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Which Sanderson works are part of the Cosmere and which aren't?


Reading order for Cosmere series by Brandon SandersonHow many appearances of Hoid have there been?Which was the “wow” scene that Sanderson was talking about?Reading order for Cosmere series by Brandon SandersonIn the Cosmere, have we had Shard entities fight as obviously as Presevation (Leras) and Ruin (Ati)?Has Brandon Sanderson ever alluded to a novel/series where we get cross-Cosmere fights?Is the magic in the Cosmere connectedAre the different types of magic in Brandon Sanderson's books his own invention?Which passages or characters seen in Mistborn hint at the Cosmere?Is there any cosmere-wide significance to the Vorin prohibition against fortune-telling?What are the Feruchemical abilities of the “God Metals” and their alloys?What is the most populous planet in the Cosmere?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}







19















According to Wikipedia:




The Cosmere is the name of the universe in which many of Sanderson's books exist. This idea came from his desire to create an epic length series without requiring readers to buy a ridiculous number of books. Because of that, he hides connections to his other works within each book, creating this "hidden epic". In the end, the Cosmere Cycle will include between 32-36 books.




But Wikipedia doesn't specify precisely which of Sanderson's books are part of the Cosmere. It's certainly not all of them, but I'm not sure exactly which ones are the exceptions.



Sanderson's own website, as well as this SFF.SE question, both mention various books which are part of the Cosmere, but they don't state whether this is all the Cosmere books published so far, nor do they give proper lists of non-Cosmere Sanderson books.



I'm looking for an exhaustive list of Sanderson's works, clearly split into Cosmere and non-Cosmere books/series.



The motivation for this question is this meta post - before starting to retag, I want to be sure which brandon-sandersonquestions are actually cosmere questions. But you don't need to worry about meta and tagging to answer this.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    just fyi the Coppermind's bibliography page is kept up to date with any developments, and the page on the Cosmere has a section about the books involved and their relative ordering

    – fbstj
    May 10 '17 at 13:23











  • The simple rule of thumb for Brandon's work is, if it mentions Earth or is set on Earth, it's not Cosmere, otherwise it is. I'm not aware of any stories of his that violate this rule, and he's specifically said on multiple occasions that Earth does not exist in the same universe as the Cosmere.

    – Mason Wheeler
    Jan 24 at 17:45


















19















According to Wikipedia:




The Cosmere is the name of the universe in which many of Sanderson's books exist. This idea came from his desire to create an epic length series without requiring readers to buy a ridiculous number of books. Because of that, he hides connections to his other works within each book, creating this "hidden epic". In the end, the Cosmere Cycle will include between 32-36 books.




But Wikipedia doesn't specify precisely which of Sanderson's books are part of the Cosmere. It's certainly not all of them, but I'm not sure exactly which ones are the exceptions.



Sanderson's own website, as well as this SFF.SE question, both mention various books which are part of the Cosmere, but they don't state whether this is all the Cosmere books published so far, nor do they give proper lists of non-Cosmere Sanderson books.



I'm looking for an exhaustive list of Sanderson's works, clearly split into Cosmere and non-Cosmere books/series.



The motivation for this question is this meta post - before starting to retag, I want to be sure which brandon-sandersonquestions are actually cosmere questions. But you don't need to worry about meta and tagging to answer this.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    just fyi the Coppermind's bibliography page is kept up to date with any developments, and the page on the Cosmere has a section about the books involved and their relative ordering

    – fbstj
    May 10 '17 at 13:23











  • The simple rule of thumb for Brandon's work is, if it mentions Earth or is set on Earth, it's not Cosmere, otherwise it is. I'm not aware of any stories of his that violate this rule, and he's specifically said on multiple occasions that Earth does not exist in the same universe as the Cosmere.

    – Mason Wheeler
    Jan 24 at 17:45














19












19








19


1






According to Wikipedia:




The Cosmere is the name of the universe in which many of Sanderson's books exist. This idea came from his desire to create an epic length series without requiring readers to buy a ridiculous number of books. Because of that, he hides connections to his other works within each book, creating this "hidden epic". In the end, the Cosmere Cycle will include between 32-36 books.




