Well yeah, but Westeros feels grounded - chiefly, in a thinly veiled War of the Roses medevial pseudo-history - in a way the books have rarely been able to do for Essos.And Westeros is a mass of cliches too lol, though well-done ones.
Well yeah, but Westeros feels grounded - chiefly, in a thinly veiled War of the Roses medevial pseudo-history - in a way the books have rarely been able to do for Essos.And Westeros is a mass of cliches too lol, though well-done ones.
Yup. Definitely kissed by fire.Nice interview with Rose Leslie talking about Game of Thrones starting at about one minute:
http://youtu.be/wfIu8WEia8k
I'm not gonna lie, that'd be kinda awesome.I honestly have no idea how that picture constitutes a spoiler.
Unless an alternate dimesnion Ned Stark from a modernized, urban version of Westeros is going to show up in season two and start fondling his secretary on the Iron Thorne, in which case I apologize for spoiling everyone.
Martin also never described why the seasons in this world are of random length. When people ask him what is the reason for that, he says "Magic".
That's a shame. As a space nerd, I always hoped their would be a future chapter with just brief discussions of the planet's rotation to the sun and how some variable would cause the drastic changes in seasons and season length.
That's a shame. As a space nerd, I always hoped their would be a future chapter with just brief discussions of the planet's rotation to the sun and how some variable would cause the drastic changes in seasons and season length.
That would be pretty cool in a science fiction novel, and indeed, was pretty cool in The Planet of Exile, an Ursula Le Guin novel on a world with long summers and long winters and how that affects it culturally (and how the vaguely medieval-era people of the world must prepare for northern invaders).
But Ice and Fire has hints running all throughout it that a lot of the thematic stuff may be literally connected, magically. I just read the first of the Dunk and Egg series of short stories, and offhandedly a character there observes that some say the summers have been shorter since the dragons died.
We have Winter, we have Ice (as in Fire and Ice), we have the walkers, we have the Old Gods, and in the other corner we have Fire, Summer, Dragons, and R'hllor. Cold has the disaster of a wintswept landscape of zombie men, hot has the disaster of the Doom of Valyria, a burning cauldron of destruction. We have claims dragons bring magic to the world, or summer, or whatever, there's clearlly a lot of vaguely Mancihean dualism screwing around here and I'm sure it'll make sense eventually.
I honestly have no idea how that picture constitutes a spoiler.
Unless an alternate dimesnion Ned Stark from a modernized, urban version of Westeros is going to show up in season two and start fondling his secretary on the Iron Thorne, in which case I apologize for spoiling everyone.
I honestly have no idea how that picture constitutes a spoiler.
Unless an alternate dimesnion Ned Stark from a modernized, urban version of Westeros is going to show up in season two and start fondling his secretary on the Iron Thorne, in which case I apologize for spoiling everyone.
Well, that would certainly appeal to the folks who had the theory (at the start of the show) that Jon Snow's mom was Cersei and he was also the "black-haired baby" she told Catelyn about...
As for the length of seasons in the GoT world:
Are the long seasons isolated only to the continent of Westeros or are they all over the world?
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