Elantris

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Elantris

Cover of Elantris, Brandon Sanderson's first novel.
Author Brandon Sanderson
Cover artist Stephan Martinière
Country United States
Language English
Genre Fantasy novel
Publisher Tor Books
Publication date
April 21, 2005 (first edition, hardback)
May 30, 2006 (first edition, paperback)
Media type Print (Hardback)
Print Mass market paperback
Pages 496 pp (first edition, hardback)
656 pp (first edition, paperback)
ISBN ISBN 0-7653-1177-1 (first edition, hardback)
ISBN 0-7653-5037-8 (first edition, paperback)
OCLC 57391959
Dewey Decimal 813/.6 22
LC Class PS3619.A533 E43 2005

Elantris is a stand-alone fantasy novel written by American author Brandon Sanderson. It was first published in April 2005 by Tor Books and is significant as Sanderson's first widely released book.

The book is named after the ruined city, whose "cursed" inhabitants are the focus of the book's plot. Elantris has also been licensed for localized release in Russia, France, Germany, Thailand, Poland, Netherlands, Brazil and at least five other markets. The book gained generally positive reviews.[1][2][3][4][5]

Plot summary

The book focuses on three principal characters whose stories intertwine. Much of the book occurs in groupings of three chapters, one for each of the three main characters.

  • Raoden, the prince of Arelon, is transformed into an Elantrian at the beginning of the book. Elantrians look different than before the transformation, and cannot die or be killed (except by drastic measures, such as burning or beheading) Their bodies do not repair themselves, so they continue to feel pain as minor injuries accumulate. They do not need to eat, but they feel hunger pains when they don't. Raoden is immediately sent to Elantris - once the wonder of the world, now a cursed ruin. Persons transformed into Elantrians are treated as dead by those outside Elantris. Raoden's storyline centers on his efforts to improve the Elantrian way of life beyond the anarchy to which it succumbed when Elantris fell.
  • Sarene, princess of Teod and Raoden's political bride-to-be whom he has never personally met, arrives in Arelon to discover that they are considered to have been married if either of them dies before the wedding. Widow of a supposedly dead prince and a new member of the mostly ill-suited Arelon nobility, she struggles to find out just what is going on, and to help the downtrodden common people - even those of Elantris. Sarene's storyline deals with her attempts to stabilize and improve the monarchy, and to prevent Hrathen's intended revolution.
  • Hrathen, a Derethi gyorn (high-ranking priest), arrives in Arelon with a mandate to convert the country to the Shu Dereth religion within three months' time, or his religion's armies will come to wipe out all of its citizens. Hrathen's storyline focuses on his efforts at political maneuvering to sway the Arelene aristocracy and place a converted Derethi on the throne, and on his struggles to come to terms with the religion he is supposed to believe.

Aons

These are central to the book's plot. They are the means by which the Elantrians perform magic. Many characters' names are variations on the Aons, as is customary in this fantasy world. The images of the many Aons can be found in the back of the book. Raoden rediscovers many of the Aons while in Elantris, preserved in scrolls that have not been consumed by the decay of the city. He learns to invoke the Aons, but finds they have lost their power, which is the ultimate cause of Elantris' collapse. Near the end of the book, Raoden discovers that the shapes of the Aons coincide with physical landmarks and natural features located around the country. A massive fissure in the earth that now cuts through the country 'altered' these landmarks, which in turn caused the Aons to lose their power. By 'reconstructing' the Aons to now incorporate the fissure in their design, Raoden restores the Aons' power.

The Hope of Elantris

Sanderson released an e-book short entitled The Hope of Elantris. It was initially for sale on Amazon, but Sanderson released it on his own site "when the contract with Amazon ran out."[6]

Reception

Elantris was very well received by both critics and readers. Orson Scott Card said, "Elantris is the finest novel of fantasy to be written in many years. Brandon Sanderson has created a truly original world of magic and intrigue, and with the rigor of the best science fiction writers he has made it real at every level."[2] Kirkus Reviews praised the book for the fact that the book was not the first book in a series, "An epic fantasy novel that is (startlingly) not Volume One of a Neverending Sequence . . . [with] an unusually well-conceived system of magic . . . the story has some grip and it's a tremendous relief to have fruition in a single volume. . . . A cut above the same-old."[5]

Sequels

Sanderson currently plans a sequel to Elantris, though he is not sure when it will be written.[7] He has stated that it would take place ten years after the current book's events, and centre around some of its very minor characters.[8]

He later announced plans for two books following Elantris, with Kiin's children being the main characters in Elantris Two.[9]

Audiobooks

GraphicAudio has released Elantris as a dramatized audio production.[10] It was adapted and produced with a full cast, narrator, sound effects and music.

Recorded Books has also published an authorized audio book of Elantris.

References

  1. "Epinions.com". Retrieved 2006-09-25. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Review by Orson Scott Card". Retrieved 2010-12-18. 
  3. "Powells.com". Retrieved 2006-09-25. 
  4. "Shopping.com, Review 1". Retrieved 2006-09-25.  "Shopping.com, Review 2". Retrieved 2006-09-25. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Review blurbs on Sanderson's site". Retrieved 2010-12-18. 
  6. http://www.brandonsanderson.com/library/32/Elantris-The-Hope-of-Elantris "The Hope of Elantris"
  7. "Elantris FAQ". Retrieved 2009-08-04. 
  8. "Elantris Chapter 8". Retrieved 2006-09-25. 
  9. "Another Long and Rambling Post on Future Books". BrandonSanderson.com. Retrieved 2010-10-13. 
  10. "GraphicAudio News". Retrieved 2009-02-27. 

External links

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