But Wikipedia doesn't specify precisely which of Sanderson's books are part of the Cosmere. It's certainly not all of them, but I'm not sure exactly which ones are the exceptions.



Sanderson's own website, as well as this SFF.SE question, both mention various books which are part of the Cosmere, but they don't state whether this is all the Cosmere books published so far, nor do they give proper lists of non-Cosmere Sanderson books.



I'm looking for an exhaustive list of Sanderson's works, clearly split into Cosmere and non-Cosmere books/series.



The motivation for this question is this meta post - before starting to retag, I want to be sure which brandon-sandersonquestions are actually cosmere questions. But you don't need to worry about meta and tagging to answer this.










share|improve this question
















According to Wikipedia:




The Cosmere is the name of the universe in which many of Sanderson's books exist. This idea came from his desire to create an epic length series without requiring readers to buy a ridiculous number of books. Because of that, he hides connections to his other works within each book, creating this "hidden epic". In the end, the Cosmere Cycle will include between 32-36 books.




But Wikipedia doesn't specify precisely which of Sanderson's books are part of the Cosmere. It's certainly not all of them, but I'm not sure exactly which ones are the exceptions.



Sanderson's own website, as well as this SFF.SE question, both mention various books which are part of the Cosmere, but they don't state whether this is all the Cosmere books published so far, nor do they give proper lists of non-Cosmere Sanderson books.



I'm looking for an exhaustive list of Sanderson's works, clearly split into Cosmere and non-Cosmere books/series.



The motivation for this question is this meta post - before starting to retag, I want to be sure which brandon-sandersonquestions are actually cosmere questions. But you don't need to worry about meta and tagging to answer this.







cosmere brandon-sanderson






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:43









Community

1




1










asked Dec 11 '16 at 17:36









Rand al'ThorRand al'Thor

98.9k44471659




98.9k44471659








  • 1





    just fyi the Coppermind's bibliography page is kept up to date with any developments, and the page on the Cosmere has a section about the books involved and their relative ordering

    – fbstj
    May 10 '17 at 13:23











  • The simple rule of thumb for Brandon's work is, if it mentions Earth or is set on Earth, it's not Cosmere, otherwise it is. I'm not aware of any stories of his that violate this rule, and he's specifically said on multiple occasions that Earth does not exist in the same universe as the Cosmere.

    – Mason Wheeler
    Jan 24 at 17:45














  • 1





    just fyi the Coppermind's bibliography page is kept up to date with any developments, and the page on the Cosmere has a section about the books involved and their relative ordering

    – fbstj
    May 10 '17 at 13:23











  • The simple rule of thumb for Brandon's work is, if it mentions Earth or is set on Earth, it's not Cosmere, otherwise it is. I'm not aware of any stories of his that violate this rule, and he's specifically said on multiple occasions that Earth does not exist in the same universe as the Cosmere.

    – Mason Wheeler
    Jan 24 at 17:45








1




1





just fyi the Coppermind's bibliography page is kept up to date with any developments, and the page on the Cosmere has a section about the books involved and their relative ordering

– fbstj
May 10 '17 at 13:23





just fyi the Coppermind's bibliography page is kept up to date with any developments, and the page on the Cosmere has a section about the books involved and their relative ordering

– fbstj
May 10 '17 at 13:23













The simple rule of thumb for Brandon's work is, if it mentions Earth or is set on Earth, it's not Cosmere, otherwise it is. I'm not aware of any stories of his that violate this rule, and he's specifically said on multiple occasions that Earth does not exist in the same universe as the Cosmere.

– Mason Wheeler
Jan 24 at 17:45





The simple rule of thumb for Brandon's work is, if it mentions Earth or is set on Earth, it's not Cosmere, otherwise it is. I'm not aware of any stories of his that violate this rule, and he's specifically said on multiple occasions that Earth does not exist in the same universe as the Cosmere.

