
Découvrez L'étroit chemin entre les souhaits, préquelle au Nom du Vent enrichie de notes de l'auteur et somptueusement illustrée par Nate Taylor - une histoire bouleversante qui ravira aussi bien les nouveaux lecteurs que les fervents admirateurs du merveilleux univers de Patrick Rothfuss. Bast sait marchander. Il connaît les subtilités des compromis et des concessions aussi bien que le fond de sa poche et à le voir faire, on dirait un peintre devant son chevalet. Mais même un maître n'est pas à l'abri d'un faux pas... En acceptant un présent sans contrepartie, Bast provoque un séisme qui va ébranler jusqu'aux fondations de son monde. Pour la première fois de sa vie, ce négociateur hors pair se retrouve redevable. L'espace d'une journée, de l'aube au crépuscule, accompagnez le plus séduisant des Faes des Quatre Coins de la civilisation tandis qu'il manigance et trafique, défiant le danger avec la grâce d'un danseur de ballet. Voici donc l'histoire de Bast. Il y retrace les anciennes manières de faire et de défaire en n'écoutant que son coeur. Y compris lorsque celui-ci l'entraîne sur des chemins hasardeux. Et au diable la prudence si elle doit le tenir éloigné du péril comme des plaisirs ! « La prose de Rothfuss vous oblige à vous arrêter pour savourer chacun de ses mots. » Eric Pierce, Fanfare « Un récit qui enchante... un mot vient aussitôt à l'esprit : magnifique. » Daniel Roman, Winter is Coming
Author

It all began when Pat Rothfuss was born to a marvelous set of parents. Throughout his formative years they encouraged him to do his best, gave him good advice, and were no doubt appropriately dismayed when he failed to live up to his full potential. In high-school Pat was something of a class clown. His hobbies included reading a novel or two a day and giving relationship advice to all his friends despite the fact that he had never so much as kissed a girl. He also role-played and wrote terrible stories about elves. He was pretty much a geek. Most of Pat's adult life has been spent in the University Wisconsin Stevens Point. In 1991 he started college in order to pursue a career in chemical engineering, then he considered clinical psychology. In 1993 he quit pretending he knew what he wanted to do with his life, changed his major to "undecided," and proceeded to study whatever amused him. He also began writing a book.... For the next seven years Pat studied anthropology, philosophy, eastern religions, history, alchemy, parapsychology, literature, and writing. He studied six different martial arts, practiced improv comedy, learned how to pick locks, and became a skilled lover of women. He also began writing a satirical advice column which he continues to this day: The College Survivial Guide. Through all of this he continued to work on his novel. In 2000 Pat went to grad school for English literature. Grad school sucked and Pat hated it. However, Pat learned that he loved to teach. He left in 2002 with his masters degree, shaking the dust from his feet and vowing never to return. During this period of time his novel was rejected by roughly every agent in the known universe. Now Pat teaches half-time at his old school as an assistant-sub-lecturer. He is underpaid but generally left alone to do as he sees fit with his classes. He is advisor for the college feminists, the fencing club, and, oddly enough, a sorority. He still roll-plays occasionally, but now he does it in an extremely sophisticated, debonair way. Through a series of lucky breaks, he has wound up with the best agent and editor imaginable, and the first book of his trilogy has been published under the title "The Name of the Wind." Though it has only been out since April 2007, it has already been sold in 26 foreign countries and won several awards. Pat has been described as "a rough, earthy iconoclast with a pipeline to the divine in everyone's subconscious." But honestly, that person was pretty drunk at the time, so you might want to take it with a grain of salt.