I think that from the perspectives of worldbuilding, character, and plot (except that the last is so complicated that in the middle sometimes it's seemed like whole books were devoted to "what else has been going on in the world through the perspective of these formerly-minor characters") it's quite good, maybe even excellent. But thematically ... I read all the early ones too quickly and too long ago (i.e. before I really started thinking about such things) to have an impression.
Eleutheria Mimetes wrote:
I haven't read the series because I'm not allowed to. My mom read most of it, but she said it had a bunch of New Age junk in it - shame, too, since the writing looks really good. You'd have to ask her. (Mama Raven Mimetes, if you'd like.)
The worldbuilding is built on some Eastern assumptions (I wouldn't say "New Age," but rather drawing from the same roots as the New Age movement), such as an endless repeating cycle of ages, reincarnation, equality-yet-complementarity of the sexes---but it's quite hard to tell whether Jordan (and now Brandon Sanderson, who is finishing the series after Jordan's death) is using these uncritically, affirming them, or turning them on their head. (That last item in particular: in the series, 'magic' is divided into two sides, male and female, and a man can only draw from
saidin and a woman from
saidar---the two are similar in some ways, different in others, but about equal---but at the beginning
saidin has been tainted ever since the beginning of the current age, so that any male "channeler" inevitably goes mad.) I also just had a thought that it's even possible that Jordan is using this partly-Eastern background to comment on some Christian eschatalogical schools of thought.
(I recall reading one review or essay somewhere that made much of the common phrase "by my hope of
salvation and rebirth" (emphasis added).)
I do think that the Wheel of Time series is well worth reading, studying critically, and pondering; it's one of the big works of fantasy of the past generation, so I think we as a community
didn't study it to learn what we can from it and to engage with what it's trying to say.
But for a young writer:
Lord Tarin wrote:
Has anyone read any books in this series, and would you classify it as Christian?
The worldbuilding is not
obviously Christian (and there is evidence for its being
not Christian), though Jordan was at least nominally a Christian himself. And it's decidedly aimed at the mass market. So I'd say it doesn't really fit the "Christian fiction" category.
Lord Tarin wrote:
Were there any inappropriate scenes or words?
About what we've come to expect from modern fantasy with romantic subplots---there are a few scenes that parents rightly deem inappropriate for children. Language-wise, I think pretty much all the "cursing" done by the characters is using phrases specific to the world, but in any case it all flew over my head.
In summary, I think that a young writer should probably wait to read the Wheel of Time series until he or she is more mature in his or her faith and isn't quite as impressionable. (I wish
I had waited ... sneaking out to our barn, where most of our family library is stored, and reading these and Bujold's Vorkosigan series was one of my bits of preteen and teenage rebellion, since my parents had told me to wait until I was older to read them, but I hadn't yet learned to read critically.)