Sword of Truth

""People are stupid; given proper motivation, almost anyone will believe almost anything. Because people are stupid, they will believe a lie because they want to believe it's true, or because they are afraid it might be true. People's heads are full of knowledge, facts, and beliefs, and most of it is false, yet they think it all true. People are stupid; they can only rarely tell the difference between a lie and the truth, and yet they are confident they can, and so are all the easier to fool.""

- The Wizard's First Rule

"Men behind Richard hit the line of evil's guardians with unrestrained violence. People armed only with their hatred for moral clarity fell bloodied, terribly injured, and dead. The line of people collapsed before the merciless charge. Some of the people, screaming their contempt, used their fists to attack Richard's men. They were met with swift and deadly steel."

- Excerpt from Naked Empire.

A series of High Fantasy novels—ahem, stories that have important human themes—written by Terry Goodkind. It started in 1994 with the publishing of Wizard's First Rule and ended in 2007 with the eleventh in the series and final book of the Chainfire trilogy, Confessor. There is also a prequel novella, originally published in the Legends compilation of short stories and now available on its own, called Debt of Bones. In chronological story order, the books are as follows:


 * Debt Of Bones (1998)
 * Wizard's First Rule (1994)
 * Stone of Tears (1995)
 * Blood of the Fold (1996)
 * Temple of the Winds (1997)
 * Soul of the Fire (1999)
 * Faith of the Fallen (2000)
 * The Pillars of Creation (2001)
 * Naked Empire (2003)
 * Chainfire (2005)
 * Phantom (2006)
 * Confessor (2007)

In addition to these books, Terry Goodkind has written two other novels. The Law of Nines serves as a sequel of sorts to the main series and features an entirely new cast of characters. The Omen Machine, billed as "A Richard and Kahlan Novel", takes place immediately after Confessor, but is not connected to the Myth Arcs of the previous series.


 * The Law of Nines (2009)
 * The Omen Machine (2011)

The TV adaptation, called Legend of the Seeker, has its own page.

Links:
 * Official website

Richard Cypher is a woods guide living in a mostly-pastoral nation called Westland, cut off from the rest of the world—known to them as consisting of two other lands, called the Midlands and D'Hara—by a magical boundary that is in fact a window to the underworld; all who enter it die. After coming upon an "odd-looking vine", he spots a mysterious and beautiful woman who appears to be chased by four armed men. Offering to help her, he finds she is being trailed by assassins.

She explains that she has come in search of a great wizard, who supposedly came to Westland years ago, to help defend the Midlands against a man named Darken Rahl, who hopes to bring all the world under his dominion. Richard knows that what she says is impossible; nothing can get through the boundaries, and Westland doesn't have any magic. Yet he has never seen a woman like her, nor men like those hunting her. He decides he should take her to Zedd, a slightly crazy old man who is like a grandfather to him, and who always seems to know everything that goes on...

As you might have guessed, Zedd does, indeed, turn out to be the wizard, and the three characters team up to stop Darken Rahl before all is lost. Richard is given the titular Sword of Truth, which uses the power of its user's personal anger to strike down enemies.

The two first books, Wizard's First Rule and Stone of Tears, are fairly standard fantasy fare, complete with dragons, an evil wizard out to rule the world, the discovery that he wasn't working for his own sake, a potentially world-ending plot, a magic sword, a wise old wizard, a mysterious woman with strange powers, and a gratuitous S&M sequence. For a long time some people thought Goodkind was ripping off Robert Jordan, as his stories contained many things that had exact counterparts in Jordan's novels. From the third book on, things get slightly less derivative, with the introduction of a new Big Bad and increasing focus on Richard's struggles as a leader. By the fourth book the plot is still pretty standard but at least going under its own power.

Around the fifth book, Goodkind began introducing Objectivist themes and aesops inspired by Ayn Rand in the Sword of Truth. Many people who liked his early works found this a turning point in the series, but he also gained many new fans and gave the plot a depth it'd lacked before. Things went overboard in the eighth book, Naked Empire, which contains the infamous evil pacifist plot. The last three books, collectively called the Chainfire Trilogy, brought back plenty of the early themes and events of the series, and Confessor, the last book, was specifically one huge throw-back to Wizard's First Rule.

Goodkind has stated a distaste for cliffhangers and other ways of forcing people to buy future books, which is why, aside from the Chainfire trilogy, the books have mostly self-contained plots; some new danger is introduced, the characters wonder about its meaning, and it is defeated. However, all of these book-plots are tied by the Myth Arc of either the Imperial Order or the Keeper of the Underworld.

There's also a spin-off book, The Law of Nines, which follows a completely different cast of characters and shifts genres from High Fantasy to a contemporary thriller with fantasy elements. It takes place in the magic-free world created at the end of "Confessor", the inhabitants of which developed technology to replace the magic they had lost. The story follows the exploits of Alex Rahl, a distant descendant of Richard's half-sister Jennsen, whose life is changed forever when he meets a woman named Jax who claims to be from a parallel universe where magic still works.

Now has a character sheet.

