In the scene where Perrin inspects the wagons, he muses:
"Perrin continued working with the wheel; he wasn't as familiar with carpentry as he was with smithing, but his father had taught each of his sons to recognize signs of trouble in a wagon."
"Each of his sons" sounds to me as if Perrin had several brothers. However, according to Encyclopaedia WoT Perrin had only one brother, Paetram, and two sisters. Paetram was nine, when he was killed by Fain in TSR. He was eight when Perrin left the Two Rivers in EotW. It seems a bit unlikely to teach a boy that young to inspect wagons, or not?
"Perrin continued working with the wheel; he wasn't as familiar with carpentry as he was with smithing, but his father had taught each of his sons to recognize signs of trouble in a wagon."
"Each of his sons" sounds to me as if Perrin had several brothers. However, according to Encyclopaedia WoT Perrin had only one brother, Paetram, and two sisters. Paetram was nine, when he was killed by Fain in TSR. He was eight when Perrin left the Two Rivers in EotW. It seems a bit unlikely to teach a boy that young to inspect wagons, or not?
A tiny mistake?
28/11/2009 08:48:37 AM
- 818 Views
Re: A tiny mistake?
28/11/2009 08:55:12 AM
- 512 Views
Nah, not too young to teach the basics. On a farm, they'd learn even earlier I'd think. *NM*
28/11/2009 09:09:05 AM
- 153 Views
Yeah?
28/11/2009 09:22:52 AM
- 427 Views
Definitely 110% for sure and probably younger than that. (I live in Nebraska).
28/11/2009 05:42:40 PM
- 398 Views
I learned to drive the truck when feeding cattle at 5 or 6. Farm kids learn stuff. *NM*
29/11/2009 02:53:31 AM
- 133 Views
Re: A tiny mistake?
28/11/2009 08:18:20 PM
- 401 Views
And the rest of the book supports an argument that proper wording is not B-Sand's strong suit.
29/11/2009 02:35:53 PM
- 358 Views
Considering that Perrin is a moron, I would be very surprised if that were the case. *NM*
29/11/2009 05:28:09 AM
- 143 Views