ledded
Herder of monkies
While I recognize that we're really talking about two things, I still saw the part whereWizarDru said:But I don't see that as a contract violation. GRRM illustrates pretty clearly from the beginning that things aren't going to be nice, cut and dried or follow the classic fantasy tropes. The minute that, you know that things aren't going to follow your classic gig.Jamie, having been caught in the act of incest with his sister, throws the young Stark heir to his near death
Jamie, having been caught in the act of incest with his sister, throws the young Stark heir to his near death, along with the Stark's abject dislike of him, set him up as a very dastardly bad guy, until a later book where you soon realize that he is not so 'bad' or inhuman, but possibly even made that decision in a point of panic or merely because he is not entirely evil, just flawed. You know, a person. I get the feeling by the end of the last book that he has been entirely misread by everyone who knows him/knows of him, and that while he has done grand and terrible things, they are mostly no less terrible than things done by almost every other character in the books (with some exceptions, of course), only made so much worse or grander by the hype surrounding him
I disagree *just* a little... I felt that Ed Stark and subsequently his Children were the central characters, especially Ed, until the end of the first book. That is when I realized, truly, that Martin was not playing around. But the buildup during the first half of the first book looked very much like a small set of very likable characters were going to drive the story throughout the series.WizarDru said:That doesn't mean he doesn't kick you in the junk...but since there is no central viewpoint character, it's much harder to say that he's breaking the contract with you.
Oh, it started becoming obvious it was different, but again the end of the first book was what truly punctuated that for me, made me realize completely that I was reading something entirely different. After wading through so much fantasy cliche, here was a guy who was not afraid to have the story be driven by the story, not the characters, which is something that the long-standing tradition of protagonist/antagonist in fantasy literature has not very often done in quite that complete of a manner, or at least in one that didnt seem disjointed and fragmentary, IMO. Don't get me wrong, I have often enjoyed well done stories of a hero or heros who, while maybe flawed, struggle against impossible odds while growing and making mistakes, etc.WizarDru said:It's clear from fairly early on that he's not writing the classic 'young boy discovers he has powers, rises from tragedy into his own and then defeats the great evil' story, although there are elements of that to be found within it.
You don't cheer for heroes or boo bad guys in Martin's book. You grab onto the story and try to hold on while it twists and turns and tries to throw you off.
Oh, I agree, though I still say it as a nicely done break away from the typical fantasy novel. However, it's pretty obvious in the first book that it is not the typical fantasy novel. I guess I'm not very brightWizarDru said:Contrast that with over 2000 pages worth of believing that you're reading one thing, and then having the rug yanked out from underneath you at the very end. The former says "fasten your seatbelts", while the second says "Ha! Made you look!" :\

Last edited: