Some books are slow, that’s true.
It's not that it's slow, it's that Jordan's character work is
garbage. Wheel of Time is only really worth reading for the (pretty decent) world-building, in my opinion (and Mat. It really should've just been a series about Mat trying
desperately to run away from his destiny, with all of the big climactic stuff happening in the background).
I've read Asimov/Herbert (I
do need to finish the
Dune Encyclopedia at some point...)/Pratchett (GNU), and liked them all. I just find Wheel of Time to be an
interesting choice when pointing at good modern fantasy. Not that fantasy is
really my genre (I'm more of a science fiction/magical realism/non-fiction person when it comes to books, honestly), but it's kinda notorious for its bad pacing, meandering plot, and Jordan's... difficulties... with distinguishing female characters from each-other.
It is by
no means the worst series I've ever read (I've read some downright
abysmal books), but I definitely wouldn't put it on the same level as Asimov or Pratchett.
Any love for Steven Erikson and the Malazan series?
They're kinda a sometimes food. Erikson's a little
too in love with the Malazan Empire, and he tends to wallow a bit too much in the grimdark side of things for my tastes (though his moments of people not being shit tend to be
amazing)... but
Memories of Ice had antifascist neanderthal mummies fighting velociraptor skeletons as an
integral part of its plot, so I can't hate them.
...
If anyone wants a book suggestion, though, Susannah Clark's
Piranesi is pretty dang good, as is Guy Gavriel Kay's
Tigana.