The Mistborn Trilogy - Brandon Sanderson

The Mistborn Trilogy

By Brandon Sanderson

  • Release Date: 2011-02-01
  • Genre: Epic Fantasy
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 2,478 Ratings

Description

The New York Times bestselling series from Brandon Sanderson. This boxed set contains:
Mistborn, The Well of Ascension, and The Hero of Ages

At the publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management software (DRM) applied.

Reviews

  • ?

    3
    By BLT345213
    Interesting but much too long.
  • Eyedropping…

    5
    By Animodious
    My eyeballs fell out… such a good book
  • Absolutely incredible

    5
    By AJlovesjesus
    Every reader needs to experience this series at least once. The thrills are fantastic. Just buy it and start, couldn't recommend enough
  • Great book

    5
    By maughantana05
    I love Sanderson this is an excellent fantasy book series
  • Loved it!!

    5
    By lordzack41
    CANT WAIT FOR THE NEXT BRANDON SANDERSON BOOK TO COME OUT!! HE’S AN ABSOLUTE WONDER WHEN IT COMES TO THE DEPTH OF EACH THEME AND CHARACTER!! A MUST BUY!!!
  • Energetic and original!

    5
    By revel8or
    Great, easy read!
  • Pure brilliance.

    5
    By HookaLankonk
    This is the book that introduced me to hard magic systems. Just finished reading it for the second time, and still love it to death. Great characters, the most satisfying fight scenes I’ve ever read utilizing such a simple yet complex power system. Just pure brilliance.
  • My favourite novel

    5
    By zedlyfe
    This trilogy was my introduction to Sanderson. I first read these three in 2017. I was glued, finished the trilogy in its entirety in a week. I’ve read the following trilogy as well as other Sanderson books and while those are good this is his best. I’ve come back to it and read it three times since 2017. I’m about to start reading it again cause I love it so much. Why do I love it? The characters have so much nuance. At times you think to yourself “the good guys are doing ‘good’ things but with bad motives” and “the bad guy is honestly just trying his best.” There’s also rich descriptions without being distracting from the storyline, the perfect in between that makes you able to imagine exactly what the author is while still being totally engrossed in the story. Sanderson’s use of religion is fascinating. Before thinking that’s a red flag (atheists, non-theists), it doesn’t advocate any existing religions. He makes up some religions and weaves them into the story in very interesting ways. His character building is on point. I’m not typically one to get emotionally attached to fictional characters, but I cried when bad things happened to Vin and was genuinely excited for her when certain things happened (not gonna spoil anything).
  • Great ending, not always a great journey

    4
    By Markus1023
    —-Minor Spoilers —- I found it hard to warm up to the characters in this book, especially Vin. I ended up liking her more towards the end of Book 3, but I did not find her very believable (e.g. how quickly she changes from feelings of worthlessness and trusting nobody to the exact opposite.) The books also offer very little of a buildup between her and Elend (who also undergoes very rapid and abrupt changes). The many characters (too many, or maybe not fletched out enough) often felt flat, and other than Sazed and maybe “OreSeur” I didn’t really feel I connected with any of them. The whole system of Allomancy felt gimmicky to me at times. Simply put and for lack of better words, I didn’t think it as “cool” as the book maybe wants to convey. It didn’t bother me either and it worked well tied into the bigger picture, but I didn’t buy the one dimensional bad a**ery Vin was supposed to portray. However, I thought the Inquisitors, Terrismen, the Lord Ruler, Feruchemists, among other things, helped create a very interesting world and the third book finished with a completely unexpected and “awesome” ending. I did not see it coming, I never read a series and was so moved by an ending. I think the ending makes the difference between 3 and 4 stars in this case. Unlike Stormlight, I don’t get the praise. Mistborn is still a good read I’d recommend to Fantasy fans, even though I’m personally not planning on reading the newer entries at this point.
  • How could someone give this one star?

    5
    By fantasy_reader
    I don’t see how someone could give this one star. Either they didn’t read it, or are making a bad joke, because from the characters, to the plot, to the interesting magic system, these books are some of the best I’ve ever read, and I read them for hours at a time, because I just couldn’t stop! For anyone who even remotely likes fantasy genre, READ THESE BOOKS!!! 5.5/5 stars

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