![]() As much as I hate to do Luhhan dirty like that, I think the idea Rafe and the team had here is a good one for accelerating Perrin's plot. “I suggested instead that he kill Master Luhhhan. That kind of trauma, dealt with realistically and responsibly, is really difficult for an adventure series to deal with. ![]() ![]() I have faith that the writers won't treat it lightly, but still. Perrin killing his wife then going off on an adventure really bothers me, even still. First off, it feels a lot like the disposable wife trope (AKA Woman in the Fridge.) Beyond that, I think the trauma of having killed your wife is so huge, the story this is telling can't realistically deal with it in a way that is responsible. I liked that idea, but didn't like it being a wife for multiple reasons. I realize that there is a good opportunity here for Perrin to be shown with rage issues, and to be afraid of the potential beast inside of him. “Biggest thing he and I disagreed on was Perrin's wife. In a long post on reddit, Sanderson writes that he disagreed with this change, as well as other changes that made the story feel more “grimdark”-a sub-genre of fantasy that Game Of Thrones would fall into, but which The Wheel Of Time does not. Apparently there’s a line in one of the books that has Perrin saying if he’d stayed in the Two Rivers a few more years he would have married Laila Dearn, and that’s where the inspiration for the character came from. ![]()
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