""You don't even have your weapon." "I am the weapon.""
 * Absence of Evidence: In Chainfire, after the eponymous spell has made everyone forget that Kahlan ever existed, Richard tries to use this to convince everyone else that she has. He points to where he says he, Kahlan, and Cara had been walking, and notes that there were no footprints between his and Cara's, which were several feet apart. He tells his companions that this means someone erased Kahlan's footprints. Nobody believes him since, as mentioned, everyone is sure that she never existed in the first place.
 * Abusive Parents: Three examples: Darken Rahl, Oba's mother, and Nicci's mother.
 * Accidental Athlete: Richard gets conscripted into a Ja'La team after he slaughters his way through a considerable number of soldiers in an almost-successful attempt to free himself.
 * Action Girl: Most of the female characters, when they don't cross over into Faux Action Girl territory.
 * Aerith and Bob: Names such as Richard, Warren and Nicci are present alongside Kahlan, Zeddicus and Jagang. Both normal and unusual names can be found in almost equal measure anywhere in the world, among heroes, muggles and antagonists.
 * Agony Beam: The Agiel, and Wizard's Pain.
 * Alternate Universe: The Law Of Nines takes place.
 * Exclusively Evil: Heart Hounds, Mriswith, Screelings, male Confessors, etc.
 * A Million Is a Statistic: Zedd detonates a light spell with similar power to a modern nuclear weapon in the midst of the Imperial Order's gigantic army. The resulting explosion kills an estimated 500,000-1,000,000 soldiers of the enemy army, though there's more where that came from. Though the Imperial Order has always considered Zedd (and Richard Rahl, who he was acting on behalf of) to be the epitome of evil (and moreso afterward), Zedd is not bothered by what happened because the soldiers killed were all faceless enemy thugs of an invading army intent on killing him and enslaving/raping everyone on the continent.
 * Animal Stereotypes
 * Animal Wrongs Group: Darken Rahl could get like this, depending on his mood. According to Cara, while he was a vegetarian and considered eating meat to be wrong, he usually didn't have a problem with merchants in the People's Palace selling meat. But every once in a while, he would snap and brutally murder such a merchant while sobbingly asking how someone could be so cruel to animals. In one case, such a 'punishment' consisted of gutting the merchant's horse and jamming his head in the open wound, letting him drown in the guts.
 * Anti-Magic: The "pristinely ungifted."
 * Anti-Villain: Nicci.
 * Arc Welding
 * Arc Words
 * Arrow Catch: Richard. Justified in that it is explained he does it with magic, specifically by manipulating the air.
 * Art Attacker: There's a court wizard who places spells on people by drawing them, using their likeness for Sympathetic Magic.
 * Artistic License Economics: The Straw Character communist bureaucracy that stifles the people of the Imperial Order, as depicted in detail in Faith of the Fallen, is so ridiculous that it should by all rights have caused the Empire to die out before the protagonist even became aware of its existence. However, Nicci visits her home town (which was an early place under control of the Imperial Order) and finds nothing but abandoned ruins. It is also explicitly stated that almost all the Old World was conquered within Richard's lifetime, and entirely thanks to Jagang, who is really the only thing holding it all together.
 * Also, the Palace of the Prophets has a seemingly endless supply of gold, which it encourages its young wizards to spend willy-nilly on the women of the nearby town, and which it freely hands out to any woman who bears a child as a result. This seems to have little to no effect on the value of the gold; when Verna interrogates one local resident and gives him a gold piece for his trouble, it's said that this is likely more than he'd see in a year.
 * Ascended Extra: Nicci plays a fairly minor role in Stone of Tears, but becomes a major character in Faith of the Fallen and remains one during the rest of the series.
 * The Atoner:
 * Attempted Rape: Happens a lot of times to Kahlan, but no one ever succeeds, though in Faith of the Fallen
 * Audible Sharpness: Whenever the Sword of Truth is drawn, the air rings with the sound of steel.
 * Author Appeal: The first book's very long S&M sequence, with perfunctory torture scenes in every following installment. Plus all the political stuff impugning socialism. And the social stuff denouncing religion. Also, lots of almost-rape—as in, Kahlan almost gets raped in every book. (Apparently, people have a hard time remembering that messing with a Confessor is a bad idea.) Also, some women will unbutton their shirts at the drop of a hat.
 * Author Filibuster: Oh, boy...
 * Author Tract: Faith of the Fallen portrays The Empire as an anti-Objectivist Dystopia and is essentially a Doorstopper-sized argument for Objectivism. Other books fall under this to lesser degrees.
 * Automaton Horses: Almost completely averted. Characters travelling any great distance will have two or three horses along to avoid wearing any one out too much. There are very loving descriptions of various mouth bits and other gear, along with their pros and cons as they relate to handling a horse. Richard, in particular, is shown many times rubbing down a horse and cleaning hooves of debris as part of his setting camp routine. It's even mentioned that a horse wearing an invasive bit shouldn't be allowed to graze freely, as it can't chew properly and could develop colic, which is a fact that most authors would never think to include unless they were just straight up showing off.
 * Back for the Finale: The Chainfire trilogy sees the return of just about every significant character in the series at one point or another, including those who were Put on a Bus (Gratch), those who just hadn't shown up in a few books (The Mud People), and those who the author had apparently simply forgotten about in the meantime (Ulic and Egan).
 * Badass: Chase, Rachel(see below), Nicci, Richard/Kahlan/Zedd when they get dangerous, etc. Jagang terrifying the Sisters of the Dark into wetting themselves by his presence alone while calmly eating dinner definitely also counts.
 * Badass Boast:
 * This exchange from Temple of the Winds:


