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After the long summer marathon in which I re-read the first four books of GRR Martin's saga, I finally tackled the long-awaited fifth book and finished it yesterday.

It's difficult to say how I feel about it: the long months of full immersion in the realms of Westeros left me a little unsettled, as if I just woke up from a convoluted dream and were still trying to regain a foothold in the normal flow of life.   There's a part of me that needs different "pastures" for the brain to explore, and another that's longing for more of that story.

It was a satisfying read, of course, the thousand-odd pages a welcome find after the six years long drought between this book and the previous one: several questions on the whereabouts of a few characters, totally absent in A Feast for Crows, were answered; new characters were added to the mix and older ones were presented in a different light, making me change my mind about them. GRR Martin often surprises us with these turnarounds, and it's one of the marks of how good a writer he is.

Yet it was not an "easy" read: the first half of the book suffered a little from the slowness many perceived in Book 4. These events ran in parallel with the story-arc of A Feast for Crows, so the feeling of having gone back and retraced one's steps must have been responsible for this sensation.
Once the story picked up again toward further developments, though, the pace did not greatly improve and the feel that some of the characters had lost momentum became too strong to ignore.

Daenerys is the one who suffers from this "illness" more than most: after having stormed through Slaver's Bay and taken over city after city, she stops at her last conquest, Meereen, and here she seems to get frozen in amber. Or rather, to be wading through molasses. Only toward the end of the book something changes - finally! - but we are left in the lurch thanks to a massive cliff-hanger. Thank you very much, Mr. Martin!

Something similar happens to other beloved characters, like Tyrion, or Jon: their last pages see them on the brink on something, with no clear indication of what will happen next. That is all right, of course: readers must be left hungering for more - it's a law of story-telling, and also a sound commercial tactic… But did we really need to suffer through pages and pages in which *nothing* happened at all to get to this point? I'm not too sure.

I've often read that sagas suffer from "sagging-middle syndrome", and ASOIAF seems no different: I hope that the next two books, which should see the conclusion of this huge story, will get back to the breath-taking, blood-racing pace of the first three instalments. It would be sad if this particular mountain were to give birth to a puny mouse, after all… 

(no subject)

Date: 2011-10-28 09:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nymeria-55.livejournal.com
Agreed on Dany's young age and the need for her to grow through mistakes, yet her long - too long IMHO - stay in Meereen made me grit my teeth... And after all that waiting, and knuckle-biting, what does Evil Uncle George do? He leaves out on the plain facing a big Dothraki khalasar - to be continued... Aaaarrrghh!!!! :-)

As for the golden-toothed guy I hope he's one of the bodies being thrown inside the city by trebuchet... *veg*

And... only April? Wow! Welcome to the addiction :-)

(no subject)

Date: 2011-10-28 09:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charlie-bz.livejournal.com
Yes! Way way too long in Mereen. I like Dany. I like her chapters but I don't want her in that boring city any longer. I really want her to meet up with Tyrion. I especially want her to meet with that former slave woman that we met somewhere in the book. I'm a little fuzzy on the details. That's what I get for reading it in a matter of days.

A reread is in the cards for me.

(no subject)

Date: 2011-10-29 04:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nymeria-55.livejournal.com
I hoped that Dany and Tyrion would meet in this book, too! They were so close, so close...
And he would be a great adviser, as well, crafty and subtle: with his help she could become so much more...


I'm a little fuzzy on the details. That's what I get for reading it in a matter of days.
This was my second re-read (I did another one when Feast for Crows came out), and if it's any comfort, I still have to look up details because the material is so HUGE that you can't remember everything. I guess you know http://www.westeros.org/ with its chapter-by-chapter forum discussions - if you don't, that's the place for a helping your memory, or http://towerofthehand.com/ where you can find books synopses divided by chapters.

How Martin keeps it all straight, I have no idea... ;-)

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