Wait…what?
No, you’re not looking for Pat Sajak and Vanna White—that’s a different wheel. You’re looking for Robert Jordan—whose birthday we celebrate today—and Brandon Sanderson, who was drafted to finish Jordan’s epic fantasy series The Wheel of Time after Jordan’s death in 2007.
Jordan began writing the first book in the series, The Eye of the World, in 1984 and published it in 1990. He had conceived the series as a trilogy, but his editor, stating that Jordan had a tendency to run a little long, doubled it and gave him a contract for six books. Jordan eventually one-upped him and doubled the length again, aiming for a twelve-book series.
Just after finishing the eleventh book in the series, Jordan was diagnosed with terminal heart disease. While he fully intended to beat the odds, he also began preparing extensive notes so that another author could finish the series the way he wanted it to end if he was unable to complete it. After Jordan’s death in September of 2007, it was announced that that author would be fellow fantasy author and longtime fan Brandon Sanderson, who quickly realized that it was not one, but three books that he would be writing. Two of these have been released already.
As of today, The Wheel of Time spans thirteen books (plus a prequel), over eleven thousand pages, and over four million words! If you want to listen to the audiobooks instead, it’ll still take you about seventeen and a half days. You’d better get started right away—the final volume, A Memory of Light, is expected to add another 300,000 words to that total. You’ve still got some time, though; it’s not scheduled to be released until sometime in 2012. Come in and check them out—they’ll be on the fourth floor in the Science Fiction section.
If you’re interested in more about Robert Jordan’s life and work, you’ll want to check out the documentary The Wit of the Staircase: The Life and Work of Robert Jordan, which is scheduled to be released tomorrow.
| Jake Gauslow |
| Adult Services Librarian | |
| jgauslow@friscotexas.gov |










