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Reddit mentions of House of Blades (The Traveler's Gate Trilogy Book 1)

Sentiment score: 15
Reddit mentions: 22

We found 22 Reddit mentions of House of Blades (The Traveler's Gate Trilogy Book 1). Here are the top ones.

House of Blades (The Traveler's Gate Trilogy Book 1)
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Release dateJune 2013

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Found 22 comments on House of Blades (The Traveler's Gate Trilogy Book 1):

u/WanderingWayfarer · 22 pointsr/Fantasy

Some of my favorite books available on Kindle Unlimited:

They Mostly Come Out At Night and Where the Waters Turn Black by Benedict Patrick

Paternus by Dyrk Ashton

Danse Macabre by Laura M. Hughes

The Half Killed by Quenby Olson

A Star Reckoners Lot by Darrell Drake

Sufficiently Advanced Magic by Andrew Rowe

Jaeth's Eye by K. S. Villoso


Here are some that I haven't read, but have heard mostly positive things about:

The Palace Job by Patrick Weekes

Revenant Winds by Mitchell Hogan

Ghosts of Tomorrow by Michael R Fletcher

A Warrior's Path by Davis Ashura

Valley of Embers by Steven Kelliher

Faithless by Graham Austin-King. He also has another series, The Riven Wyrde Saga, beginning with Fae - The Wild Hunt

Ours is the Storm by D. Thourson Palmer

Path of Man by Matt Moss

Threat of Madness by D.K. Holmberg

To Whatever End by Claire Frank

House of Blades by Will Wight

Path of Flames by Phil Tucker

The Woven Ring by M. D. Presley

Awaken Online: Catharsis by Travis Bagwell

Wolf of the North by Duncan M. Hamilton

Free the Darkness by Kel Kade

The Cycle of Arawn Trilogy by Edward W. Robinson

Dawn of Wonder by Jonathan Renshaw

Benjamim Ashwood by AC Cobble

The Crimson Queen by Alec Hutson

The Queens Poinsoner by Jeff Wheeler

Stiger's Tigers by Marc Alan Edelheit 

Rise of the Ranger by Philip C. Quaintrell 

Nice Dragons Finish Last by Rachel Aaron

Devil's Night Dawning by Damien Black


Here are some older fantasy and sci-fi books that I enjoyed:

Tales of Nevèrÿon by Samuel R. Delany - African inspired S&S by an extremely talented writer.

Witch World as well as other good books by Andre Norton

Swords and Deviltry The first volume of Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser by Fritz Leiber - Many of the tropes of the rogue/thief came from this legendary duo created by Leiber. And it's worth noting that Leiber actually coined the term Sword & Sorcery. This collection contains 3 stories, two average origin stories for each character and the final story is the Hugo and Nebula winning novella "Ill Met in Lankhmar" detailing the first meeting of Fafhrd and The Grey Mouser.

Swords Against Darkness - A '70s S&S anthology. It has few stinkers, a few mediocre stories, and a some really good ones. Poul Anderson and Ramsey Campbell both have awesome stories in this anthology that are well worth checking out. For some reason, there were quite a few typos in this book, it was slightly distracting, but may have been fixed since I read it.

The Best of C. L. Moore by C. L. Moore. I read this earlier this year and I absolutely loved it. The collection is all sci-fi and one Jirel of Joiry story, which is her famous female Sword & Sorcery character. I was suprised by how well her sci-fi stories held up, often times pulp sci-fi doesn't age well, but this collection was great. Moore was married to the writer Henry Kuttner, and up until his death they wrote a bunch of great stories together. Both of their collections are basically collaborations, although I'm sure a few stories were done solo. His collection The Best of Henry Kuttner features the short story that the movie The Last Mimzy was based on. And, if you are into the original Twilight Zone TV series there is a story that was adapted into a memorable season 1 episode entitled "What You Need". Kuttner and Moore are two of my favorite pulp authors and I'm not even that into science fiction, but I really enjoy their work.

u/0n_an_unrelated_note · 15 pointsr/ProgressionFantasy

Kinda in order. Keep in mind I don't read the translated Asian novels because most of the translations are hot garbage and I just can't get used to those.

Cradle from Will Wight- Excellent writing and plotline, it's what got me into this subreddit in the first place. No need to say any more, this is a stable of the sub.

Mother of Learning from Domagoj Kurmaic- Also really solid, the story is a few months away from finishing, highly recommend.

Metaworld Chronicles from Wutosama- The author took a generic isekai plotline and twisted it. The writing might not be completely as good as the others, but probably competing for personal enjoyment right up there with Cradle. It's not as popular as the others, but read the first few chapters and give it a shot if you want.

Arcane Ascension from Andrew Rowe- Very solid too, but slightly inferior to Cradle imo. Probably because I read Cradle first. Honestly, the book is quite forgettable since I don't remember the plotline, but I still remember it being good.

The Traveler's Gate Trilogy from Will Wight- It gets really wordy at times, and I get confused by the plot sometimes because I get impatient and my eyes skip a few lines or so. Still solid, but the weakest one out of the ones I've read.

u/Uru81189 · 14 pointsr/Fantasy

I should have seen this coming, but I'm ashamed to admit that it took me way too long to figure out what you were asking for.

