Early works Jordan began writing in 1977. His first writing project was a fantasy novel entitled
Warriors of the Altaii, writing by hand over three and a half months and typing it up when he returned to work. He contacted
Donald A. Wolheim at
DAW Books and immediately received an offer, but after attempting to negotiate a minor detail the offer was rejected, citing his "excessive demands". Despite the lack of a publishing deal, he tendered his resignation from his nuclear engineering job, confident that he could write full time. A local bookstore owner put Jordan in touch with the editor
Harriet McDougal, who read
Altaii. Instead of editing this early work she asked for a new story, which led Jordan to write
The Fallon Blood, published in 1980 by McDougal's personal imprint, Popham Press. Jordan began dating McDougal and his late-1970s
Dungeons & Dragons game with her son Will would serve as inspiration for
The Wheel of Time. Jordan wrote three books in the Fallon saga and planned it to be a longer series chronicling the
history of the United States from the time of the
Civil War to the Vietnam War. While the works sold fairly well, Jordan became bored after the third one and decided to explore other avenues. Jordan stopped using Popham Press in the early 1980s as he was aware that it was owned by McDougal and he was about to marry his "only source of income". With this in mind, his future books would be published by other companies while McDougal would continue to edit his works. He also wrote the western
Cheyenne Raiders around this time, his only book to use a different editor.
Conan the Barbarian Tom Doherty at
Tor Books obtained the rights to
Conan the Barbarian and needed a novel very quickly. McDougal recommended Jordan because she knew he had written his first novel,
Warriors of the Altaii, in a very short timespan. Jordan initially turned down the offer because he was concerned about writing in an established fictional universe from another author. He later accepted and enjoyed the project, though he found it difficult to be creative within the strict format rules of the books. He would go on to write seven of these from 1982 to 1984.
The Wheel of Time 2005 On the back of the successful Conan books, Doherty asked if he had any other book ideas, and Jordan discussed his plans for an epic fantasy series, of up to three books in length. Jordan's work on
The Wheel of Time began in 1984 and ballooned in scope from the initial three book vision. Diagnosed with a terminal heart condition in the mid-2000s, he became concerned that he might not live to complete the series and compiled additional notes beyond those he already had so that another could finish the "final" book,
A Memory of Light. He shared all of the significant plot details with his family not long before he died with this in mind. He maintained that in doing so the book would get published even if "the worst actually happens". After Jordan's death in September 2007,
Brandon Sanderson took on that role. Sanderson completed the story across three volumes from 2009 to 2013, the last of which bore Jordan's title
A Memory of Light. ==Personal life==