Patrick Rothfuss
I remember sitting down once, [at] three in the morning and probably the only person awake in Stevens Point. And I stop, and I think: "This is crap! I've spent years of my life writing crap. This will never be published - it isn't good... I've wasted years of my life!" *shrugs and types on* You do it because you like the process. I mean... you write because you like to write.
Patrick Rothfuss is the author of The Kingkiller Chronicle and its companion stories.
Contents
Biography
Patrick "Pat" James Rothfuss was born in Madison, Wisconsin[1], on June 6th, 1973. His father Jim was an engineer.[2] He and his younger sister[3] were raised in rural Wisconsin.
In 1999, Rothfuss graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, where he had originally enrolled as "to study the equivalent of chemical engineering".[4] He would later switch to clinical psychology[5]; three years into his degree, he became "Undeclared".[6] Nine years later, university policy finally forced him to graduate; he left with a BA in English, and minors in psychology, history, philosophy, and writing.[6]
Works
Temerant
These are novels or stories set in Temerant, the world of The Kingkiller Chronicle.
- The Road to Levinshir (2002): An excerpt from the series published as a short story. It appears in Subterranean: Tales of Dark Fantasy (July 2008, Subterranean Press), edited by William Schafer, and Epic: Legends of Fantasy Anthology, which was edited by John Joseph Adams (January 2012, Tachyon Publications). Originally written for The Name of the Wind, it would appear in a different format in The Wise Man's Fear.
- The Name of the Wind (March 27, 2007) was the first novel in in the trilogy The Kingkiller Chronicle.
- The Wise Man's Fear (March 1, 2011) was the second novel in the trilogy The Kingkiller Chronicle.
- "How Old Holly Came to Be" (June 21, 2013) was published in the anthology Unfettered, edited by Shawn Speakman, a short story spin-off.
- The Slow Regard of Silent Things (January 11, 2014) is a spin-off novella. It was illustrated by Nate Taylor.
- "The Lightning Tree" (June 17, 2014), a spin-off novellette published in Rogues. It was edited by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois.
- "The Boy Who Loved the Moon": A comic book adaptation of a section from The Wise Man's Fear, illustrated by frequent collaborator Nate Taylor.
- The Doors of Stone (unpublished), the upcoming final book in The Kingkiller Chronicle.
Non-Temerant (Print Media)
These are works of fiction set outside of Temerant.
- Your Annotated, Illustrated College Survival Guide (January, 2005, Cornerstone Press): A collection of four years' worth of humorous "advice" essays written by Rothfuss, starting in 1998.[7] The book was illustrated by Brett Hiorns[8](credited as "B.J. Hiorns").
- The Adventures of the Princess and Mr. Whiffle: The Thing Beneath the Bed (June 21, 2010): A not-for-children "children's book" about a princess and her teddy bear. It was illustrated by Nate Taylor.
- The Adventures of the Princess and Mr. Whiffle: The Dark of Deep Below (November 30, 2013): A sequel to The Thing Beneath the Bed, again illustrated by Nate Taylor.
- Rat Queens #2: Rothfuss and Taylor collaborated to create a five-page backup comic for the series Rat Queens (April 12, 2017).[9]
- "So Long as You Can See the Moon": a 12-page Torment: Tides of Numenera comic created exclusively for backers which Rothfuss and Taylor collaborated on.[10]
- Rick and Morty vs. Dungeons and Dragons (issue #1: August, 2018; trade paperback: March 12, 2019, IDW Publishing): Co-written with Jim Zub and illustrated by Troy Little. A crossover comic between the cartoon Rick and Morty and the Dungeons and Dragons franchise.[11]
Video Games
- Torment: Tides of Numenera: Rothfuss joined Tides of Numenera as a writer in 2013, creating and writing the companion character Rhin.
- Hero's Song: Rothfuss helped create the lore for Hero's Song, an open world roguelike fantasy game by Pixelmage Games. Following a failed Kickstarter campaign[12] and lack of resources sales[13], the game was cancelled and the company closed down in 2016.[14]
On Hold
- The Tale of Laniel Young-Again: This is the working title[15] for a story about a legendary figure in the world of Temerant. The book was put on on hold "about two thirds of the way in"[16]in 2014 to focus work on The Doors of Stone[17].
Personal Life
Rothfuss lives in a house he bought with his girlfriend Sarah in 2009. The couple has two sons.
Notes
- ↑ Patrick Rothfuss's autobiography, official website
- ↑ Interview with Lightspeed Magazine (March, 2015). This is loose, but I'll confirm from something more solid later.
- ↑ Pat's blog: blog, if only barely
- ↑ Pat's blog, On the Making of Methelgin
- ↑ SFBook, Patrick Rothfuss bio
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Denvention 3 biography
- ↑ Goodreads, Pat's review of Your Annotated, Illustrated College Survival Guide
- ↑ Pat's blog, [https://blog.patrickrothfuss.com/2014/11/the-traditional-pat-rothfuss-donation-blog/ The Traditional Pat Rothfuss Donation Blog ]: "This edition is annotated, and illustrated by my longtime friend Brett Hiorns"
- ↑ Kurtis Wiebe
- ↑ Torment RPG Tumblr, Digital Add-Ons
- ↑ Io9,Rick and Morty Are Going to Save the Universe With a Game of Dungeons & Dragons
- ↑ PC Gamer, [https://www.pcgamer.com/the-heros-song-kickstarter-plug-has-been-pulled/ The Hero's Song Kickstarter plug has been pulled ]
- ↑ GamesIndustry.biz, Pixelmage Games closes before completion of Hero's Song
- ↑ PC Gamer, John Smedley's Hero's Song cancelled, Pixelmage Games shut down
- ↑ YouTube, Patrick Rothfuss reads "The Tale of Laniel Young-Again": "The standing, awful title for this is The Tale of Laniel Young-Again"
- ↑ YouTube, Projects after book three — Patrick Rothfuss on JoCo Cruise 2017
- ↑ Kingkiller Chronicle subreddit report at a reading