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A comet the color of blood and flame cuts across the sky. Two great leaders—Lord Eddard Stark and Robert Baratheon—who hold sway over an age of enforced peace are dead, victims of royal treachery. Now, from the ancient citadel of Dragonstone to the forbidding shores of Winterfell, chaos reigns. Six factions struggle for control of a divided land and the Iron Throne of the Seven Kingdoms, preparing to stake their claims through tempest, turmoil, and war.

It is a tale in which brother plots against brother and the dead rise to walk in the night. Here a princess masquerades as an orphan boy; a knight of the mind prepares a poison for a treacherous sorceress; and wild men descend from the Mountains of the Moon to ravage the countryside. Against a backdrop of incest and fratricide, alchemy and murder, victory may go to the men and women possessed of the coldest steel...and the coldest hearts. For when kings clash, the whole land trembles.

Here is the second volume in George R.R. Martin magnificent cycle of novels that includes A Game of Thrones and A Storm of Swords. As a whole, this series comprises a genuine masterpiece of modern fantasy, bringing together the best the genre has to offer. Magic, mystery, intrigue, romance, and adventure fill these pages and transport us to a world unlike any we have ever experienced. Already hailed as a classic, George R.R. Martin stunning series is destined to stand as one of the great achievements of imaginative fiction.

1009 pages, Paperback

First published November 16, 1998

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About the author

George R.R. Martin

1,404 books111k followers
George Raymond Richard "R.R." Martin was born September 20, 1948, in Bayonne, New Jersey. His father was Raymond Collins Martin, a longshoreman, and his mother was Margaret Brady Martin. He has two sisters, Darleen Martin Lapinski and Janet Martin Patten.

Martin attended Mary Jane Donohoe School and Marist High School. He began writing very young, selling monster stories to other neighborhood children for pennies, dramatic readings included. Later he became a comic book fan and collector in high school, and began to write fiction for comic fanzines (amateur fan magazines). Martin's first professional sale was made in 1970 at age 21: The Hero, sold to Galaxy, published in February, 1971 issue. Other sales followed.

In 1970 Martin received a B.S. in Journalism from Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, graduating summa cum laude. He went on to complete a M.S. in Journalism in 1971, also from Northwestern.

As a conscientious objector, Martin did alternative service 1972-1974 with VISTA, attached to Cook County Legal Assistance Foundation. He also directed chess tournaments for the Continental Chess Association from 1973-1976, and was a Journalism instructor at Clarke College, Dubuque, Iowa, from 1976-1978. He wrote part-time throughout the 1970s while working as a VISTA Volunteer, chess director, and teacher.

In 1975 he married Gale Burnick. They divorced in 1979, with no children. Martin became a full-time writer in 1979. He was writer-in-residence at Clarke College from 1978-79.

Moving on to Hollywood, Martin signed on as a story editor for Twilight Zone at CBS Television in 1986. In 1987 Martin became an Executive Story Consultant for Beauty and the Beast at CBS. In 1988 he became a Producer for Beauty and the Beast, then in 1989 moved up to Co-Supervising Producer. He was Executive Producer for Doorways, a pilot which he wrote for Columbia Pictures Television, which was filmed during 1992-93.

Martin's present home is Santa Fe, New Mexico. He is a member of Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America (he was South-Central Regional Director 1977-1979, and Vice President 1996-1998), and of Writers' Guild of America, West.

http://us.macmillan.com/author/george...

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 27,870 reviews
Profile Image for Reynje.
272 reviews956 followers
Read
June 14, 2012

Instead of writing a review, I'm just going to post a list of the facial expressions I made while reading this book:

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However... I feel this one most accurately sums up A Clash of Kings:

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Profile Image for Cassy.
273 reviews825 followers
August 5, 2019
This isn’t going to be a cutesy review. I am well into the third book. I fear that if I don’t blurt out my thoughts about this one soon, then all the books in the series are going to meld together in my memory. Here are my three main impressions:

1. Bleak, dreary, and dismal

Don’t expect any happiness in this book. Martin is merciless with his characters. And if you do see a bright light, don’t trust it. One character learned she won’t have to marry an abusive, horrible guy. She and I were elated. Then someone pointed out that her ex-fiancé could still abuse her as he desires, and few would be able to stop him.