 * The speaker in question then proves he wasn't kidding by
 * Badass Bookworm:
 * Warren. By all appearances, he is a class A nerd. But then Faith of the Fallen reminds us he's also a natural born wizard who can throw Wizard's Fire around with the best of 'em.
 * Nicci also counts.
 * Badass Normal: Chase, consistently described as wearing a small armory (he had to actually dress down in order to infiltrate an enemy camp), knowing how to use every weapon he has to great effect, and is probably the deadliest non-magical person in the whole series.
 * Bald of Evil: Emperor Jagang.
 * The Baroness:
 * The Mord-Sith.
 * Also, Nicci.
 * Bavarian Fire Drill: In Phantom, Rachel manages to bluff her way past many people while escaping from captivity.
 * Be a Whore to Get Your Man: Attempted by Nadine in the backstory, which failed miserably. She and Richard had had something of a relationship, and she wanted him to step it up to the next level... and decided the best way to do that was to let Richard catch her schtupping his brother and invite him to join in. Three guesses how well that ingenious plot turned out.
 * Because Destiny Says So: Subverted, in that Richard hates prophecy and goes his own way. About half the time he succeeds, half the time, not so much. But then someone always rationalizes it as prophecy being misinterpreted and Richard actually doing what the prophecy said in the first place.
 * It may not be rationalization. A repeated theme is that only a Prophet has ANY chance whatsoever of correctly interpreting a Prophecy, and even then is extremely unlikely to be able to get the real meaning across to anyone other than another Prophet. A Prophet can, however, attempt to manipulate events...
 * Bed Trick: Kahlan and Richard, near the end of Temple of the Winds. (It's arranged by a third party.)
 * Berserk Button: Kahlan and Richard each go berserk if someone tries to harm the other.
 * Beware the Nice Ones: Used in a twisted fashion with the Mord-Sith. It's explained that they deliberately seek out the kindest, gentlest, most loving little girls to become Mord-Sith, and breaking them makes for a more cruel, sadistic torturer.
 * Big Bad: Darken Rahl is in the first book,  in the second book, is  in the third, and   in the fourth. Through the rest of the series, Emperor Jagang takes this role.
 * Bigger Bad: The ultimate Big Bad of the Sword of Truth universe is
 * Black Eyes of Evil: Emperor Jagang's "nightmare" eyes. When any Dreamwalker is experienced enough, their eyes turn, as "the mark of a Dreamwalker."
 * Black Magic: Subtractive Magic, the power of the underworld.
 * Black Magician Girl:  becomes this for Richard's allies after her High Heel Face Turn.
 * Blond Guys Are Evil: Darken Rahl.
 * Blondes Are Evil:
 * The Mord-Sith, and Nicci.
 * Extended to pretty much all of the D'Haran forces, since blond hair and blue eyes are the mark of a "pure" D'Haran bloodline and
 * Blood Sport: Ja'La dh Jin.
 * Blow You Away: One of the abilities of the Gifted. Richard is able to stop arrows by manipulating the air, and Nicci can form a blade from the air that can cut a man in half.
 * Blue Eyes: Common among pure-blooded D'Harans. Nicci also has blue eyes.
 * Braids of Action: The Mord-Sith.
 * Break the Cutie: How the Mord-Sith become, well, Mord-Sith.
 * Broken Aesop: The first few books have Richard being told that most people who end up doing great evil honestly believed that they were doing the right thing, and that unquestioning belief in the rightness of one's cause is the most dangerous thing in the world. Later on in the series, the author takes the opposite position: some things really are as simple as black and white, and if you really are Right, taking extreme measures when fighting against those who really are Evil is not only justifiable, but necessary. However, the protagonists end up doing some, well, morally questionable things in the process, to the point where the protagonists can end up looking like textbook examples of what the first few books warned against becoming.
 * Brought Down to Normal: in the last few books of the series... not that he ever really did much with  in the first place.
 * Bullet Time: This occurs in the books as well as the series, whenever Kahlan uses her power and in many of Richard's fights, accompanied by the recurring phrases "Time was hers" and "Bringer of death" respectively.
 * Bury Your Gays: Raina, though, to be fair, a 50% mortality rate of the series' homosexuals is not remarkably high compared to the overall mortality rate. Her lover survives the series, is one of Richard's advisors (as she knows some High D'Haran), and in the last book is shown paired up with another Mord-Sith. However, this "pairing" is mostly implied.
 * The Caligula: Princess Violet, originally a Royal Brat in Wizard's First Rule, returns in Phantom as one of these, having become Queen. Darken Rahl also has some aspects of this, but it's not his defining characteristic. Emperor Jagang, however, is indeed a tyrant and Evil Overlord, but he's not crazy.
 * Call Back:
 * Almost the whole of the last three books is a callback to the first book, mostly by putting characters in similar situations to the first book, but showing how they handle things differently now that they've changed.
 * The scene where  has the exact same dialogue as the one in the first book with Darken Rahl.
 * Card-Carrying Villain: Emperor Jagang seems to think Richard is this, giving, "Because he's evil!" as the reason he believes Richard is opposing him.

