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The Wind - The Name Of

Rothfuss does not shy away from this. Kvothe’s pride in his heritage is a constant rebellion. He sings the songs of his people, follows their unwritten code of hospitality (the Lethani , a concept that becomes more developed in the sequel), and refuses to be ashamed. The most poignant moments in the novel often involve Kvothe performing with his lute. Music is his first language, his truest form of magic. When he plays, the social barriers of class and prejudice melt away. The scene in the Eolian—the famed music tavern—where Kvothe earns his pipes (a silver talent pipes awarded to only the finest musicians) is pure, unadulterated triumph. For a few minutes, he is not a Ruh bastard or a charity case; he is an artist, speaking a universal truth.

We are introduced to Kote, a reserved, innkeeper in the sleepy town of Newarre. He is unassuming, perhaps a little sad, with red hair that hints at a past he refuses to discuss. The world outside his inn, the Four Corners of Civilization, is one where magic (called "sympathy") is real but fading into academic study, where demons are feared, and where the legendary Chandrian—seven ancient figures of terror—are the stuff of children’s rhymes. The Name of the Wind

"It was the patient, cut-flower sound of a man waiting to die." And yet, in telling his story, Kvothe blooms again. Rothfuss does not shy away from this

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