2. Eeny, meeny, miny, moe

It occurred to me halfway through a big battle that I didn’t know who I was rooting for. The defender is a cruel king and has a tenuous claim to the throne, but I like a few of the characters in his castle and feared what would happen to them if they lose. The attacker would probably be a fair king, yet he is cold and distant. He has a better claim than most to the throne. However I doubt he could hold it for long. Precisely who did I want to win? It was not a problem of apathy. Martin drew the characters and politics so craftily that I just could not decide. Honestly, instead of picking, I sat back and enjoyed the twists and turns.

3. Better keep up!

The scope of the plot is ever-expanding. I give Martin kudos for having such a grand vision and keeping it all straight. I don't feel that any of the storylines are unnecessary (except, I hate to say it, maybe Arya’s). And I have complete faith that they will culminate in the most amazing way by the end of series. Yet it is inevitable that you will prefer some perspectives over others. I counted the pages in between Daenerys’ chapters – an average of 130 pages! And this is a middle book. There are no cliffhangers, but very little is resolved. If it is resolved, that means someone died. Unless they are only pretending to be dead, of course.

I lied. One more point.

4. Awesomeness
Profile Image for karen.
3,994 reviews171k followers
June 20, 2018
WINTERFELLLLLLL!!

obey your nerds. is what i am learning.srsly - i was never going to read this series, but once i started... it is like a drug. and - yes - i watched season two before i read this book, but i am not going to wait for seasons 3-4 to read the next one, no way, because i am hooked and I MUST KNOW! and if any one of you people spoils the third book for me, i am going to make one of those torture devices with the bucket, the rat, and the torch, and it is bye-bye stomach for you!

i see now why it takes him so long to write these things. this is the densest and more fully-realized world i have ever read. martin just plants these little seeds, and they sometimes take hundreds of pages to sprout but when they do - oh my word! and there are so many little details, so much backstory, so many overlaps and connections, and history and so much depth to this world. it feels so genuine. it is like my beloved donald harington - where he created an entire town full of people and then just set them loose and let them live their lives, and his touch is so light that it feels like he is just writing down his observances of them rather than creating them, because the mind simply reels at the idea that all of these details and tight storylines came from one person's mind. but with martin, the scope is so much bigger. and it kills me. there is just so. much. going on.

i loved the second season. and i love how reading the book after the season really enhanced my enjoyment. most of the show is faithful to the book, but not as much as the first season/book. but one is not better than the other. i am sad that some of the book-things didn't make it into the show, and sad that some of the show-things were not in the book.but together - ahhhh - my brainheart is pleased.

the characters whose stories changed the most from the book to the screen are



(??? it is almost entirely changed for the show)

and



i mean, really - what could be better than every single one of these scenes:



so i was sad it was not in the book at all.

and obviously, all his stuff:



cuz he isn't even in the book. robbed!

hmmm more thoughts...at first, i hated



because of his affectation-laden dialogue. but oh, man, did i ever come around. and now i want one for my very own.

and who is a worse human being??



or

??

i am still deciding, but i am rubbing my hands in glee in anticipation of just desserts. although martin's sense of justice is very specific and unpredictable. but a girl can dream.

the book is by no means perfect. every time it got to one of



's pov chapters, i was all zzzzzzzzzzzzz.

because, obviously, the only perspective that matters is



who is great in the books, but somehow even better onscreen. and everything with



is wayyy better onscreen, and since she is one of my favorite actresses, i am glad she has a lot more to do than was written for her originally.

and george r.r. martin...



so that is hardly a book review, but there are a lot of reviews for this book and i am pretty much ordering you to go out and read these right now, so just do it and stop your backtalk.

i leave you with this thought:



and this one, because oh my god - what a perfect comparison that i somehow overlooked!





twins!! my beloveds!

now go read.

oh, but p.s. - CHAINS!!!

god i loved this book.

come to my blog!
Profile Image for Petrik.
729 reviews51.6k followers
May 4, 2023
4.5/5 stars

A Clash of Kings was a brilliant sequel that brought the spotlight of the series to one of the most well-written characters in fantasy: Tyrion Lannister.


