Underthing Postcards

Patrick Rothfuss

Regular price
$10.00
$10.00
Regular price
Saving $-10.00

Underthing Postcards

Patrick Rothfuss

Regular price
$10.00
$10.00
Regular price
Saving $-10.00

This set of seven postcards beckon travelers to enjoy some of the half-seen sights in the Underthing. Get lost in Rubric! Relax in Cricklet! Stop for a light lunch in Tree (a very light lunch, and don't sample the butter--it's full of knives).

Inspired by Patrick Rothfuss's The Slow Regard of Silent Things, these postcards will help you reconnect with your long-lost, beautiful-and-broken friends.

You can find more officially licensed merchandise in our Kingkiller Chronicle collection.

All proceeds go to Worldbuilders, a geek-centered nonprofit supporting humanitarian efforts worldwide.

Underthing PostcardsMiscellany - Underthing PostcardsUnderthing PostcardsUnderthing PostcardsUnderthing PostcardsUnderthing PostcardsUnderthing PostcardsUnderthing PostcardsUnderthing PostcardsUnderthing Postcards

“Words are pale shadows of forgotten names. As names have power, words have power. Words can light fires in the minds of men. Words can wring tears from the hardest hearts.”

― Patrick Rothfuss,

This set of seven postcards beckon travelers to enjoy some of the half-seen sights in the Underthing. Get lost in Rubric! Relax in Cricklet! Stop for a light lunch in Tree (a very light lunch, and don't sample the butter--it's full of knives).

Inspired by Patrick Rothfuss's The Slow Regard of Silent Things, these postcards will help you reconnect with your long-lost, beautiful-and-broken friends.

You can find more officially licensed merchandise in our Kingkiller Chronicle collection.

All proceeds go to Worldbuilders, a geek-centered nonprofit supporting humanitarian efforts worldwide.

These postcards are all mailable, frameable, and largely just ready for anything you need a 6.5" x 4.25" postcard for!

Patrick Rothfuss was born in Madison, Wisconsin to awesome parents. After nine years at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, he accidentally had enough credits to graduate with an English degree. Patrick then went to grad school. He’d rather not talk about it. In March 2007, The Name of the Wind was published and met with surprising success. In the years since, it has been translated into 30 languages, won all manner of awards, and become a bestseller in several countries. After a great deal of work and a few raised eyebrows from his patient editor, Wise Man’s Fear came out in March 2011, immediately hitting #1 on the New York Times Bestseller list. When not working on the third book of the series, Pat plays with his kiddos, makes mead, and runs Worldbuilders, a geek-centered charity that has raised more than a million dollars for Heifer International. For more information about Patrick Rothfuss, check out his blog.