By the way, how long has Sam been at the Wall now? You'd think after a month or two he'd lose a lot of weight.
He was sneaking more than his fair share of the Watch's dwindling food supplies. That's the real reason Jon sent him away.By the way, how long has Sam been at the Wall now? You'd think after a month or two he'd lose a lot of weight.
And even after the last Jon chapter, the general consensus of the fandom is that he will not die, he will "get better". No one of importance dies in those books anymore. It's almost zombie apocalypse in Westeros, with all the resurrections ...I pretty much figured either Dany or Jon was going to get killed, because once you realize how plot and shock-driven this series is, you simply go "what's the one thing you don't expect to happen?" and pick that. It's becoming like M. Night Shyamalan in it's predictibility ("WHAT A TWIST").
I finished it last night and I have to say... I'm pretty disappointed.
...
That's really it. GRRM has lost control of his story. how about writing a book that's well paced and logical instead of filled with retarded "twists". Honestly, I can't believe it took TWO FULL BOOKS to get here from the end of ASOS (I really hope HBO is just ruthless in getting to the meat of these books, I feel like there's a LOT to cut out). Someone get this guy an actual editor. This reminds me of the stuff I write when I'm struggling and not enjoying writing it and I do so out of obligation, that's what it feels like. I think I'm probably done with this series. Though in 5 years time, I might be ready to give it another try.
I'm very unhappy with how purely plot-driven the series has become.
Tyrion... did anybody think GRRM could make his character arc so goddamn boring?
The problem arises from the fact that almost everything that happened in the last two books was supposed to be glossed over in a time jump. He basically had to make a bunch of filler so that he didn't have half a book of flashbacks dragging down the ongoing story of what would have been the fifth book.
Not even that. It feels like warmed over Orientalism. The feminized unmasculine East, and all that rot.In Slaver's bay we have an alien culture that just feels like a weird twisted combo of vaguely oriental and ancient Rome/Middle East.
We aren't given a PoV from within the culture
I didn't mind Barristan's chapters, but making Shavepate or some other heavily featured Meereenese character a POV would've probably worked just as good or even better.We aren't given a PoV from within the culture so we are left seeing that world through Dany's frustratingly teenage eyes, Quentin's oblivious single-minded eyes and Barristan's grumpy old homesick eyes.
I've never actually seen anyone online say they like Victarion's chapters (here or in A Feast for Crows). I forget who said it, but someone succinctly pointed out that when we left Victarion in A Feast for Crows he was en route to Mereen, and when we leave him in A Dance with Dragons... he is still en route to Mereen.I also could have done without the useless Quentyn Martell chapters and (blasphemy alert!) Victarion's chapters.
I get that they're yet another faction in the massive civil war, and that's my problem with them. Like I said, I was fine with them when they were the catalyst for Theon betraying the Starks and eventually descending into Reek, but then actually introducing several of them as POV characters in AFFC and ADWD only served to make these middle books even more bloated than they already were.The Greyjoys are also relevant to the plot in a way that's immediately obvious - as one of the great houses of Westeros and, like the Starks, claiming a pre-Targaryen kingdom, they're just another prong in the multifactional civil war that's been wrecking the country since the second novel. I have no idea how much the politics of Slaver's Bay will play into the game of thrones, but the importance of what the claimants for the Seastone Chair are doing is kind of obvious.
And also, fun.
Bran gets three chapters in Dance, but, yeah, it's a very succinct story arc that Martin would have done well to emulate in the book as a whole.The book is pretty ruthless in how much it pares down Bran's material - he gets what, two chapters, and a ton of plot advancement? - but it could have been helped with much less Tyrion and Daenerys.
Typo or Freudian slip?I'm having a hard time separating them for review purposes therefore, it's just one long sag to me so far.
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