– Mason Wheeler
Jan 24 at 17:45










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















16














List of Cosmere works



The Cosmere series is on-going, so the works that are part of it will grow. However, the more recent works set in the Cosmere have been more clearly part of a shared universe, with crossover characters (like Hoid) and concepts (like Shards and Adonalsium itself, how magic works in general). It should be pretty easy to decide if a novel is Cosmere or not based on this.



At this point, these works are part of the Cosmere; everything else published as of December 2016 is not a Cosmere work:



The Mistborn series (set on Scadrial):




  • The Final Empire

  • The Well of Ascension

  • The Hero of Ages

  • The Alloy of Law

  • Shadows of Self

  • The Bands of Mourning

  • The Eleventh Metal

  • "Allomancer Jak and the Pits of Eltania"

  • Mistborn: Secret History


The Stormlight Archive (set on Roshar):




  • The Way of Kings

  • Words of Radiance


  • Edgedancer (novella)

  • Oathbringer


The Elantris series (set on Sel):




  • Elantris

  • The Emperor's Soul

  • "The Hope of Elantris"


The White Sand series (set on Taldain):




  • White Sand vol 1.

  • White Sand vol 2.


  • White Sand vol 3. (forthcoming)


Standalone/single works:





  • Warbreaker (set on Nalthis)


  • Shadows for Silence in the Forests of Hell (set on Threnody)


  • Sixth of the Dusk (set on First of the Sun)


List of non-Cosmere works



Any other work by Sanderson would be considered a non-Cosmere work. There's a lot of short stories published in anthologies that don't really have their own series name or title, and wouldn't really have tags to begin with. There's a list on Wikipedia but I have no idea how complete it is. The main novels/novellas he has published include:



The Wheel of Time (collaborative):




  • The Gathering Storm

  • Towers of Midnight

  • A Memory of Light


The Reckoners series:




  • Steelheart


  • Firefight

  • Calamity


  • Mitosis (novella)


The Rithmatist series:




  • The Rithmatist

  • The Aztlanian


The Alcatraz series:




  • Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians

  • The Scrivener's Bones

  • The Knights of Crystallia

  • The Shattered Lens

  • The Dark Talent


Infinity Blade series (based on the video game):




  • Infinity Blade: Awakening

  • Infinity Blade: Redemption


Legion series:




  • Legion

  • Legion: Skin Deep

  • Legion: Lies of the Beholder


Skyward Series:





  • Defending Elysium (novella)

  • Skyward


Standalone books:




  • Perfect State






share|improve this answer


























  • Is this just the Cosmere works? I'd like a list of the non-Cosmere ones too (so that I know which tags to watch out for while merging). In fact, didn't you have a non-Cosmere list at first and then shadow-edit it out?

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:18











  • nope, i don't even know all of his non-cosmere works, there's a number of one-offs. I'll go grab a bibliography.

    – KutuluMike
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:31






  • 2





    This answer has been really helpful in sorting out the outlying brandon-sanderson-tagged questions before the merge into cosmere. Thanks a lot :-)

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 13 '16 at 13:36












Your Answer








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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









16














List of Cosmere works



The Cosmere series is on-going, so the works that are part of it will grow. However, the more recent works set in the Cosmere have been more clearly part of a shared universe, with crossover characters (like Hoid) and concepts (like Shards and Adonalsium itself, how magic works in general). It should be pretty easy to decide if a novel is Cosmere or not based on this.



At this point, these works are part of the Cosmere; everything else published as of December 2016 is not a Cosmere work:



The Mistborn series (set on Scadrial):




  • The Final Empire

  • The Well of Ascension

  • The Hero of Ages

  • The Alloy of Law

  • Shadows of Self

  • The Bands of Mourning

  • The Eleventh Metal

  • "Allomancer Jak and the Pits of Eltania"

  • Mistborn: Secret History


The Stormlight Archive (set on Roshar):




  • The Way of Kings

  • Words of Radiance


  • Edgedancer (novella)

  • Oathbringer


The Elantris series (set on Sel):




  • Elantris

  • The Emperor's Soul

  • "The Hope of Elantris"


The White Sand series (set on Taldain):




  • White Sand vol 1.

  • White Sand vol 2.