Book 1: House of Blades

u/Salaris · 10 pointsr/Fantasy

Will Wight's House of Blades and the rest of the Traveler's Gate Trilogy sounds right up your alley. The protagonist starts out as an ordinary villager and gradually progresses to shonen anime power levels.

u/CS027 · 6 pointsr/Fantasy

I'd recommend giving Will Wight a try. His stuff reminds me of early Sanderson. It's definitely not very polished yet, but it's innovative, you can see his improvement as a writer, and he's trying new things. His first series is called Traveler's Gate; it's a really fun read. First book is available here.

He's currently working on two parallel series set in a different world with dueling protagonists. It's interesting because they just ooze potential- they're good books right now, but while reading them you can just tell that he's going to be huge within the next 10 years.

u/CoffeeArchives · 4 pointsr/Fantasy

Here's some I can recommend:

House of Blades by Will Wight, narrated by Will Wight.

If you're a fan of Sanderson's magic systems or fight sequences, you might like this a lot. It's fast-paced, fun, and turns a few tropes around. I didn't listen to this on audio, but I just checked out the sample and it sounds like the author did a pretty good job narrating himself. The ebook is currently free on Amazon! So if you get the ebook for free, the audiobook should be $2 on Audible.



Forging Divinity by Andrew Rowe, narrated by Nick Podehl.

This is another book similar to Sanderson's style of hard magic systems. (Interestingly enough, Rowe is a huge fan of Will Wight and a regular member of this subreddit). The book is narrated by the same narrator who did the Kingkiller series! Also, this is the first book in what will likely be an extraordinarily epic series, with a magic school spinoff book due to release later this year.



Theft of Swords by Michael J. Sullivan, narrated by Tim Gerard Reynolds.

This book is and isn't indie/self-published, so I'm not sure if this fits what you are looking for. Sullivan originally self-published this series, and it was later picked up for traditional publication. This is the omnibus containing the first two books (both of which were self-published originally). Both the book and narration are very good, though.

***

A Warrior's Path** by Davis Ashura, narrated by Nick Podehl.

This has a society with a strict caste system, where each caste has their own magical abilities. The story follows a warrior who has to learn to reexamine this caste system and the politics of the warrior's home city. Also, there's a magical god-demon that can control hordes of evil minions.

u/akurei77 · 4 pointsr/suggestmeabook

Looks like you haven't read "The Kingkiller Chronicles", which is a really popular fantasy series. I really couldn't recommend it highly enough, it's one of my favorites.

Codex Alera is a series by Jim Butcher, the same guy who does the Dresden novels. In the beginning of the series, the most interesting part is probably the somewhat novel way that magic works. I'll won't go into it much, but it's not the same wand-waving type you usually see. I think the story and characters take a book or two to really develop, but by the middle of the series I thought it was really good.

For something a bit less well known, I really like The Traveler's Gate series by Will Wright, an amazon self-published author. The writing itself is what I would call acceptable – you certainly won't find any poetry masquerading as prose, but I think it's probably better than the early Hunger Games stuff, for example. More importantly, it does a good enough job to get the story across, which I thought was really fun to read. (The writing also gets better as the series goes on, as you might expect from a first-time author.) This series is more about the adventure than anything, and I thought that was done really well. It's also like $4 per book, so the investment is small.

u/SleepyTexan · 4 pointsr/noveltranslations

If you haven't already read his works, Will Wight will make all his ebooks free on July 4th on Amazon.

Source

I've seen plenty of recommendations for some of his books on here due to having xianxia elements and I'll definitely take advantage to finally read his books.

Note: you have to be logged in to your Amazon account to "purchase" the ebooks.
***

Edit

"Sale" is now live, to facilitate buying I'll link Will Wight's list of books on his site with a direct link to Amazon and the first book of each series below.

Will Wight

Amazon

u/sharklops · 3 pointsr/Fantasy

Congratulations! Getting a Kindle was one of the best things I've ever done. Check out Will Wight's Traveler's Gate series. Here's the first book, House of Blades

u/wanderjahr · 3 pointsr/Fantasy

Link

Check out /r/UnlimitedBestOF, the best place for Kindle Unlimited recommendations!

u/therukus · 2 pointsr/gaming

This reminds me so much of Valinhall in House of Blades. A Hogwart-esque school/home where everything is earned and everything is trying to kill you. Everyone should check it out.

u/guga31bb · 2 pointsr/FCJbookclub

I read Will Wight's Traveler's Gate Trilogy and thought it was great. It was a nice change of pace after going through R Scott Bakker's books, which are great but very dense. This was more light but still quite good.

u/Wilmore · 1 pointr/suggestmeabook

I've been in a similar mood lately, and recently read the first two books in the Traveler's Gate Trilogy. They definitely helped scratch that itch, and reminded me a bit of Mistborn.