A Clash of Kings is the second book in A Song of Ice and Fire saga by George R. R. Martin. The main story in this sequel mainly revolves around the multiple kings of Westeros battling in full force for the right to sit in the Iron Throne. This, however, is just scratching the surface of the story. Martin built upon everything he has established in the first wonderfully and with that, the scale of the story has become much bigger than before that I found it quite a difficult task to review this tome without spoiling anything, but spoiler-free review as always it is. Just like my review on A Game of Thrones, I’ll be doing some qualities comparison between the book and its TV series (Season 2) adaptation.

Picture: A Clash of Kings by Marc Simonetti


Continuing immediately from where the story left off in the previous book, Martin implemented a lot of incredible elements into the story such as shifting alliance, utterly engaging politics, intricate world-building expansion, and most importantly, compelling morally grey characters. There were new POV characters introduced in this installment and a lot of great character developments imbued. Although a lot of events happened in this book, this doesn’t mean that A Clash of Kings was a fast-paced read, honestly I found it even slower than its predecessor. Regarding pacing, in my opinion the TV series offered a better experience. However, unlike the first season where it pretty much adapted the book scene by scene, there were a few changes done for the second season of the TV series; some for better, some for worse, but overall I still think that the TV series did a spectacular job once again on adapting another installment of this series for the wider audience.

“There's no shame in fear, my father told me, what matters is how we face it.”


The devil lies in the details, and Martin delivered intricacies not only on world-building but on every aspect of the book/series. I can make this review longer than it should be by talking about each character’s merits and cons to highlight Martin’s awesome characterizations, but I’ll refrain from doing that here and instead focus on one main character, Tyrion Lannister.

“People often claim to hunger for truth, but seldom like the taste when it's served up.”


It doesn’t matter whether it’s the book or the TV shows, Tyrion Lannister is my favorite character of the series and having finally read the two books of the original material, I can already vouch that he’s one of the most well-written characters in fantasy. He’s witty, cunning, smart, and despite all the physical disabilities he has as a dwarf, he never gives up and knows how to use the one thing he’s best with: his brain. Reading the book, I can feel that Martin had a lot of fun writing his character. Martin’s characterizations in this book shined the most when Tyrion’s POV came to play and luckily there were a lot of them. Don’t get me wrong, many of the other characters and events were crucial in making this book as good as it was, but overall, more than anything, I genuinely think that A Clash of Kings is a magnificent book about Tyrion Lannister and if you love his character as much as I do, you’re most likely going to have a good time reading this worthy sequel. Also, I personally think Peter Dinklage did a super terrific job in portraying this complex character, and it has been repeatedly proven as the series progressed.

“When you tear out a man's tongue, you are not proving him a liar, you're only telling the world that you fear what he might say.”


World-building wise, the novel provides insights into more magic and setting of the series. Martin is an amazing world-builder, it gets even more evident the more I progress through the series. The politics of King’s Landings were meticulously written, the dialogue between characters was immensely enjoyable, and the world he created is brimming with mysteries and revelations; they all made up for the slow pacing of the tome. There was only one big action piece happening within this book, The Battle of the Blackwater that happened at the final section of the book. Action sequences aren’t really Martin’s strongest talent as an author, The Battle of the Blackwater was the only big action sequence and it happened for more or less 50 pages; that’s out the two books (1,800+ pages) I’ve read so far combined. However, the battle itself was finely written. Martin’s prose has a strong immersion and vivid power that during this battle, the frantic situation, the swirling flame, the madness of the river, the vanishing of the deck, and the chaos were so easily imagined in my head.

“So many vows... they make you swear and swear. Defend the king. Obey the king. Keep his secrets. Do his bidding. Your life for his. But obey your father. Love your sister. Protect the innocent. Defend the weak. Respect the gods. Obey the laws. It’s too much. No matter what you do, you’re forsaking one vow or the other.”


