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Wheel of Time Premium Boxed Set I (Books 1-3) Review

Wheel of Time Premium Boxed Set I (Books 1-3) Review

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4.7 / 5

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Wheel of Time Premium Boxed Set I: Books 1-3 (The Eye of the World, The Great Hunt, The Dragon

Wheel of Time Premium Boxed Set I: Books 1-3 (The Eye of the World, The Great Hunt, The Dragon

4.7/5
$22.65

Wheel of Time Books 1-3 Premium Boxed Set is the source material for Prime Video's adaptation. We reviewed it for show fans wanting depth.

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Prime Video's The Wheel of Time (2021-present) adapted Robert Jordan's 14-book epic fantasy series. Books 1-3 (The Eye of the World, The Great Hunt, The Dragon Reborn) cover most of Prime's first 2 seasons. The Premium Boxed Set ($40, 4.7 stars, 6,300+ reviews) collects them with hardcover quality. We reviewed for show viewers + first-time series-readers.

TL;DR

The right epic-fantasy entry for Prime Wheel of Time viewers wanting source material depth. Books 1-3 in premium hardcover; 14-book series total (Jordan died after book 11; Sanderson finished books 12-14). Coming-of-age + farmboy-as-prophesied-savior + multi-POV structure influenced Game of Thrones, Stormlight, Mistborn. Pair with Prime Season 1-2 viewing. Skip if you're not committed to the 14-book journey.

Why It Matters

Wheel of Time pioneered modern multi-POV epic fantasy. Where Lord of the Rings tracks one fellowship, WoT tracks 5+ characters across continents — each with their own arc, threat, and revelation. This template influenced everything that came after, including A Song of Ice and Fire.

Key Specs

  • Author: Robert Jordan (1948-2007); books 12-14 by Brandon Sanderson
  • Books in set: 3 (The Eye of the World, The Great Hunt, The Dragon Reborn)
  • Total pages: ~2,400
  • Original publication: 1990-1991 (books 1-3)
  • Format: Premium hardcover boxed set
  • Genre: Epic fantasy / multi-POV / coming-of-age
  • Setting: Westlands continent
  • Prime adaptation: 2021-present (3 seasons aired as of 2026)
  • Reading time: ~50-60 hours (boxed set total)

Pros

  • Premium hardcover quality. Built to last 14-book series.
  • First 3 books in one purchase. Series commitment starter.
  • Foundational multi-POV epic fantasy. Genre-defining structure.
  • Prime Video adaptation source. Compare scene-by-scene.
  • 14-book payoff. Long-term reading commitment for committed readers.
  • Sanderson finish. Books 12-14 well-received despite ghost-writing.
  • Audiobook is excellent. Michael Kramer + Kate Reading narration is genre-defining.

Cons

  • 2,400 pages just for first 3 books. Massive total commitment.
  • Slow opening 200 pages. Setup-heavy.
  • Middle books (7-10) drag. Many readers stall here.
  • 1990s prose feels dated. No modern hooks.
  • Some readers prefer Prime adaptation pacing. Show compresses.
  • Premium hardcover is heavy. Travel-unfriendly format.

Who It's For

  • Prime Wheel of Time fans. Source material with depth.
  • Multi-POV epic fantasy readers. After Lord of the Rings, before Stormlight.
  • 14-book series committers. Don't start unless you'll finish.
  • Premium hardcover collectors. Lasts decades of re-reads.
  • Audiobook listeners. Michael Kramer + Kate Reading narration.
  • Genre-influence trackers. WoT predates and influenced ASOIAF.
  • Skip if you only enjoy the show, if you can't commit to 14 books, or if 1990s fantasy prose feels dated to you.

How to Use

  • Read in order: Eye of the World → Great Hunt → Dragon Reborn
  • After book 3, decide whether to commit to full 14-book journey (most quitters quit at book 7-10)
  • Pair with Prime Season 1-2 for adaptation comparison
  • Audiobook 660+ hours total — start with print to settle into the world
  • Use community wiki (encyclopaedia-wot.org) for character lookup

How It Compares

  • vs Wheel of Time Books 4-6 Boxed Set II ($40): Continue series. Pick after book 3 if hooked.
  • vs A Game of Thrones 5-Book Box Set ($35): Comparable epic fantasy commitment. 5 books vs 14.
  • vs The Stormlight Archive (Sanderson): Comparable scope. Sanderson's series; same author who finished WoT.
  • vs Mistborn (Sanderson): Comparable accessible epic fantasy.
  • vs The Lord of the Rings (Tolkien): Foundational genre work. Different scope (single fellowship vs multi-POV).

Bottom Line

The Wheel of Time Premium Boxed Set I is the right epic-fantasy entry for Prime show viewers + multi-POV fantasy readers. Premium hardcover, 14-book series source, Sanderson finish promise. A Game of Thrones is the comparable commitment; Stormlight Archive is the modern Sanderson alternative. For "the foundational multi-POV fantasy series Prime is adapting," this earns the slot at $40.

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