Saturday, January 08, 2011

Book Review - The Name of the Wind

I am a fan of fairy tales - always have been.  Partly because I'm a dyed-in-the-wool romantic, and nothing makes a romantic's heart weep like the will-they-won't-they relationships found in fairy tales.  Partly because I was taught quite early in my childhood to always root for the underdog (Let's go, Mets!), and the heart of all fairy tales is the path of an underappreciated, misunderstood youngster who faces poverty, injury, loss, illness, and certain death in order to defeat evil.  Mostly because I am drawn with every fiber of my being to a good rhythm, and there isn't a genre within the realm of the written word that can influence the tide of one's heart-blood like a fairy tale. 

A well-written fairy tale makes you feel like you're sitting around a campfire that is just barely staving off the darkness and wilderness of night, going over the events of the day with people whom you can implicitly trust to have your back.  It speaks to your mind's ear in the voice of a road-weary gypsy story-teller.  It finds the right balance between the expected - the magic of threes, the foreshadowing, the black hat-/white hat elements - and the unexpected - the surprising twists that fling our hero(ine) into and out of trouble with such abandon.  Fairy tales leave you wrapped in a patchwork quilt of emotional aftermath: elation, melancholy, fury, and of course, hope.

There are a great number of fairy tales written specifically for adults.  One of the best that I have come across is The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss(Aside - I would guess that this book is officially considered a 'fantasy', but it felt very fairy tale to me.)  Imagine Harry Potter (exceptionally bright hero chafes under limitations and rules of youth) meets The Princess Bride (an innocent yet smoldering, star-crossed romance) meets DragonLance (feudal setting filled with burly peasants who gather at inns to discuss the nearby forest's potential for evil).  It has adventure and science and magic and beggars and mead and candles and headmasters and maidens and copper coins and lutes and jealousy and keys and a maybe-dragon.  In short, it is exactly the kind of story in which I want to immerse myself for hours upon hours at a time.

I have only a few complaints about this book.  The first is that it was a mere 722 pages long.  I devoured it in the course of several unintentionally late nights, and I am now slavering for more.  The second is that, in the fashion of many great fairy tale/fantasy stories, this book is really just a large part of the whole story.  It ends rather abruptly and leaves the many threads of the story all loose and dangly.  This would be fine, if not for my third complaint.  Thirdly, the second book in the story has yet to be released.  (According to his website, it is expected to come out in March of 2011.)

I am in agony.  If you have any affection for fairy tales or fantasy stories, you should get your hands on a copy as soon as you possibly can.  My misery needs some company.

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