By Jagang's standards, Richard is evil, because Richard's ideas are not only opposed to Jagang's, but inimical to them. Richard appears to understand this (but not people who simply don't agree with him). Jagang does not.
 * Cast from Hit Points: Wizard's Life Fire.
 * Catch Phrase:
 * Zedd and Richard: "Nothing is ever easy."
 * Richard: "Bringer of death."
 * Zedd: "Bags!"
 * Chameleon Camouflage: It has mriswith, lizard people capable of changing their color for a fairly good concealment. They also wear capes which do the same, but much better.
 * Character Development: Nicci gets quite a bit starting in Faith of the Fallen, as her entire character and role needed to be turned around starting there. It starts with her getting an Expansion Pack Past, and eventually leads to
 * Character Filibuster: Especially towards the end of the series, characters' speeches often go on for pages at a time; in one case, such an oration lasts for two whole chapters. Many of these are also Author Filibusters.
 * Chekhov's Boomerang: The Boxes of Orden, after having been mostly ignored since the second book, become very important again in the series finale.
 * Chekhov's Gunman: The  mentioned in the first book, and casualy in a few others turn out to actual be important.
 * Chekhov's Skill: Kahlan being taught about war by her father.
 * Chess Motifs: Show up in The Omen Machine, with the titular contraption's prophecies "Queen takes pawn," and "Pawn takes queen." Most of the main characters don't recognize them at first, as in this 'verse, Chess is an obscure game played only in the far reaches of the empire.
 * The Chessmaster/The Man Behind the Man: Anna is a rather benevolent version of this before her 'retirement' where she arranges events so that Richard is born and can fulfill the prophecies. Afterwards she tries to be this but fails miserably. Becomes even worse at this starting in the Faith Of The Fallen where she becomes quite obsessive about ordering Richard to lead his armies because of the prophecies even though its repeatedly mentioned he fulfills the prophecies anyways and he is supposed to lead, not her. She gets called out on it several timesand its even pointed out that her obsession with prophecies allowed the huge conflict to take place, but she doesn't let that stop her from trying for long.
 * Child of Rape:, Du Chaillu's fourth child.
 * Chosen One: Richard is the first person in three thousand years to be a true Seeker of Truth or a War Wizard, in addition to being an integral figure in multiple prophecies. The universe more or less revolves around his actions.
 * Cold-Blooded Torture: What  does to Demmin Nass in the first book. Zedd comments on how cruel it is, Chase calls it true justice.
 * Combat Pragmatist: As the series goes on, Richard uses this more and more as his modus operandi. Twice in the last book alone he cut off an Imperial Order commander and Emperor Jagang himself in mid-sentence with decapitation and magic heart attack, respectively.
 * Combat Sadomasochist: The Mord-Sith. Richard acquires a touch of it through their... tutelage.
 * The Comically Serious: Nicci is always, always dead serious... except during certain types of scenes.
 * Cosmic Keystone
 * Convulsive Seizures
 * Crapsack World: The collectivist dystopia is a somewhat exaggerated version of this, but in the rest of the world heroes and muggles still routinely suffer horrible fates.
 * Crazy Cultural Comparison: The Mud People greet each other by punching to demonstrate strength. Though there are cultural allowances to accomodate for things like age (the elders, for example, are given a more ceremonial smack rather than the rattle-your-teeth-and-knock-you-to-the-ground punches younger warriors might give each other).
 * Dangerous Forbidden Technique
 * Dangerously Genre Savvy: Nicci. She intentionally invokes or defies several tropes, such as when she, or when   She also intentionally studies Richard's previous captors so she can avoid their mistakes.
 * Darker and Edgier: ...than Wheel of Time.
 * Dark Action Girl: Nicci
 * Deadpan Snarker: Though completely humorless, Nicci has a tendency to make snarky remarks of black humor. Zedd does not find these very amusing at all. Zedd and Nathan get into the more usual type, and apparently Richard used to be like this, but we never see it in the series.
 * Deal with the Devil: If you aren't born with Subtractive Magic, (like Richard) you can get it for the low, low price of your soul and eternal damnation!
 * Deus Ex Machina:
 * Most notable in the, where is dying from being poisoned, with the only antidote down the drain and the only person who can make the antidote dead. He then uses  to reverse engineer the ingredients (down to the amount needed of each) of the antidote at the very last minute.
 * Also notable at the end of the fifth book, when Richard realizes how to stop the bells, using a leap of logic that is nothing short of mind-boggling.
 * Or the second book where Richard, without being aware he's doing anything of the sort, uses magical lightning to strike down all the enemy commanders and then any soldiers who don't surrender.
 * Devil but No God: The Keeper of the Underworld is present in several books, usually at the climax where it turns out he's inches from crossing over into the world and killing everything. Additionally, he seems to regularly talk with the Sisters of the Dark to make deals with them. The Creator, however, doesn't seem to do anything at all.
 * Distracted by the Sexy:
 * Nicci intentionally uses this, at one point going as far as to  One Mord-sith does this in the seventh or eighth book, leading to some quite amusing scenes when the normally leather-clad torturer marches back into camp in a revealing pink dress.
 * Kahlan uses this to her advantage as a battle tactic against the Imperial Order in Stone of Tears by fighting (almost) completely naked.
 * Doorstopper
 * Downer Ending: Soul of the Fire is singularly the most depressing book of the series, and ends with.
 * The Dragon: Demmin Nass for Darken Rahl, Nicholas the Slide and Nicci for Emperor Jagang, Ulicia and Oba Rahl for the Keeper of the Underworld.
 * Dress Code: The length of hair in the Midlands signified a woman's rank: longest hair, highest rank. This is somehow magically enforced—Confessors physically cannot cut their own hair, for example.
 * The Dulcinea Effect: Remember, if you see a mysterious Woman in White being followed by five big men, go after her and save her! Nothing could possibly happen afterwards!
 * Dystopian Edict: Fire BAD!
 * Earn Your Happy Ending: In . After that, it's more of, "earn your right to suffer even worse horrors in the next book."
 * Easily-Conquered World: Bandakar, whose strawman pacifists put up as little of a fight as you'd expect them to. Also Anderith, which is guarded by a circle of magic bells that can be defeated by ; their army is literally entirely for show.
 * Easy Evangelism: Although one character had been gradually leaning toward Richard, just seeing his statue and the inscription is enough to turn her all the way to his side.
 * Easy Logistics:
 * The Imperial Order's army is so ridiculously huge, keeping it supplied should be much harder than it is. Then again, they've got the vast majority of the world supplying them, and they're mentioned as raiding everywhere they go for supplies.
 * One wonders why Kahlan's original tactics weren't just to burn their hilariously long supply lines. Besides, with foraging troops, Kahlan could just as easily pick them off rather than raid their camps. It's likely that Terry Goodkind hadn't heard the phrase Amateurs study strategy, professionals study logistics.
 * Just stopping the original expeditionary force in the second book wasn't the only goal. Her troops had seen said army utterly annihilate their home, kill everyone they ever knew, and do even worse to their women. They wanted to kill those bastards.
 * The Empire: In the first book, D'Hara is The Empire. In the second book, the existence of another, much larger, empire is hinted at, and in the third book, defeating it becomes a Myth Arc of sorts that holds the rest of the series together.
 * The End of the World as We Know It: Always threatened, but (almost) never happens. Richard actually uses the phrase, "the end of the world as we know it'' when discussing
 * Either/Or Prophecy: Mostly played straight, but subverted in the fourth book with a "bound fork" prophecy in which Richard dies in both possible outcomes.
 * Emotionless Girl: Nicci. Confessors also use this idea as a public image, adopting their "Confessor's Face."
 * Enemy to All Living Things: Anyone touched by the Keeper of the Underworld, most notably
 * Everything's Better with Princesses:
 * Inverted: the only princess to play a prominent role in the series, Violet, is a Complete Monster-in-training.
 * Kahlan is the daughter of a king, although her other title renders her princesshood somewhat irrelevant.
 * Evil Overlord: In the first book, Darken Rahl. Starting with the third book, Emperor Jagang. Pillars of Creation reveals that the
 * Evil Will Fail: Jagang's empire is completely oppressive to individuality and self-interest. As a result, when a high ranking member falls in love and is confronted with the dissonance of what he feels and what he believes, he
 * Expansion Pack Past: Nicci gets one in Faith of the Fallen.
 * Expansion Pack World
 * Expy:
 * Samuel bears more than a passing resemblance to Gollum.
 * There are also the various similarities between Goodkind's world and that of The Wheel of Time. The most direct parallels appear in Stone of Tears and Blood of the Fold. The Sisters of the Light are similar to the Aes Sedai in Robert Jordan's work (complete with evil members). The Keeper of the Underworld and the Dark One are both Satan figures that are trying to break the magical barriers keeping them out of the normal world. They both have human followers, called "banelings" and "darkfriends", respectively, and there are organizations (the Blood of the Fold, the Children of the light) dedicated to hunting them that only manage to spread paranoia and kill innocent people.
 * Failure Is the Only Option
 * False-Flag Operation: Darken Rahl uses this tactic in the first book.
 * Fantastic Nuke: The colossal light spell. When it goes off, the casualities can end up in the hundreds of thousands.
 * Faux Action Girl: The actual deadliness of the women in battle is highly plot-sensitive.
 * Feathered Fiend: The evil spirit chicken monster in Soul of the Fire.
 * Femme Fatale: Merissa and Nicci. The former leans almost to being The Vamp, while the later is more of an Unfettered Dark Action Girl.
 * Fictionary: High D'Haran, a rather Germanic language. Important because a lot of older prophecies are written in it.
 * Fictional Document: Several books of prophecy, The Book of Counted Shadows, .
 * Five-Man Band: Richard, Kahlan, Cara, Zedd, and, as the main five "good" characters, can be seen as this, but they rarely assemble together at one time.
 * Flat Earth Atheist: After the events of the first five books, Richard and Kahlan have no excuse for believing what they do about the Afterlife.
 * Flaw Exploitation: Nicci exploits
 * Flaying Alive: Many characters suffer this or are threatened with it. The Palace of the Prophets graduate Neville Ranson is forced to inflict it on his lifelong friend as part of his forcible initiation into the service of the Keeper.
 * Forgot About His Powers: Wizards have the ability to transform a man into a wolf, or presumably another animal, as evidenced by Brophy. This power is never used after the first book, even though it's not that far-fetched to imagine that it would be quite useful in a number of scenarios.
 * Freudian Excuse: The Mord-Sith's "training."
 * Functional Magic: Additive and Subtractive magic.
 * God: Mostly just a superstition; the Creator is seen by most of the main characters as, at best, a force of balance.
 * Genre Shift: From "stories with important human themes" to a series of Author Tracts in favor of Objectivism.
 * A God Am I:
 * God of Evil: The Keeper.
 * Good Girls Avoid Abortion: purchases a foetus-flushing potion from a herbalist, only to pour it away after giving the matter some thought.
 * Good Is Dumb: Averted with After joining the good guys, she retains her Subtractive Magic and uses it to great effect on several occasions.
 * Good Is Not Nice: Kahlan in the Con Dar. Richard, pretty much any time from the second book on, thank you Sisters of the Light.  after joining the good guys, though she was never very nice to start, (except to look at). Neither Zedd nor the Prelate have issues with lying and manipulating innocent people. Cara is... well, a Mord-Sith.
 * Go, Ye Heroes, Go and Die: Intentionally used by Zedd to demoralize a mob that wanted to burn him for witchcraft, by getting them to work themselves into believing a "warlock" is a nigh-unstoppable Big Bad and complimenting them for being willing to fight such a powerful foe.
 * Green-Eyed Monster: Played straight with Jagang, averted with Nicci.
 * Hair of Gold: D'Harans in general starting in the second book.
 * Happiness in Slavery
 * Have You Told Anyone Else?: Jedidiah asks this of Sister Margaret in Stone of Tears. Her death follows shortly thereafter.
 * Heel Face Turn:
 * Heel Face Revolving Door: Nicci. It's hard to name a major faction, good or bad, that she hasn't served at one point.
 * Hellfire: Wizard's fire.
 * Here There Were Dragons: Almost literally invoked. The later books in the series heavily imply that the world will soon be without magic entirely, which means the end of magical creatures. Richard first realizes how bad this is when he finds the skeleton of a dragon, and wonders if it was the last of them.
 * Heroic BSOD: Richard suffers an especially harsh one after Soul of the Fire. His attempts to sway the people of Anderith to his side fail miserably as they vote to remain neutral in the war between D'Hara and the Imperial Order, Kahlan is ruthlessly beaten and loses the baby they had just conceived, and the Imperial Order draws first blood after they move into Anderith and he can't do a thing to stop them, since they had voted for neutrality after he had told them that he wouldn't waste his men's lives fighting to save people who wouldn't contribute to the effort. He destroys Anderith's Forgotten Superweapon, but the Imperial Order still has a strong foothold in the Midlands and can strike out at will. Personally, militarily, and politically defeated, he takes Kahlan and Cara with him to a remote mountain range in Westland with every intention of sitting out the rest of the war in peace and to hell with everyone else. In part, it's because he wants his people to learn to fight tyranny because they want to rather than because he orders them to, but mostly it's because he's just that sick and tired of the whole mess. If it weren't for Nicci tracking him down and kidnapping him, he would have been able to hide for years without being found.
 * Heroic Sacrifice: Wizards Life Fire can be this, if used to protect another person. In this first book, Kahlan's former wizard does this to ensure that Darken Rahl cannot . Zed tastes the ashes left on the wall and notes that they are sweet, the sign that it was a Heroic Sacrifice.
 * High Heel Face Turn:.
 * I Just Want to Be Normal: Richard spends the first couple of books saying he's just a woods guide, before he accepts his role as.
 * I'm a Humanitarian: The Mud People ritually consume the flesh of their fallen enemies, in an aversion of the "cannibals are always villains" aspect of the trope.
 * I Want My Beloved to Be Happy:
 * Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique: The heroes have few qualms about the use of this, and at one point cross the line into full-blown Cold-Blooded Torture.
 * Kangaroo Court: Kahlan's conviction by Neville Ranson in Stone of Tears.
 * Knight Templar: Richard slowly turns into one, despite being warned against doing so. Then there's the series canonical Knight Templar, Sister Nicci.
 * Lady in Red: Merissa always wears a red dress, and her personality definitely fits with the trope. This is perhaps a deliberate contrast to Nicci's preferred colors.
 * Lady of Black Magic: Nicci.
 * The Lancer: Kahlan functions as Richard's second-in-command and sometimes equal in addition to his love interest. When she isn't available, her role is filled by Lesser lancers include General Reibisch, Benjamin Meiffert, and Chase.
 * Let's Get Dangerous: Richard Rahl signifies himself getting dangerous with the phrase, "bringer of death." Similarly, when Nicci is going to get dangerous, she slips into the personal of "Death's Mistress."
 * Line in the Sand: Kahlan offers her soldiers the opportunity to opt out before their seemingly suicidal attack on the Imperial Order. After they leave, she orders the remaining soldiers to go after them and kill them, on the (eventually proven correct) assumption that they planned to sell the others out to the Imperial Order.
 * The Little Black Dress: The only thing that Nicci ever wears, except in the last couple books, when one of the Mord-Sith keeps putting her in a frilly pink nightgown; even the narration thinks this is funny, especially when Nicci proceeds to make pronouncements of doom while still wearing it.
 * Little Miss Badass: Rachel in the later books; not surprising, since she was adopted by Chase in the first book, and he's been teaching her everything he knows.
 * Living Lie Detector: The Confessors' magic was created for this purpose, although it has other uses, such as self defense.
 * Long Running Book Series
 * Lost Technology: Technically lost magic, but it fits the trope.
 * Lotus Eater Machine: The boundary separating the New World from the Old World works like this, tempting those attempting to travel through it with their hearts' desire. It also appears to keep people alive when it traps them, since.
 * Luke, I Am Your Father:.
 * Magi Babble: See also Magic A Is Magic A.
 * MacGuffin: However, it's often quite clear what they do, and some actually get used.
 * Magic A Is Magic A:
 * Attempted, but it's never all that consistent. By the end of the series, it seems to boil down to "however Richard needs it to work."
 * One thing that is kept consistent is that all magic has some kind of balancing factor or opposite. Additive magic has subtractive magic. The Sword of Truth runs on both anger and love. The Rahl bloodline's enchantment that ensures there's always a Gifted heir results in the Anti-Magic pristinely un-gifted. It comes back as a clue in The Omen Machine:.
 * Magic Knight: Richard.
 * Merlin and Nimue: Richard's relationship with Sister Verna, and the other Sisters of Light.
 * Million Mook March: The Imperial Order. They gather over a million troops for an invasion, and later the number swells with reinforcements to 2-3 million. By comparison, before Richard starts trying to consolidate the Midlands' forces, the largest assembled armies were in the 100-200,000 range, and the D'Haran led resistance is hopelessly outnumbered for the duration of the series.
 * Mind Rape:
 * Darken Rahl has the ability to project horrific visions into others' minds, which he does to  in Stone of Tears. However, the undisputed king of Mind Rape in the series is the Dreamwalker Emperor Jagang.
 * Shota does this to Richard in Phantom, planting thoroughly lucid visions of Imperial Order atrocities in his mind.
 * Mind Your Step: The stairs of the house Richard moves into with Nicci in Faith Of The Fallen are in pretty sorry condition, so Richard talks some of the local thugs, who had been threatening him, into helping him fix them, telling them otherwise they wouldn't amount to anything. Two of them oblige, while the third, well, isn't swayed so easily.
 * Mommy Issues: Nicci's relationship with her mother is a female example. Her unnamed mother's dogma being instilled in her at an early age is revealed to be the root of her near-insanity, and is probably responsible for more of her anguish than anyone else in the world.
 * Moral Dissonance: The tactically sound but morally questionable strategies employed by Richard's armies on his instructions.
 * More Than Mind Control: Jagang's brutal Mind Rape of the Sisters of the Light eventually makes them so terrified of his wrath that they do everything possible to help the Imperial Order, even when he isn't controlling them.
 * My Girl Is a Slut: is the last one to realize his wife's infidelity, and he had prided himself on their fidelity, much to his dismay.
 * My Girl Is Not a Slut: Despite having been with only Richard once (and only a couple people knew) and was going to marry him, several people assume this about Kahlan in The Temple of The Wind.
 * Mystical Plague: In Temple of the Winds, Jagang unleashes a plague, like a worse version of the Black Death, on the Midlands' capital city. And he deliberately starts it with a bunch of young children.
 * Name's the Same: For the last time, it's not that Zedd.
 * Names to Run Away From Really Fast: First there's Darken Rahl, but most of this the nommes de guerre the good guys end up with. Zedd is the Wind of Death; Richard is the Bringer of Death; Nicci is Death's Mistress. And you better believe they earned those nicknames.
 * New Powers as the Plot Demands: Richard doesn't actually know anything about magic, but the powers he eventually develops work instinctively; he does impossible feats of magic without knowing the slightest thing about how he's doing it. Frequently used as an Ass Pull.
 * Neuro Vault: Wizard's First Rule revolves around Darken Rahl's attempts to extract the contents of the Book of Counted Shadows from Richard's mind.
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero:
 * Repeatedly, as a setup for the next book. Due to the way book 7 is written, in book 8 you don't even know why they broke it, just that it happened at the same time as the last book's events.
 * In Chainfire,  becomes very worried that she is to blame for Richard's "delusions", something that causes her a great deal of guilt. She also blames herself for using Subtractive magic to save his life, effectively giving the Blood Beast Richard's "scent".
 * Nobody Here but Us Chickens: As mentioned above, the harbingers of doom first appear as a chicken.
 * Noble Savage: Played straight with the Mud People.
 * Number Two: Whichever side Nicci is currently on, you can bet she'll be number two.
 * Non-Indicative Name: Goodkind loves using this one.
 * The Sword of Truth's magic doesn't operate based on truth, but on the wielder's perceptions, whether or not they're accurate.
 * A death spell doesn't kill people; it's used to make people think the target is dead.
 * A maternity spell has little to do with motherhood, instead creating Synchronization between the caster and the target (effectively taking them hostage).
 * No Periods, Period: Exception: Periods (or "moon flow") are mentioned three times:
 * While a plague is going through the Midlands, Richard goes to see Kahlan, and is told she isn't feeling well. Naturally, he immediately fears the worst, only to be told by her maid that it's just that time of the month, and she normally wouldn't have mentioned it, except to assuage Richard's fears.
 * Richard is developing a rash on his neck, so Cara goes to a healer to get a salve. She gives it to Richard, and he starts applying it while she lists off the ingredients, only to get squicked out when she gets to "...and some of my moon flow blood."
 * No Pronunciation Guide: Kahlan's name is, rather unintuitively, pronounced by Word of God as "KAY-lan".
 * Not So Different: There's the fact that the Confessors, a faction of "good" women, have the same infanticidal tendencies as the House of Rahl, the leaders of the evil empire.
 * Obfuscating Stupidity: Nathan Rahl acts like an idiotic manchild most of the time, but drops the act as soon as things get serious. Zedd likes to play up to people's expections that he's a silly old coot, only to surprise them at the best of moments.
 * Offing the Offspring:
 * Darken Rahl has a lot of kids, most of them he doesn't even know about. For their sake, they had better either inherit Rahl's magical powers, or make sure that he never finds them. Old Darken is admittedly obsessed with finding his one true "Gifted" heir, and doesn't appreciate ungifted offspring running around.
