The Fires of Heaven The Fires of Heaven (abbreviated as tFoH or FoH by fans) is the fifth book in American author Robert Jordan's fantasy series The Wheel of Time. It was published by Tor Books and released on October 15, 1993.
It's notable for being the first novel in the series to not involve an appearance by each of the three ta'veren from the Two Rivers, due to Perrin's absence. The Fires of Heaven consists of a prologue and 56 chapters.
The Fires of Heaven
Original cover of The Fires of Heaven, showing Mat, Rand, and Aviendha
Author(s)
Robert Jordan
Cover artist
Darrell K. Sweet
Country
United States
Language
English
Series
The Wheel of Time
Genre(s)
Fantasy
Publisher
Tor Books (U.S.)
Publication date
October 15, 1993
Media type
Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages
704 pp (U.S. hardback edition)
ISBN
ISBN 0-312-85427-7 (US hardback edition)
OCLC Number
29136140
Dewey Decimal
813/.54 20
LC Classification
PS3560.Author: Robert Jordan Download "The Fires of Heaven" from Google Books The Fires of Heaven (The Wheel of Time, Book 5). Rand al'Thor, the Dragon Reborn, continues his effort to unify the diverse people of a discordant world against the Dark One in this fifth tome of the Wheel of Time series (begun with The Eye of the World ). While the Aes Sedai, women who channel the One Power, and the Forsaken, ancient disciples of the Dark One, strive to bend him to their purposes, Rand leads the clans of the Aiel in a war of unification. Rand must try to master his powers as a man who can channel, while eluding the concomitant madness, as two groups of women attempt to come to his aid. His love, Elayne, Daughter-Heir of Andor, and Nynaeve, both Aes Sedai in training, join a circus to evade an angry sisterhood, and Siuan Sanche, former leader of the Aes Sedai now stripped of her powers, and two companions seek other rebels in an attempt to avert the final doom. Jordan deftly weaves details from previous books into this narrative and includes a glossary so that new readers can pick up the saga at this point. But all should beware: the few months covered here suggest it may be years and many more volumes before this series reaches its conclusion. |
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