The Name of the Wind Audiobook Review: Rothfuss's Kingkiller Epic
Patrick Rothfuss's Kingkiller Chronicle has cult status despite 14-year incomplete series. We listened to Nick Podehl's audiobook narration.

The Fantasy Audiobook With 28 Hours of Beautiful Prose
Patrick Rothfuss's The Name of the Wind (2007) is the first book of the Kingkiller Chronicle. Nick Podehl's audiobook narration is one of the most-praised fantasy narrations available. At 28 hours 26 minutes, it's a substantial commitment — but those are 28 hours of Rothfuss's elegant prose and Podehl's voice work.
Short answer: Essential modern fantasy audiobook. Nick Podehl's narration is elite. Kvothe's framed narrative (he's telling his own story to a scribe) works perfectly in audio. Note: series is 14+ years incomplete (book 3 "Doors of Stone" not published). Read knowing that.
What the Book Is About
Frame story: Kvothe, once a legendary figure, now running an inn under an alias, is convinced to tell his true story to a scribe over 3 days. The book covers Day 1.
Inner story: Kvothe's early life — his childhood with a traveling theatre troupe, his family's murder by mysterious figures, his years of poverty in Tarbean, his entry into the University of Magic (the Arcanum), his early studies.
Nick Podehl's Narration
Podehl voices:
- Kvothe at multiple ages (child, teen, young adult)
- Dozens of supporting characters distinctly
- Songs + poems with musicality (Kvothe is a musician)
- Emotional pacing from light-hearted to devastating
- Rich world-building prose
Podehl's work on Kingkiller is widely considered one of the best fantasy audiobook performances ever.
Runtime
Book 1: 28h 26m Book 2 (Wise Man's Fear): 42h 55m Book 3 (Doors of Stone): NOT PUBLISHED as of 2026
Combined 70+ hours of content if/when book 3 releases.
The Series Problem
Book 1 + Book 2 published 2007 + 2011. Fans have waited 14+ years for book 3. Rothfuss has periodically suggested progress but delivery has been inconsistent. Read/listen knowing you may never get the ending.
This is either acceptable (journey matters more than destination) or frustrating depending on your tolerance.
Who Should Listen
Strong fit:
- Literary fantasy readers
- Audiobook enthusiasts (Podehl is elite)
- Long-commute listeners
- Patient readers OK with unfinished series
- Those who value prose quality
Less ideal:
- Readers needing closure
- Impatient listeners
- Those preferring action over character development
- Fantasy newcomers wanting quick gratification
Pros and Cons
Pros: Elite Podehl narration, Rothfuss's prose is beautiful, Kvothe is a compelling protagonist, frame story works perfectly in audio, 28 hours of sustained quality, University of Magic setting is original and layered
Cons: Series incomplete (14+ years), pacing can feel slow in middle sections, Kvothe's unreliable narrator tips show late, long runtime deters some, some find protagonist too perfect
FAQ
Do I need to read book 2? Standalone works but leaves many threads.
Will book 3 release? Unknown. Don't hold breath.
Are there short stories/novellas? Yes — "The Slow Regard of Silent Things" and "The Lightning Tree." Both excellent.
Compared to other fantasy audio? Peers: Mistborn (Kramer), Stormlight Archive (Kramer + Reading), Kingkiller (Podehl).
Movie/TV adaptation? Multiple attempts, none produced. Don't hold breath.
Is it dark? Yes in places. Family murder, poverty, trauma. Not grimdark but serious.
Bottom Line
For fantasy audiobook enthusiasts, The Name of the Wind is mandatory. Nick Podehl's narration is elite, Rothfuss's prose is beautiful, 28 hours of sustained quality reward patient listening. Just know the series remains unfinished.
Our rating: 4.7/5 — Docked for series incompletion and occasional middle pacing. Within fantasy audiobook category, elite.
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