  • White Sand vol 3. (forthcoming)


Standalone/single works:





  • Warbreaker (set on Nalthis)


  • Shadows for Silence in the Forests of Hell (set on Threnody)


  • Sixth of the Dusk (set on First of the Sun)


List of non-Cosmere works



Any other work by Sanderson would be considered a non-Cosmere work. There's a lot of short stories published in anthologies that don't really have their own series name or title, and wouldn't really have tags to begin with. There's a list on Wikipedia but I have no idea how complete it is. The main novels/novellas he has published include:



The Wheel of Time (collaborative):




  • The Gathering Storm

  • Towers of Midnight

  • A Memory of Light


The Reckoners series:




  • Steelheart


  • Firefight

  • Calamity


  • Mitosis (novella)


The Rithmatist series:




  • The Rithmatist

  • The Aztlanian


The Alcatraz series:




  • Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians

  • The Scrivener's Bones

  • The Knights of Crystallia

  • The Shattered Lens

  • The Dark Talent


Infinity Blade series (based on the video game):




  • Infinity Blade: Awakening

  • Infinity Blade: Redemption


Legion series:




  • Legion

  • Legion: Skin Deep

  • Legion: Lies of the Beholder


Skyward Series:





  • Defending Elysium (novella)

  • Skyward


Standalone books:




  • Perfect State






share|improve this answer


























  • Is this just the Cosmere works? I'd like a list of the non-Cosmere ones too (so that I know which tags to watch out for while merging). In fact, didn't you have a non-Cosmere list at first and then shadow-edit it out?

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:18











  • nope, i don't even know all of his non-cosmere works, there's a number of one-offs. I'll go grab a bibliography.

    – KutuluMike
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:31






  • 2





    This answer has been really helpful in sorting out the outlying brandon-sanderson-tagged questions before the merge into cosmere. Thanks a lot :-)

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 13 '16 at 13:36
















16














List of Cosmere works



The Cosmere series is on-going, so the works that are part of it will grow. However, the more recent works set in the Cosmere have been more clearly part of a shared universe, with crossover characters (like Hoid) and concepts (like Shards and Adonalsium itself, how magic works in general). It should be pretty easy to decide if a novel is Cosmere or not based on this.



At this point, these works are part of the Cosmere; everything else published as of December 2016 is not a Cosmere work:



The Mistborn series (set on Scadrial):




  • The Final Empire

  • The Well of Ascension

  • The Hero of Ages

  • The Alloy of Law

  • Shadows of Self

  • The Bands of Mourning

  • The Eleventh Metal

  • "Allomancer Jak and the Pits of Eltania"

  • Mistborn: Secret History


The Stormlight Archive (set on Roshar):




  • The Way of Kings

  • Words of Radiance


  • Edgedancer (novella)

  • Oathbringer


The Elantris series (set on Sel):




  • Elantris

  • The Emperor's Soul

  • "The Hope of Elantris"


The White Sand series (set on Taldain):




  • White Sand vol 1.

  • White Sand vol 2.


  • White Sand vol 3. (forthcoming)


Standalone/single works:





  • Warbreaker (set on Nalthis)


  • Shadows for Silence in the Forests of Hell (set on Threnody)


  • Sixth of the Dusk (set on First of the Sun)


List of non-Cosmere works



Any other work by Sanderson would be considered a non-Cosmere work. There's a lot of short stories published in anthologies that don't really have their own series name or title, and wouldn't really have tags to begin with. There's a list on Wikipedia but I have no idea how complete it is. The main novels/novellas he has published include:



The Wheel of Time (collaborative):




  • The Gathering Storm

  • Towers of Midnight

  • A Memory of Light


The Reckoners series:




  • Steelheart


  • Firefight

  • Calamity


  • Mitosis (novella)


The Rithmatist series:




  • The Rithmatist

  • The Aztlanian


The Alcatraz series:




  • Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians

  • The Scrivener's Bones

  • The Knights of Crystallia

  • The Shattered Lens

  • The Dark Talent


Infinity Blade series (based on the video game):




  • Infinity Blade: Awakening

  • Infinity Blade: Redemption


Legion series:




  • Legion

  • Legion: Skin Deep

  • Legion: Lies of the Beholder


Skyward Series:





  • Defending Elysium (novella)

  • Skyward


Standalone books:




  • Perfect State






share|improve this answer


























  • Is this just the Cosmere works? I'd like a list of the non-Cosmere ones too (so that I know which tags to watch out for while merging). In fact, didn't you have a non-Cosmere list at first and then shadow-edit it out?

