

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to South Korea.
The Way of Kings: Book One of the Stormlight Archive : Sanderson, Brandon: desertcart.ae: Books Review: Reading Habit - Good collection Review: What a great book - Loved it


| Best Sellers Rank | #28,232 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #25 in Military Fantasy #93 in Sword & Sorcery Fantasy #110 in War Fiction |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (7,820) |
| Dimensions | 10.54 x 4.95 x 17.15 cm |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 0765365278 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0765365279 |
| Item weight | 567 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 1280 pages |
| Publication date | 24 May 2011 |
| Publisher | Tor Books |
S**B
Reading Habit
Good collection
S**O
What a great book
Loved it
A**L
perfect
👍👍
H**N
Książka przyszła szybko i w idealnym stanie, lepszym niż nawet się spodziewałem!
D**7
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)
M**K
R**D
Received my package a lot sooner than a thought. Extremely happy and exactly what i wanted.
B**H
It's been a long time since I've enjoyed a good epic fantasy. The operative word being "enjoyed." The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson may have been over 1,000 pages long, but it didn't read like it. He's one of my favorite authors - I've read Elantris 7 or 8 times by itself - and I'd been looking forward to this book for some time. The main storyline revolves around the war sparked when the black-and-red-skinned Parshendi assassinated the Alethi King. Ten years after the war began, it has devolved into a competition between the Alethi princes for the gemstone hearts of the giant crustacean-like monsters who inhabit the battlefield. Only one of the princes, the Brightlord Dalinar Kholin, sees a problem with this, but his nightmarish visions of the end of the world have alienated him from his peers and made his judgment suspect. The plot was incredible complex, mostly following the stories of several main characters: a former soldier turned slave, forced to labor under the infamous "bridge crews" who are essentially human shields to protect the real warriors from enemy arrows. A thief masquerading as a scholar to steal a priceless magical artifact and save her family. A paranoid young king who sees assassination plots in even his most trusted of advisors. An enslaved assassin with the ability to manipulate the forces of gravity who despises the murderous acts his masters force him to commit. A spren - largely unintelligent, fairy-like creatures attuned to very specific elements like pain, wind, or glory - who is becoming sentient as the human she is fixated with grows back his soul. All the worldbuilding is detailed and very well done, but it does make for a somewhat slow start. So if you mean to dive into it, bring your patience.There was a good amount of repetition throughout the book; for example, I lost count of how many times Sanderson repeated that the Parshendi were not the same creatures as the enslaved parshmen, even though they looked exactly alike. I kept waiting for that to become relevant, but it didn't - at least in this book. There isn't much action for it being 1,000 pages long, and, as it is apparently the first novel in an anticipated 10-novel-long series, nothing is really wrapped up by the end. It's a thousand pages long, but at the end you feel like nothing's happened yet. That being said, it was brilliantly written and engaging, I cared about all of the characters, and it read very quickly despite its length. I'm definitely going to read the next one even if it's 2,000 pages. The world itself was staggering in scope but not so unfamiliar that it alienated the reader; humans are humans and dogs are dogs, although most other life forms seem to be giant crustaceans (which is actually kinda cool; the last time I encountered any kind of giant crustacean was in Stephen King's The Drawing of the Three). Each nation was well-crafted and explored, and each vastly different that the last. One nation is plagued by 'Highstorms' so powerful that they whip building-sized boulders through the air likfe confetti and the plants themselves have learned how to move out of the way. Another is filled with creatures who consider all forms of stone holy. I could go on for a long, long time about this book. But if you enjoy epic fantasy, you'll enjoy this. I really liked it, and I'll probably read it again just before the next book comes out.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago