May 26, 2022
A relatively slow-paced book containing an utterly powerful climax sequence; a spectacular middle book for the Mistborn trilogy.
When I first read The Well of Ascension, my experience dictated that I thoroughly loved it. It’s not until later I discovered that apparently, a lot of people found this book disappointing. Because of this, I was a bit scared that my reread experience would be ruined. Apparently, there’s nothing to worry about. Yes, it’s a different kind of book in comparison to The Final Empire, but I honestly don’t mind; my overall experience of this reread concludes that my investment with the characters and narrative in The Well of Ascension remains REAL.
Picture: The Well of Ascension by breath-art

The storyline in The Well of Ascension begins a year after the end of The Final Empire. The majority of the plotline revolves around the siege of Luthadel, and now Vin, Elend, and everyone must do everything in their power to stop the upcoming threat. In the meantime, they also have to deal with Luthadel’s internal political turmoil. The Well of Ascension, at its core, is slow-paced and intense political intrigues; Sanderson never lets up in making sure the character’s motivation ends up in the right development before the final installment of the trilogy. This indeed means there’s a lot of talking, contemplation, with minimum battle scenes. However, despite all of these, I was never once bored; just like Elend, I lost the track of time.
I love reading slow-paced books; I think there’s a lot of room for excellent characterizations within books that take their time to develop the characters. And in my opinion, The Well of Ascension delivers on that front greatly; this was especially true for Vin, Elend, Sazed, and OroSeur. I know a lot of readers have mentioned that they found the first half of this novel to be too slow due to the lack of action sequences, but for me, the mystery, the character developments, the magic system, and the world were more than enough to give me elation. I didn’t think the first half of the book was useless at all; it was addictive, and the exploration of leadership, identity, love, and faith was incredibly well written. The slow and tense politic plus the methodical build-up truly made the last 150 pages of Sanderlanche so breathtaking.
There was also a magnificent new metal to burn for the Mistborn here: duralumin. This single metal addition is magnificent. It expanded the complexity of the magic system and action sequences in the entire trilogy exponentially. Back when I first read the first book, I thought Allomancy wouldn’t go beyond what I’ve read in the first book, and I couldn’t be more wrong. Sanderson ceaselessly expanded the intricacies of the magic system within each installment; this includes The Hero of Ages and also Mistborn: Wax and Wayne. But I’m getting ahead of myself here. The existence of duralumin made all the action sequences—especially the last 150 pages—in the book imbued with greatness; some of the action sequences here actually reminded me of the actions in Attack on Titan, which means it was bloody brilliant.
Picture: Interior artworks for the The Well of Ascension Leatherbound edition by Charles Tan (left) and Miranda Meeks (right)

In terms of world-building, Sanderson—once again—did a great job in utilizing the epigraph to explore the lore and heightened the mystery aspect in this book. Specifically on The Deepness and the Well of Ascension itself. Plus, the nature and secret of the Kandra and Koloss revealed here were beneficial in gaining my interest in the book, and it never lets up.
I won’t deny that there were elements of infamous second book syndrome, but this was just one of the rare cases where I still end up enjoying it. SO MUCH. First-time readers of this book may not know it yet, but The Well of Ascension served its purpose as a terrific middle book installment. Whether the reader loved the book or not, that’s another story. But for me, it worked superbly; in my opinion, Sanderson has masterfully set the stage for the transcending conclusion of the series. Once again, even upon reread, I must say that I’m still amazed by how much this book holds up for me.
You can find this and the rest of my reviews at Novel Notions | I also have a Booktube channel
Special thanks to my Patrons on Patreon for giving me extra support towards my passion for reading and reviewing!
My Patrons: Alfred, Alya, Annabeth, Ben, Blaise, Devin, Diana, Dylan, Edward, Ellen, Gary, Hamad, Helen, Jimmy Nutts, Joie, Luis, Lufi, Melinda, Mike, Miracle, Nicholas, Sarah, Sarah, Seth, Shaad, Summer, Wendy, Wick, Zoe.
When I first read The Well of Ascension, my experience dictated that I thoroughly loved it. It’s not until later I discovered that apparently, a lot of people found this book disappointing. Because of this, I was a bit scared that my reread experience would be ruined. Apparently, there’s nothing to worry about. Yes, it’s a different kind of book in comparison to The Final Empire, but I honestly don’t mind; my overall experience of this reread concludes that my investment with the characters and narrative in The Well of Ascension remains REAL.
Picture: The Well of Ascension by breath-art

