The Dragon Reborn
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The Dragon Reborn (abbreviated as tDR by fans) is the third book of American author Robert Jordan's fantasy series The Wheel of Time. It was published by Tor Books and released on September 15, 1991.
Contents |
[edit] Plot summary
Original cover of The Dragon Reborn, showing Perrin Aybara looking upon Rand al'Thor reaching for Callandor | |
Author | Robert Jordan |
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Cover Artist | Darrell K. Sweet |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | The Wheel of Time |
Genre(s) | Fantasy |
Publisher | Tor Books (U.S.) |
Released | October 15, 1991 |
Media Type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 624 pp (U.S. hardback edition) |
ISBN | ISBN 0-312-85248-7 (US hardback edition) |
Preceded by | The Great Hunt |
Followed by | The Shadow Rising |
The Dragon Reborn consists of a prologue and 56 chapters.
[edit] From the Mountains of Mist to Tear
Rand al'Thor, having been declared the Dragon Reborn at the end of the previous book, The Great Hunt by Moiraine Damodred, secretly leaves the Shienaran camp in the Mountains of Mist to go to Tear to prove himself the Dragon Reborn. Along the way he is hunted by Darkhounds.
Moiraine, Lan Mandragoran, and Perrin Aybara chase after Rand. Along the way, they encounter a Hunter for the Horn, Faile Bashere, battle Darkhounds, and discover that the Forsaken Sammael rules in Illian.
[edit] From Tar Valon to Tear
Mat Cauthon is taken to Tar Valon by Verin Mathwin, Nynaeve al'Meara, Egwene al'Vere, and Elayne Trakand.
The Amyrlin Seat, Siuan Sanche, sets Nynaeve, Egwene, and Elayne to the task of hunting down the Black Ajah. A lead sends the trio traveling to Tear.
In the White Tower, through the use of a sa'angreal by Aes Sedai, Mat is permanently healed of the corruptive influence of the ruby dagger of Shadar Logoth.Once healed Mat defeats Galad Damodred and Gawyn Trakand at the same time in a practice sword battle using a quarter staff.This wins him enough money to gamble with and earn enough money to escape from Tar Valon. Mat finds Thom Merrilin in an inn, discovering that the gleeman is not dead as previously thought. The pair escape Tar Valon together and travel to Andor, where Mat learns of a plot by Queen Morgase's lover, Lord Gaebril (actually the Forsaken Rahvin in disguise), to murder Elayne, Daughter-Heir of Andor. Seeking to prevent that murder, Mat pursues the women, who are already headed for Tear.
[edit] Climax in the Stone of Tear
In Tear, Nynaeve, Egwene, and Elayne are betrayed by Juilin Sandar (who was under the influence of a form of Compulsion from Liandrin) to the Black Ajah and then imprisoned in the Stone of Tear, where they are rescued by Mat and a repentant Juilin. Faile falls into a Black Ajah trap meant for Moiraine, and Perrin risks his life in the World of Dreams to rescue her.
Rand and the Forsaken Be'lal duel in the Stone of Tear. Moiraine interrupts the battle and kills Be'lal with balefire. Ba'alzamon appears, disables Moiraine and attacks Rand. Rand draws Callandor, proving himself the Dragon Reborn, and, with it, kills Ba'alzamon. Rand thinks he has killed the Dark One, who he believes was Ba'alzamon, but Moiraine tells him that the Dark One is not human, and therefore cannot have been Ba'alzamon, because Ba'alzamon left behind a corpse. Moiraine instead deducts that the corpse is Ishamael, Chiefest among the Forsaken. The Aiel in Tear take the Stone and reveal themselves as the People of the Dragon.
[edit] Notes
Among The Wheel of Time books, The Dragon Reborn was unique at the time in that it only had a handful of chapters told from Rand al'Thor's point of view. Instead, nearly all chapters are told from the perspectives of his friends and allies as they race to catch up to him and help him. This is unusual: Rand is the main protagonist of the series and, as the Dragon Reborn, he is the title character of this book. However, although few chapters are told from his point of view, his presence in the plot is ubiquitous; all major characters in the book are either trying to help him or working against him. Later books evince a trend toward more "worldwide" points of view, with Rand receiving comparatively little focus, although his presence (or absence) is still widely noted.
[edit] External links
- Detailed summaries of each chapter
- More detailed summaries of each chapter from http://www.encyclopaedia-wot.org
- Review at http://www.booksnbytes.com/
- Dragon Reborn review at http://krisreviews.com
- ISBN 0-312-85248-7 (hardcover)
- ISBN 0-8125-1371-1 (paperback)
The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan | |
Prequel: New Spring |
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Characters | Places | Events | Concepts |