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Robert
Jordan, creator of The Wheel of Time believes that fantasy is an
enduring form of literature because it reaches "something deep
in people; their dreams." He feels that fantasy literature
appeals to a desire for a simpler time of life with recognizable
good and evil, and that fantasy provides a universe with rules,
order and underlying framework.
The author has both a degree in
physics and a military background, unusual credits for a fantasy
writer.
A lifelong resident of Charleston,
South Carolina, Jordan was born in 1948. With a brother 12 years
his senior, Robert began his education at an early age, and his
future interest in fantastic literature was inevitable. "When
my parents couldn't get a baby-sitter, they'd get my brother,"
he recalls. "He would read to me, not kids' books, but things
he was interested in, like Jules Verne, H.G. Wells and Mark Twain,
so I was exposed to a lot of great fiction.
Jordan served two tours of duty
in Vietnam (from 1968-70), earning the Distinguished Flying Cross
and the Bronze star. The Vietnamese twice awarded him with their
Cross of Gallantry.
After Vietnam, he entered the Citadel,
the military college of South Carolina, where he received a degree
in physics. In retrospect, Robert Jordan feels that physics is not
such an unusual background for a fantasy writer. "You can't
study quantum mechanics without a feel for fantasy," he recently
reflected, "Schrodinger's Cat alone will kill any logical person
dead." After attaining his degree, he was employed by the Navy
as a nuclear engineer. He was hospitalized for an injury which gave
him a great deal of time to catch up on his reading. Jordan quickly
ran out of satisfactory material, and in exasperation, thought he
could probably write as well as the authors he had been reading.
The Wheel of Time is the happy result.
Robert Jordan has now been writing
for 13 years, and he has been married for ten. He and his wife live
in the Old Historic District of Charleston, in a house dating from
1797. A history buff, he is particularly interested in Charleston's
past, and in military history. An outdoors man, Jordan enjoys hunting
fishing and sailing, and the indoor sports of poker, chess and pool,
and collecting pipes.
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