Admittedly, there were a few sections of the book that were simply too slow. I’m speaking specifically on Bran’s POV, which I found to be extremely boring. Remember, I’m reviewing this based on my experience as a first-time reader of the series who watched the TV shows first; I already know the major plot twists and events happening within the series. Because of this, Bran’s POV probably ended up becoming even more boring than it should be.

“He who hurries through life hurries to his grave.”


Although I loved A Game of Thrones more, safe for a few hiccups in pacing, A Clash of Kings is a worthy sequel that expands the world, histories, characterizations, and conflicts of the series fantastically. I truly enjoyed reading this one, and I have no doubt that I will enjoy the next one too. It goes without saying that I highly recommend this series to epic fantasy reader.

You can order the book from: Book Depository (Free shipping)

You can find this and the rest of my reviews at Novel Notions
Profile Image for Melissa Rudder.
175 reviews261 followers
April 18, 2011
It was right about at the beginning of George R. R. Martin’s A Clash of Kings, the second book in his A Song of Ice and Fire series, that I admitted to myself that I wanted to quit my job and everything else in my life so I could stay home and read all day. I resisted the urge. I’m still not quite sure if I made the right decision.

You think you know someone, and then you read the second book about her. (Or him. Though, for the most part, the changes of the hers were more exciting for me in this book. Minus the most clever and entertaining character to waddle through the pages of a fantasy book, who will go unnamed so I don’t spoil the fact that he lived through the first book. Okay, I may have given it away a little.) It’s not that the characters went through any unrealistic shifts; it’s just that Martin let us get to know them even better and we got to watch how they responded to new situations. Or at least I did. You may not have even read A Clash of Kings yet. Your loss.

I think enjoyed the first book more because the slow corruption of an innocent and stable world interested me. But everything else that utterly enthralled me from the first book—the complex and endearing characters, the mystery and intrigue, the moments when honor, family, love, and pride all seem at odds with one another—was there in the second, and was amplified because, with each chapter, I grew more and more invested.

Don’t start this series unless you’re ready to devote yourself to reading every published book of it. I don’t know what I’m going to do when I’ve finished the fourth book and have to sit around waiting for Martin to write and publish the rest. That will be a sad, sad day.

Quotes!

“Crowns do queer things to the heads beneath them.”

“He who hurries through life hurries to his grave.”

“A good lord comforts and protects the weak and helpless.”

“When we speak of the morrow nothing is ever certain.”

“Only a fool humbles himself when the world is so full of men eager to do that job for him.”

"People often claim to hunger for truth, but seldom like the taste when it's served up."

"There's no shame in fear... what matters is how we face it."

"A man agrees with god as a raindrop with the storm."

"When you tear out a man's tongue, you are not proving him a liar, you're only telling the world that you fear what he might say."

"The best lies contain within them nuggets of truth, enough to give a listener pause."

"Oh, to be sure, there is much we do not understand. The years pass in their hundreds and their thousands, and what does any man see of life but a few summers, a few winters? We look at mountains and call them eternal, and so they seem... but in the course of time, mountains rise and fall, rivers change their courses, stars fall from the sky, and great cities sink beneath the sea... Everything changes."

"The unseen enemy is always the most fearsome."
Profile Image for NickReads.
461 reviews1,182 followers
September 6, 2019
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You can find the full review and more about this book on my blog!

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I HAVE NO WORDS,just as the first one,perfection.After Game of Thrones ending,with the head on the spike and the naked mother of dragons with her dragons in her body,you can imagine my level of excitement.I recall reading this in 6 days,and I am proud about that.For my opinion the first one was better than this,but still this one was almost as enjoyable as the first.

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My favorite is Daenerys Targaryen,I just like to read about her and the cities she goes.She is a badass hot character and you know I am a sucker for that.The scene with Unsullied was kind of predictable,but still awesome.Also in this one I started to like Jamie,I don't know,I just don't care about the incest anymore,and I am glad I got to see him more as a own character because in the King's Landing he was always in the shadow of Cercei.