The Name of the Wind also fits the bill if you haven't read that yet. Very much centered on one character and goes into quite a bit of detail about said character's training and education. Seems like it's exactly what you're going for from what you've described.

u/amazon-converter-bot · 1 pointr/FreeEBOOKS

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amazon.co.uk

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Beep bloop. I'm a bot to convert Amazon ebook links to local Amazon sites.
I currently look here: amazon.com, amazon.co.uk, amazon.ca, amazon.com.au, amazon.in, amazon.com.mx, amazon.de, amazon.it, amazon.es, amazon.com.br, amazon.nl, amazon.co.jp, amazon.fr, if you would like your local version of Amazon adding please contact my creator.

u/MaybeEvilWizard · 1 pointr/Iteration110Cradle

I read [House of Blades] (https://www.amazon.com/House-Blades-Travelers-Gate-Trilogy-ebook/dp/B00D52X58Y) the first month it came out. Same for the The Crimson Vault and City of Light.

I however admit that I did not read the Elder Empire series until much later, after I had already started Cradle. I had seen it on kindle while browsing many many times, but it didn't click with me. I very much enjoyed it once I finally started reading it, but I was very hesitant to start it for a couple of reasons I can identify for you.

  • The cover didn't click with me. You've already realized this, since I know that you're reworking the covers for all the books. Maybe this is a personal pet peeve of mine, but I HATE when the focus of a book cover is on a front-view depiction of the protagonist. Covers, like movie posters, aren't there to depict a scene from the book or movie, they're theme pieces. You're supposed to be able to look at them and at a glance realize "Oh! This is an action adventure book!" or "Oh, this story is about spaceships and cool magic!". Of Sea and Shadow and of Shadow and Sea covers featured only the characters on it, with a focus on their facial details (Which I also dislike, mind you. I prefer personal details left up to the reader's imagination). I got the general Pirate vs. Assassin idea from the covers, but that's all I got. If I had realized there were giant, Lovecraftian monsters, I might have picked up the book a lot sooner. Again, the new cover for Of Sea and Shadow does a much better job at this.

  • The other thing that really kept me from diving into the book was that I was afraid of having to pick a side. Pirates vs. ninjas? They're both cool! I can't choose! I'm too indecisive. House of Blades and Cradle both had the promise that these main characters would be powerhouses once the story really got going, but I feared that wouldn't be possible with opposing protagonists. How bad-ass can the main character really be if they're up against another protagonist? I also realized that this isn't really the case once I started reading, but beforehand my assumption was that the protagonist of one story would be the Big Bad of the other, and that there was no way they'd ever come to terms and for one of them to have a good ending the other would necessarily have to be defeated in a big downer ending. I didn't want to risk that kind of letdown. You navigated around this in the story itself, but this was my fear from reading the synopsis multiple times as I clicked on it and passed on it several times.

  • I, and many others, read much faster on a kindle than on paper. The internet has trained us to read quickly when we're online, and so whenever I'm on a digital device I tend to move across the pages much faster. In addition, kindle books are much cheaper than regular books, so instead of savoring that one book I bought for $20, I can buy five books for $3.99. This means I tend not to pay as much attention while reading on kindle as I would if I was reading a hardcover. This is why I went out and bought a physical copy of Oathbringer.
    This puts a little limiter on how complex I want a book to be. If I'm reading fast I don't want to have to remember a dozen different characters and each of their backgrounds and plot lines. The Elder Empire threatened to overwhelm my unprepared mind with lots of POV characters and interweaving plots. It sounded like epic fantasy to me, and don't get me wrong, I love epic fantasy, but I'd read House of Blades, which felt more like Heroic Fantasy or maybe coming of age fantasy, I wasn't sure I wanted to dive into something like that for a fairly new author I'd only read from a different sub-genre. I was somewhat afraid of putting forth the mental effort to read a story I was uncertain I'd like in the first place. I kept putting it off, thinking that I'd read it when I was in the right mood to dive into something more complex plot-wise. Unfortunately, when I'm looking for a book I can really dive into mentally I don't usually look to self-published books. I look for the big traditional names like, Rothfus' Name of the Wind or Oathbringer or A song of Ice and Fire or Malzahan book of the Fallen.

  • I was still hoping for more Travelers Gate. I really liked the Travler’s Gate world. While you wrapped up the plotlines I felt as though the story for House of Blades was like a kid trying to wear a giant’s shoes. The world was so huge, with great world building and limitless potential. How could 1100 pages cover it all? With the scale of the world I just hadn’t expected the story to be only a trilogy. So much material was left unexplored. I may have projected some of that anger onto The Elder Empire, thinking, “Curses! This is the story that stole Traveler’s Gate book four from us!”.

    I apologize for the wall of text. There's a few more points I can think of but I'll stop here before my comment becomes too long for anybody to bother reading. Hopefully it helps you in your future marketing endeavors!
u/sushi_cw · 1 pointr/Fantasy

I just finished the Traveler's Gate Trilogy by Will Wright.

I think it fits the bill nicely: enjoyable easy reading, lots of action, fairly small cast.

First book Here

u/thkuntze · 1 pointr/HelpMeFind

The ebooks are on Amazon.. If you meant "free" then you're on the wrong sub: /r/Piracy/