 * Though Darken Rahl takes this to extremes, it's actually a long-standing tradition in the House of Rahl that goes back thousands of years. "Pristinely Ungifted" offspring of the House of Rahl are historically euthanized at birth, because of the inherent Anti-Magic quality they possess, and the fact that any children they have will also be Pristinely Ungifted, meaning that they could potentially wipe out magic entirely. Of course, Darken has forgotten about the reason for this tradition and just settled for getting rid of any accidental offspring that don't fit his criteria as his true heir.
 * Also of note are female Confessors. Male Confessors are much, much stronger than female ones to the point where it becomes impossible to control them; according to the backstory, every one was a Complete Monster, using their powers to get whatever they wanted, and sparking off decades of war before they were wiped out. So, all female Confessors are forced to have their mate kill any of their male children immediately at birth, while the Confessor herself tends to be overcome with grief for some time afterward. And these women are supposed to be one of the good factions, despite doing basically the same thing Rahl does, for much the same reasons.
 * Omniscient Morality License: Cited by certain characters as the reason they should be allowed to guide the main character's life. Subverted most of the time in that they're repeatedly called out on it, and probably caused a lot of the series' conflicts and strife by doing so. Only Nathan gets away with it on occasion, mostly because he's an actual prophet and has the prophecies, rather than interpreting them second hand.
 * Once an Episode: Every book, a new Wizard's Rule will be revealed.
 * Our Dragons Are Different: We only ever see red dragons, but the first book mentions several other varieties of differing size, intelligence, and temperament.
 * Our Werebeasts Are Different: Includes a werecat and, a man turned into a wolf by a magical spell.
 * Pay Evil Unto Evil
 * Personal Dictionary: Goodkind is so scared of the Sci Fi Ghetto, he wants to pretend his books aren't fantasy, so he changes the definition from having fantastic elements to having no philosophical discussion, so his books magically won't count. They're still kept in the fantasy section, though.
 * Person of Mass Destruction: Zedd, who isn't called "The Wind of Death" for nothing. Also, Richard leans toward it whenever he gets his magic working.
 * The Philosopher: Supposedly, Richard.
 * Pity the Kidnapper: in Temple of the Winds.
 * Playing with Fire: Wizard's Fire.
 * Plot Armour/Story-Driven Invulnerability: Darken Rahl in Wizard's First Rule because of the magic of orden.
 * Power Nullifier: The Rada'han, whatever the hell
 * Power Trio: In Wizard's First Rule, it's Richard, Kahlan, and Zedd, the last Seeker, Confessor, and First Wizard, respectively. In Temple of the Winds, it's Richard, Kahlan, and Cara. In Chainfire, it's Richard, Cara, and
 * Pretty in Mink: A few people wear fur, and surprisingly this has little effect on a character's morality.
 * Psychic Powers: Dreamwalkers. The D'Haran bond to the Lord Rahl is designed to block this sort of thing.
 * Punctuated! For! Emphasis!: Kahlan talks like this when she gets angry. Most notably in Wizard's First Rule when Michael grabbed her in the wrong place.
 * Rape as Drama: The armies of the Imperial Order rape the women of every city they conquer (but not the cities that join willingly). Many of the female characters and Richard have either had such an experience or have come close.
 * Rape Is Love:
 * Richard being the rape victim, in the first book's torture/S&M sequence. He ends up with a bad case of Stockholm Syndrome, falling for his torturer and forgiving her.
 * Jagang also believes that this trope is true, and makes a speech about it to during the Chainfire Trilogy. Her response? "You are getting bad advice from your testicles."
 * Really Gets Around: Nicci, having had "relations" with men in circumstances that vary to an insane degree, from rape, to ritual sex with a namble, to being handed to random men as "punishment", to willingly/semi-willingly staying as Jagang's consort, to one case that could almost be called prostitution, to one scenario where she slept with a man she actually disliked just to.
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old: The Palace of the Prophets has a spell on it that slows down aging for anyone who lives in it. As a result, several members of the supporting cast are hundreds of years older than they look. One, Nathan, turns out to be
 * Redemption Equals Death: actually sort of goes through this twice. The first time,  The second time,
 * Resigned to the Call: Richard really, really didn't want to be the only hope of the New World and the leader of D'Hara. He'd much rather have just gone home after defeating Darken Rahl and lived out his life with Kahlan. But he's The Chosen One, and he eventually accepts that he pretty much has to work all this shit out himself.
 * Retcon: The Book of Counted Shadows is the key to unlocking the magic of Orden in the first book (proved by its role in awakening Richard's Gift). By the time the magic of Orden returns at the end of the series, it isn't.
 * Ret-Gone: does this to a person. Unfortunately, it also has the rather unfortunate side effect of
 * Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory: A variant; the Sword of Truth protects Richard from the initial effects of . Anyone else who touches it afterward can shake off the lingering effects (i.e., they can acknowledge ), but they don't regain.
 * Roaring Rampage of Revenge: At the end of Wizard's First Rule, Kahlan
 * Romantic Runner-Up: Nicci is a female example.
 * Satan: The Keeper of the Underworld.
 * Schrödinger's Gun: Minor elements in one book will turn out to be crucial to the plot of the next, with practically no foreshadowing; this can sometimes seem much more like an Ass Pull than anything that was planned in advance.
 * Sealed Evil in a Can: Several, including Big Bad Emperor Jagang.
 * Self-Fulfilling Prophecy: Subverted in that a character who has knowledge of prophecy explains how this might occur and how to avoid it.
 * Selfless Wish: Inverted. Richard, when faced with a Sadistic Choice, chooses the selfish wish... knowing the selfless one will be granted in any case.
 * Self-Made Orphan: kills his father, . Similarly, his half brother Oba Rahl kills his mother with a shovel. In both these cases, however, the injured parties were evil, abusive douchebags and clearly deserved it, and in the former case,.
 * Shirtless Scene:
 * In Stone of Tears, Richard takes off his shirt (while holding his sword) before  for "fluidity." Du Chaillu didn't really seem to mind he'd killed all five of her husbands.
 * In Faith of the Fallen, however, he takes a very dim view of shirtlessness when stair maintenance is concerned.
 * Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism: Would you believe that Goodkind considers this series to be firmly on the idealistic side?
 * So Beautiful It's a Curse: Nicci. Her mother told her at an early age that beauty is only useful to whores. Grown-up Nicci is repeatedly described as one of the most beautiful women in the whole series.
 * Stalker with a Crush: is a stalker with a crush on
 * The Stoic: Nicci . . . just Nicci. Undoubtedly the most stoic character in the entire series. After going through an insane life of hardship and self-loathing, she eventually becomes so hardened that she
 * Super Strength: Nicholas has this.
 * Straw Character: If a person isn't an Objectivist in Sword of Truth, they are either too cowardly to take control of their own lives, or are actively trying to enforce Communism and religion on the free people of the world. The latter are invariably killed, while the former are usually given a chance to see the error of their ways.
 * Suicidal Pacifism: The people of Bandakar.
 * Super Fun Happy Thing of Doom