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And the ending,like what the hell was that,the white walkers? I must admit,I got a Walking Dead vibe there.I thought Winter coming would bring like Giants as high as the Night's Watch wall with spikes and stuff,but white walkers in horses? That was like the excitement for Hangover 3(if you know what I mean),but still I am so deep in this series,I can't wait to read the next book(Already read it)*grins*


Okay so you what you get from reading this:

My favorite thing ever:
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A great cool character that is totally awesome and cool:
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The person you always wanted to kill:
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The second person you always wanted to kill:
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Dragons:
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Arya freaking Stark:
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More Daenerys:

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I can't recommend this enough:)

*Pictures from the review are not mine, I took them mostly from Google images or Tumblr*
Profile Image for Lisa of Troy.
519 reviews5,625 followers
October 19, 2023
Book #2 in The Male Soap Opera

In my review of Book #1 in The Game of Throne series (formally called A Song of Ice and Fire), I stated that it was a male soap opera. I stand by that sentiment in Book #2.

Now this book is an epic fantasy. It is massive! To get through this, I practiced immersion reading, listening to the audiobook while following along in a copy of the text. The audiobook was 30 hours. This is important when reviewing the book because I think I would have had a vastly different experience if I just read the book.

The narrator was amazing! And the storytelling was excellent. Never did I feel like reading this book was a chore, and I genuinely looked forward to reading this book. To me, storytelling is the most important element, so I am going to rate A Clash of Kings 5 stars.

The book rotates between different perspectives. My favorite perspective was Tyrion who is a person of short stature, and he must rely on his wits, not his strength. There were a couple of times that things didn’t look so great for Tyrion, but he had the upper hand.

My least favorite characters were probably Jon (not that much happened) and Daenerys (this character seemed a bit removed from the narrative thread, and her storyline seems to be dropped at times).

George R.R. Martin includes some of my favorite themes like the perseverance of underdogs, and I like how he has clearly invented a rich world full of history, language, religion, and traditions. However, he doesn’t get too lost in the world building, providing just enough to move the plot along and keep things interesting.

Again, storytelling is the most important thing with me, but there were a few elements that caused me pause.

First, good grief! The introduction. Recently, I have been watching a YouTube series by Brandon Sanderson, and someone asked him, “How long is too long for an introduction?” He responded that it depends on how famous the author is, and I started to laugh. Because the introduction to A Clash of Kings is 1 hour long! One hour. And it was really confusing. I felt so much better when the book began, and I recognized a character and didn’t feel completely out of sorts.

Secondly, I was having this internal debate (and now I guess it’s external) about which characters are most interesting. Two of the characters who really interest me are King Robb and Lord Tywin (Tyrion’s father). However, we don’t rotate to their perspectives. Does anyone know if there are other books which cover these two perspectives?

Third, there are just a touch too many characters. At the end of the book, George R.R. Martin has lists of characters. There are about 20 pages of characters……20! At times, a minor character would make an appearance, and I would go, “Who is that?”

Even though I just read 30 hours of this book, I already want to read the next one!

Food for thought: There are some great quotes in A Clash of Kings. The hardcover version that I have is gorgeous but at times I wish that I had a digital copy so that I could highlight and share the quotes.

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Profile Image for John Wiswell.
Author 41 books540 followers
April 21, 2012
If long Fantasy stories have fundamental rules, they probably go like this: 1) create a rich world, 2) put interesting characters in it, and 3) mix up some sequence of interesting things happening around them, happening to them, and being done by them. Martin’s first novel in this series, A Game of Thrones, fulfilled all three swimmingly. He forged one of the deepest Fantasy realms since Tolkien, with a mythology, culture and history. He spun characters of a few key families and then scattering them throughout that world and by the mid-point getting nearly all of them into some form of political, romantic or military intrigue. Active scenes illustrated the world and put it into motion, largely through political intrigue and the build to war.

This second book takes a mallet to what the first set up, dulling and dumbing down the world and putting the majority of the characters into boring or redundant situations where they do not escape the inertia of wasted prose until the final third of the book. Where the slow build to great promise was acceptable in the first, the sharp drop into bleak and sluggish chapters here is deeply disheartening.