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:18











  • nope, i don't even know all of his non-cosmere works, there's a number of one-offs. I'll go grab a bibliography.

    – KutuluMike
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:31






  • 2





    This answer has been really helpful in sorting out the outlying brandon-sanderson-tagged questions before the merge into cosmere. Thanks a lot :-)

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 13 '16 at 13:36














16












16








16







List of Cosmere works



The Cosmere series is on-going, so the works that are part of it will grow. However, the more recent works set in the Cosmere have been more clearly part of a shared universe, with crossover characters (like Hoid) and concepts (like Shards and Adonalsium itself, how magic works in general). It should be pretty easy to decide if a novel is Cosmere or not based on this.



At this point, these works are part of the Cosmere; everything else published as of December 2016 is not a Cosmere work:



The Mistborn series (set on Scadrial):




  • The Final Empire

  • The Well of Ascension

  • The Hero of Ages

  • The Alloy of Law

  • Shadows of Self

  • The Bands of Mourning

  • The Eleventh Metal

  • "Allomancer Jak and the Pits of Eltania"

  • Mistborn: Secret History


The Stormlight Archive (set on Roshar):




  • The Way of Kings

  • Words of Radiance


  • Edgedancer (novella)

  • Oathbringer


The Elantris series (set on Sel):




  • Elantris

  • The Emperor's Soul

  • "The Hope of Elantris"


The White Sand series (set on Taldain):




  • White Sand vol 1.

  • White Sand vol 2.


  • White Sand vol 3. (forthcoming)


Standalone/single works:





  • Warbreaker (set on Nalthis)


  • Shadows for Silence in the Forests of Hell (set on Threnody)


  • Sixth of the Dusk (set on First of the Sun)


List of non-Cosmere works



Any other work by Sanderson would be considered a non-Cosmere work. There's a lot of short stories published in anthologies that don't really have their own series name or title, and wouldn't really have tags to begin with. There's a list on Wikipedia but I have no idea how complete it is. The main novels/novellas he has published include:



The Wheel of Time (collaborative):




  • The Gathering Storm

  • Towers of Midnight

  • A Memory of Light


The Reckoners series:




  • Steelheart


  • Firefight

  • Calamity


  • Mitosis (novella)


The Rithmatist series:




  • The Rithmatist

  • The Aztlanian


The Alcatraz series:




  • Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians

  • The Scrivener's Bones

  • The Knights of Crystallia

  • The Shattered Lens

  • The Dark Talent


Infinity Blade series (based on the video game):




  • Infinity Blade: Awakening

  • Infinity Blade: Redemption


Legion series:




  • Legion

  • Legion: Skin Deep

  • Legion: Lies of the Beholder


Skyward Series:





  • Defending Elysium (novella)

  • Skyward


Standalone books:




  • Perfect State






share|improve this answer















List of Cosmere works



The Cosmere series is on-going, so the works that are part of it will grow. However, the more recent works set in the Cosmere have been more clearly part of a shared universe, with crossover characters (like Hoid) and concepts (like Shards and Adonalsium itself, how magic works in general). It should be pretty easy to decide if a novel is Cosmere or not based on this.



At this point, these works are part of the Cosmere; everything else published as of December 2016 is not a Cosmere work:



The Mistborn series (set on Scadrial):




  • The Final Empire

  • The Well of Ascension

  • The Hero of Ages

  • The Alloy of Law

  • Shadows of Self

  • The Bands of Mourning

  • The Eleventh Metal

  • "Allomancer Jak and the Pits of Eltania"

  • Mistborn: Secret History


The Stormlight Archive (set on Roshar):




  • The Way of Kings

  • Words of Radiance


  • Edgedancer (novella)

  • Oathbringer


The Elantris series (set on Sel):




  • Elantris

  • The Emperor's Soul

  • "The Hope of Elantris"


The White Sand series (set on Taldain):




  • White Sand vol 1.