 * Take That: The evil politicians who are the primary villains in the fifth book are supposedly modeled on Bill and Hillary Clinton, with whom they share a set of initials.
 * Taking You with Me:
 * Wizard's life fire, where a wizard who knows he's doomed throws literally everything he has into Wizard's Fire; one demonstration of it from a Wizard of the Second Order (considerably less powerful than Zedd) is enough to vaporize people instantly.
 * Kahlan also threatens to do this to, but she isn't intimidated at all.
 * When Zedd is captured by the Imperial Order and forced to identify magic items, he tries to use a music box with a Sunset Spell on it in this fashion. Fortunately for him, he gets rescued in between triggering it and the explosion itself, which conveniently helps cover said escape.
 * Tautological Templar: Discussed in the first book, when Zedd describes Darken Rahl's mindset as being like this. Later, however, in Naked Empire, the author argues, completely seriously, that it's not only morally permissible, but morally necessary, to kill anyone who stands in the way of protecting your own life, regardless of what other circumstances may apply.
 * Terms of Endangerment
 * The Power of Love: Double Subversion. The power of a Confessor is the power to turn anyone into a mindless slave by taking the small spark of love within them and enhancing it until their mind is filled with nothing but love.
 * The Scottish Trope:
 * Subverted. The Sisters of the Light are constantly warning Richard not to speak the name of the Keeper of the Underworld, but it turns out that the implied dire consequences are merely superstition.
 * Also played straight with the summoning of the Chimes, though it's not just saying their names. There's a specific set of criteria that the one saying it has to fit for it to work.
 * Time Skip: The Law Of Nines, in addition to taking place, is also set thousands of years after the main series.
 * Title Drop: The title of each book is mentioned conspicuously in the text, except for in Soul of the Fire, the title of which bears tenuous relation at best to anything in the book.
 * Toad Licking: In one of the novels, hallucinogenic toads are used as part of a tribal ritual, but they're not actually licked as the hallucinogens in question are transmitted through skin contact.
 * Too Dumb to Live/Stupid Good:
 * The entire belief system of the culture that produced the evil pacifists is so absurd that only a Straw Character could accept it. And, indeed, many of them do get killed, because they won't fight back or even try to get out of the way when people with weapons are nearby and trying to kill each other.
 * Several Sisters of the Light show this in Stone of Tears and Blood of the Fold. Taken to the full extent with.
 * Took a Level in Badass: Richard learning the Dance With Death half way through Stone of Tears turns him from a woods guide who just happens to have a magic sword into a nearly unbeatable swordsman.
 * Training the Peaceful Villagers: Richard to the Bandakarans that join him in Naked Empire. It's actually surprising just how well they take to violence, considering they're taught from birth that any and all violence, even in self-defense, is wrong.
 * Trojan Prisoner
 * True Sight: The pristinely ungifted, being unable to sense magic at all, are unaffected by illusions.
 * Ultimate Evil: The Keeper of the Underworld.
 * Unblockable Attack: The sword.
 * The Unfettered: Nicci.
 * Unstoppable Rage: The Con Dar, which Kahlan goes into when . Also, Richard goes into one whenever someone threatens Kahlan.
 * Unusual Euphemism: "Bags", commonly uttered by Zedd. It's not clear what it's a euphemism for, but he's rebuked for saying it in front of children.
 * Unwitting Pawn: Pasha Maes, manipulated by Ulicia. Later, in the Chainfire trilogy, Ulicia is the unwitting pawn of Jagang.
 * Villain Ball: So, you've used a spell to make lose her memory, and be the next best thing to invisible. She has no idea who you are, so you can give her any impression of who and what she's supposed to be you want. Do you A. pretend to be her friend, so as to earn her trust and make things easier for yourself, or B. treat her like shit, beat her, berate her, and threaten her, and thereby inspire her to work actively against you? If you picked A, you're smarter than the Sisters of the Dark.
 * Villainesses Want Heroes: Where do I begin... Denna, Nicci, most of the Sisters of the Dark... pretty much every evil female character at least attempts to throw themselves at Richard.
 * Violence Really Is the Answer: The theme of Naked Empire.
 * Weapon of Mass Destruction: At one point, Zedd detonates what amounts to a magical nuclear bomb in the middle of the Imperial Order's ranks.
 * We Could Have Avoided All This: A major reason for the plot of Stone of Tears, and therefore the rest of the series, is that the Box of Orden that Darken Rahl opened was left open, because neither Richard nor Zedd knew how to close it properly, and worried that just slamming it shut might make things even worse; Richard even says he's glad that Zedd didn't do so in a well-meaning attempt to fix things. Then, in the final book, after, Richard, having realized how the boxes really work, just puts the lid right back on with no ill effects.
 * What Happened to the Mouse?: Richard's bodyguards Ulic and Egan disappear entirely without mention after Temple Of The Winds, and their sudden and conspicuous reappearance in Confessor seems to suggest Goodkind realized he'd forgotten all about them. There's also the seer girl from Stone of Tears who returns to tell the heroes (at great length) about a city conquered by the Order in the last trilogy, then just wanders off later on, never to be referenced again.
 * Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: Snakes for Kahlan, rats for Cara, lice for Nicci.
 * With Us or Against Us: While they only actively try to kill the villains, Richard eventually comes to believe that if a person is unwilling to take responsibility for their life into their own hands (read: not an Objectivist), then the life of that person is expendable when it means ensuring the safety of his own people.
 * Wolf Man/Big Badass Wolf: Rather literally, with Brophy.
 * Woman in Black: Nicci.
 * Woman Scorned: Con Dar (see also Unstoppable Rage).
 * World of Badass
 * Wouldn't Hit a Girl: Deliberately averted, and for good reason. Richard notes he is quite aware that women can be just as dangerous as men.
 * Writer on Board: And how!
 * Xanatos Roulette: By book 3, it becomes evident that  has been manipulating events for quite some time
 * Xenofiction: at one point in Soul of the Fire, the narrative briefly takes the Point of View of a horse.
 * You Can See Me?
 * You Just Told Me:
 * Used a few times in the first book.
 * Also inverted once. A man entreats Richard and Kahlan to follow them, saying it was sent by their friend, the wizard. Richard instinctively asks, "Zedd?" and the man responds in the affirmative. But while they're following him, Richard notices something's off, and demands the man tell them their friend's name. The man repeats that it's Zedd, at which point Richard points out he'd know that because Richard told him, and demands the wizard's full name. The man is then revealed as a shapeshifting creature.
 * You Will Know What to Do: Richard often knows instinctively what to do to solve problems or use his powers. It's subverted in the second book, however. Prophecy was counting on Richard grabbing a certain item from Adie's house in the first book because he would have a feeling about it. Instead, the feeling just made Richard uneasy about the item, and he left it right where it was.
 * You Will Know What to Do: Richard often knows instinctively what to do to solve problems or use his powers. It's subverted in the second book, however. Prophecy was counting on Richard grabbing a certain item from Adie's house in the first book because he would have a feeling about it. Instead, the feeling just made Richard uneasy about the item, and he left it right where it was.