Reason for the reader to find Rand's impulsive "foolproof" plan a bit unlikely to kill off Graendal at that point of the story? Absolutely.
"She couldn't have died because God's purpose for her was not done" is psychotic reasoning in the real world. As textual analysis of an ambiguous murder in a book, not so much.
"She couldn't have died because God's purpose for her was not done" is psychotic reasoning in the real world. As textual analysis of an ambiguous murder in a book, not so much.
Provisional calendar for Towers of Midnight: https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0ApFWTyzG9G_UdHZCUjQzVGNLeUJyMkUycXkzQlExSFE&output=html
I was right! In your face.
24/11/2010 06:57:21 AM
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No, you guys were really wrong.
24/11/2010 08:52:15 PM
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That kind of thing always annoys me.
25/11/2010 02:52:03 PM
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I didn't mind she lived. I only minded that she was worthless afterward and nothing came of it *NM*
25/11/2010 03:42:40 PM
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What he gets for posting ToM threads when he's only read a few chapters, I reckon.
25/11/2010 05:11:17 PM
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I'm still scratching my head over this. (I've finished the book)
29/11/2010 05:44:20 AM
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Don't blame you (and, thanks, now I don't have to sweat spoilers--and neither do you).
29/11/2010 01:49:21 PM
- 578 Views
No reason for Rand to think so
27/11/2010 01:14:29 AM
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