  • White Sand vol 2.


  • White Sand vol 3. (forthcoming)


Standalone/single works:





  • Warbreaker (set on Nalthis)


  • Shadows for Silence in the Forests of Hell (set on Threnody)


  • Sixth of the Dusk (set on First of the Sun)


List of non-Cosmere works



Any other work by Sanderson would be considered a non-Cosmere work. There's a lot of short stories published in anthologies that don't really have their own series name or title, and wouldn't really have tags to begin with. There's a list on Wikipedia but I have no idea how complete it is. The main novels/novellas he has published include:



The Wheel of Time (collaborative):




  • The Gathering Storm

  • Towers of Midnight

  • A Memory of Light


The Reckoners series:




  • Steelheart


  • Firefight

  • Calamity


  • Mitosis (novella)


The Rithmatist series:




  • The Rithmatist

  • The Aztlanian


The Alcatraz series:




  • Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians

  • The Scrivener's Bones

  • The Knights of Crystallia

  • The Shattered Lens

  • The Dark Talent


Infinity Blade series (based on the video game):




  • Infinity Blade: Awakening

  • Infinity Blade: Redemption


Legion series:




  • Legion

  • Legion: Skin Deep

  • Legion: Lies of the Beholder


Skyward Series:





  • Defending Elysium (novella)

  • Skyward


Standalone books:




  • Perfect State







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 2 mins ago









Stormblessed

3,15211346




3,15211346










answered Dec 11 '16 at 18:09









KutuluMikeKutuluMike

92.8k18302470




92.8k18302470













  • Is this just the Cosmere works? I'd like a list of the non-Cosmere ones too (so that I know which tags to watch out for while merging). In fact, didn't you have a non-Cosmere list at first and then shadow-edit it out?

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:18











  • nope, i don't even know all of his non-cosmere works, there's a number of one-offs. I'll go grab a bibliography.

    – KutuluMike
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:31






  • 2





    This answer has been really helpful in sorting out the outlying brandon-sanderson-tagged questions before the merge into cosmere. Thanks a lot :-)

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 13 '16 at 13:36



















  • Is this just the Cosmere works? I'd like a list of the non-Cosmere ones too (so that I know which tags to watch out for while merging). In fact, didn't you have a non-Cosmere list at first and then shadow-edit it out?

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:18











  • nope, i don't even know all of his non-cosmere works, there's a number of one-offs. I'll go grab a bibliography.

    – KutuluMike
    Dec 11 '16 at 18:31






  • 2





    This answer has been really helpful in sorting out the outlying brandon-sanderson-tagged questions before the merge into cosmere. Thanks a lot :-)

    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 13 '16 at 13:36

















Is this just the Cosmere works? I'd like a list of the non-Cosmere ones too (so that I know which tags to watch out for while merging). In fact, didn't you have a non-Cosmere list at first and then shadow-edit it out?

– Rand al'Thor
Dec 11 '16 at 18:18





Is this just the Cosmere works? I'd like a list of the non-Cosmere ones too (so that I know which tags to watch out for while merging). In fact, didn't you have a non-Cosmere list at first and then shadow-edit it out?

– Rand al'Thor
Dec 11 '16 at 18:18













nope, i don't even know all of his non-cosmere works, there's a number of one-offs. I'll go grab a bibliography.

– KutuluMike
Dec 11 '16 at 18:31





nope, i don't even know all of his non-cosmere works, there's a number of one-offs. I'll go grab a bibliography.

– KutuluMike
Dec 11 '16 at 18:31




2




2





This answer has been really helpful in sorting out the outlying brandon-sanderson-tagged questions before the merge into cosmere. Thanks a lot :-)

– Rand al'Thor
Dec 13 '16 at 13:36





This answer has been really helpful in sorting out the outlying brandon-sanderson-tagged questions before the merge into cosmere. Thanks a lot :-)

– Rand al'Thor
Dec 13 '16 at 13:36


















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