I’d say yes. But that is not canon because I’m not remembering specifically, does that make sense? I’ll tell you if it’s canon or it isn’t, but that one is just my instinct.
Question: How extensive were RJ’s notes about Lews Therin?
Answer: His notes about Lews Therin, I would say are about middle extensive, comparatively of different things that he has notes on. Les than some, more than others. They were extensive enough that I know enough things you don’t know to make me excited, but not so extensive that you know, you are ever going to see a book about Lews Therin or anything like that.
Question: As a followup question, are the notes about Lews Therin the same notes about the voice of Lews Therin’s?
Answer: You know I think that’s enough of a spoiler because there is still confusion or not confusion, wondering from people whether or not Lews Therin is the voice, I mean, of course Semirhage said that it is… Robert Jordan never really made that explicit himself. What I think and what you think may be different and so we’ll just leave it. There are things about this in the book.
Question: What was your reaction when you finished The Gathering Storm?
Answer: It was an enormous sigh of relief, followed by a, how shoudl I say it, a curiousity what kinds of screams I would get when people read the last chapter of the book.
Question: When will the book be released in New Zealand and South Africa?
Answer: New Zealand and South Africa I think are both part of the World English market which is the UK publishers job to get books shipped there. So it all depends on how quickly the UK publisher gets their edition out and how quickly they can get to shipping them. Austrailia should be very soon, how ever long it takes them, but it’s not going to be a long time because I thought UK was releasing today. Alright? And South Africa should be the same.
Question (Katie): Why did you choose to be so open with your writing process?
Answer: It’s because when I was trying to break into this business and learn to be a writer, the whole process seemed opaque to me. And I think that’s because I was doing it before the era of the Internet really hit and now that we have this opportunity I figure I’ll throw it out there and maybe what I’m talking about will really help other writers who are aspiring. And also on the other end of it, it gets a little frustrating waiting for books to come out and you never know what’s going to happen and you never know what’s going on. I figure with the Internet we have such a great opportunity to keep people in the loop to let people know what’s going on. We don’t have to be so shadowed anymore, so I want to make as best use of it as I can.
Question (Katie): If you could choose an Ajah, which Ajah would you choose?
Answer: If there were Ajahs for guys, I would definitely be a Brown.
Question: Do you have any books coming out between the next two Wheel of Time books?
Answer: I have been working very hard on a book called “The Way of Kings” for about ten years now. It is the beginning of a large epic and I’ve always wanted to write one. I think it’s almost ready. If the revisions work it will come out next fall. I don’t think I will have one the year after that because the Wheel of Time is first priority. So, either between this one and the next one or between “The Towers of Midnight” and “A Memory of Light”.
Question: Since you are Brown Ajah, will we learn more about the 12 (13) Depositories in the White Tower?
Answer: They are mentioned in “The Gathering Storm”.
Question (Luke): Has anyone ever had the same ability as Min? And do you know how it is caused or how the ability works?
Answer: The ability works quite explicitly from her being able to see glimmers in the Pattern. She is seeing what is being woven in the future and that is how most of the Foretelling powers work. He was actually pretty explicit in the notes about that. Though some of them of course, there are ones that are strict, meaning they see the Pattern, some of them you see how the Pattern might be. She sees the Pattern as it will be. Has anyone ever had it before? Yeah, from what I read it never said it explicitly, but it implied that this is a power that could exist again and has existed before, but there are no lists of anyone that’s had it before. It’s definitely open that somebody could have had it before, but he doesn’t actually say specificially.
Question: How much writing do you think you’ll get done during the Tour?
Answer: I bought a brand new Netbook just yesterday…the goal being to do writing on the plane rides and in the car while the driver is driving me around. How much do I think I’ll get done? My goal is to get up to about 90%…I’m not sure if I’ll make that…we’ll see…get to the 90%. What am I at right now? 70? (pause while he signs a book) Okay, let’s not say 90%, I just added that up. Let’s say 80%. Thirty thousand words is going to be tough to get. As I was thinking about that, wait a minute, fifty thousand words is a good month on its own, so if on tour I get half that I’m going to be happy.
Question (Claire): Will we see the Land of Madmen in any of the last books?
Answer: RAFO.
Question (Susan): Will you be coming to Canada? Will any previously unknown Black Ajah members be revealed?
Answer: I have spoken with my Canadian publisher and they have offered to send me on a tour. We are looking at having me go sometime next summer? I will yes that. Yes there will be Black Ajah members revealed in The Gathering Storm.
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Juste une question c'est quoi RAFO?
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Merci!!!
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RAFO : le rêve des fans de GRR Martin

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Et ça y est le supplice continue... "Nous regrettons de vous informer d'un délai supplémentaire pour votre commande"
J'espère que ca ne sera pas trop long! Avec tout les spoilers ci-dessus que je ne peux pas lire mais qui attirent follement ma souris.
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+1 pareil ce matin! Histoire de bien commencer la journée!
Enfin peut être que j'aurais le temps de finir ma relecture de KoD comme ça!
(positivons!
)
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oTkOIGFkDAA
Vidéos 2-6, séries de questions/réponses avec les fans.
Bon, évidemment, c'est en anglais.
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Il n'y a pas de mal à être un petit peu mesquin. 
http://www.elbakin.net/fantasy/news/109 … -en-fleche
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Ah non mais on ne PEUT PAS comparer avec Goodkind, c'est un sacrilège!!! En tout cas bien contente des résultats de ce tome, c'est pas en France qu'un livre de fantasy se hisserait à la première place! Bon à part HP mais bon, est-ce vraiment comparable là aussi ?
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