The storyline in The Well of Ascension begins a year after the end of The Final Empire. The majority of the plotline revolves around the siege of Luthadel, and now Vin, Elend, and everyone must do everything in their power to stop the upcoming threat. In the meantime, they also have to deal with Luthadel’s internal political turmoil. The Well of Ascension, at its core, is slow-paced and intense political intrigues; Sanderson never lets up in making sure the character’s motivation ends up in the right development before the final installment of the trilogy. This indeed means there’s a lot of talking, contemplation, with minimum battle scenes. However, despite all of these, I was never once bored; just like Elend, I lost the track of time.
“Elend: I kind of lost track of time…
Breeze: For two hours?
Elend: There were books involved.”
I love reading slow-paced books; I think there’s a lot of room for excellent characterizations within books that take their time to develop the characters. And in my opinion, The Well of Ascension delivers on that front greatly; this was especially true for Vin, Elend, Sazed, and OroSeur. I know a lot of readers have mentioned that they found the first half of this novel to be too slow due to the lack of action sequences, but for me, the mystery, the character developments, the magic system, and the world were more than enough to give me elation. I didn’t think the first half of the book was useless at all; it was addictive, and the exploration of leadership, identity, love, and faith was incredibly well written. The slow and tense politic plus the methodical build-up truly made the last 150 pages of Sanderlanche so breathtaking.
“A man can only lead when others accept him as their leader, and he has only as much authority as his subjects give to him. All of the brilliant ideas in the world cannot save your kingdom if no one will listen to them.”
There was also a magnificent new metal to burn for the Mistborn here: duralumin. This single metal addition is magnificent. It expanded the complexity of the magic system and action sequences in the entire trilogy exponentially. Back when I first read the first book, I thought Allomancy wouldn’t go beyond what I’ve read in the first book, and I couldn’t be more wrong. Sanderson ceaselessly expanded the intricacies of the magic system within each installment; this includes The Hero of Ages and also Mistborn: Wax and Wayne. But I’m getting ahead of myself here. The existence of duralumin made all the action sequences—especially the last 150 pages—in the book imbued with greatness; some of the action sequences here actually reminded me of the actions in Attack on Titan, which means it was bloody brilliant.
Picture: Interior artworks for the The Well of Ascension Leatherbound edition by Charles Tan (left) and Miranda Meeks (right)

In terms of world-building, Sanderson—once again—did a great job in utilizing the epigraph to explore the lore and heightened the mystery aspect in this book. Specifically on The Deepness and the Well of Ascension itself. Plus, the nature and secret of the Kandra and Koloss revealed here were beneficial in gaining my interest in the book, and it never lets up.
“It's easy to believe in something when you win all the time...The losses are what define a man's faith.”
I won’t deny that there were elements of infamous second book syndrome, but this was just one of the rare cases where I still end up enjoying it. SO MUCH. First-time readers of this book may not know it yet, but The Well of Ascension served its purpose as a terrific middle book installment. Whether the reader loved the book or not, that’s another story. But for me, it worked superbly; in my opinion, Sanderson has masterfully set the stage for the transcending conclusion of the series. Once again, even upon reread, I must say that I’m still amazed by how much this book holds up for me.
You can find this and the rest of my reviews at Novel Notions | I also have a Booktube channel
Special thanks to my Patrons on Patreon for giving me extra support towards my passion for reading and reviewing!
My Patrons: Alfred, Alya, Annabeth, Ben, Blaise, Devin, Diana, Dylan, Edward, Ellen, Gary, Hamad, Helen, Jimmy Nutts, Joie, Luis, Lufi, Melinda, Mike, Miracle, Nicholas, Sarah, Sarah, Seth, Shaad, Summer, Wendy, Wick, Zoe.