Martin’s prose drops off noticeably. Fewer scenes generate atmosphere, and often it seems downright immature with sub-JK Rowling lines like, “The shame of that hurt worse than the pain, and the pain hurt a lot.” There is no language in this volume that rivals the blacksmith’s metallurgy or the dragon eggs in the first, leaving the thousand-page trek much less worthwhile.

Plotting and pacing have suffered similar fates. The first book took a few hundred pages to get off the ground but then flew into character development and action divvied up between a dozen (or so) lives, giving us a sense of a full and cohesive world. The narrative is divvied up again here, but with different results. A couple of characters are in intense situations: one girl poses as a boy, heading to an army garrison with a questionable guide and the possibility of being attacked by the enemy at any time on her attempt to get home; and a young soldier has gone to the other side of “the wall” and is risking facing creatures and perils never written about in the span of his homeland’s culture. They should have this volume to themselves, but instead we spend the first half waiting to hear more about them while we watch other characters sneaking into whorehouses and chatting about freshman-level theology. It’s especially annoying to leave someone hiding from enemy troops so you can read about some guy we haven’t thought about for hundreds of pages is getting a blowjob (Martin’s approach to sex is perhaps more adolescent than in the first book, and definitely has less appealing placement). While the last third expands the number of useful and interesting roles, the book has far too many chapters that serve as dull blockades to worthwhile narrative. These low-action chapters are not artistic or particularly expressive of original opinions (The Song of Ice and Fire seems like a prime franchise to expand into semi-literary fiction), but rather fumbles over clichés of sadness, lust and nonsense that are all strikingly less immediate than the situations we leave to read about them. We do not need another conversation about how some form of magic or divinity can’t possibly be real. Five or six of them will suffice.

It ties into a troubling sluggishness about this book. The first book ended on the verge of war with one major battle having ended. The second book ends on the very beginning of war, with a whole bunch of people arriving. It ends essentially on the same promise of future progress that the first did, and has so much unnecessary material that I couldn't help looking at my copy of A Storm of Swords, the 1,200-page third book, and wonder if it wasn’t bloated by the same problems. UPDATE: Storms of Swords conquered all expectations and was the best start-to-finish entry in the series so far. To read about what changed you can click here.

It stings worse because the first book ended with so many promises – NEW READERS MAY WANT TO SKIP THIS PARAGRAPH. We ended on the revelation that dragons are real, and three fell into the hands of one of the most tragic characters. In this volume they spend 1,000 pages doing little more than eat as we’re informed that they’re weak and helpless, and serve only as an excuse for their owner to go to a couple of fancy places. The revelation of the undead in the first book is even more underdeveloped here. Even the other side of “the wall” turns out to not by a realm of nightmares or perils, but more barbarians and sad people – a nice literary point, but severely underwhelming in delivery. There were so many things to look forward to, but they don’t manifest.

In short: Clash of Kings doesn't have much clashing and the kings do little of value. It would have been more aptly titled The Sadness of the People Who Aren’t Kings, but that wouldn’t have sold as well.
Profile Image for Sean Barrs .
1,122 reviews46.6k followers
October 1, 2023
2023 Review

This series is absolute fire and I'd almost forgotten how good the books actually are. There's so many great characters and plots here, but the thing that makes the series so compelling is the possibility and the openness.

Anything could happen. And reading this when you know the fates of many of the characters, it's so clear to see how easily things could have been different. A slight move in a different direction, or a different decision, could have lead to so many different outcomes. Victory would have been possible for so many characters that died had they made a different move in the game.

The plot is incredibly intricate and complex. And there are a few standout characters here that really begin to develop and show their qualities. However, I've always considered this one to be Tyrion's book, the book in which he is at his sharpest and begins to demonstrate what he is capable of, and how much he could actually do if given a proper chance.

So, 8 years after my first read, my opinion of this is relatively unchanged: Tyrion is a boss.

2015 Review

This is the Imp’s hour; this is the Imp’s book. Forget about Dany, and forget about Jon Snow because this is the book where we get to see the true quality of Tyrion Lannister.

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Tyrion is my favourite character in this series, so I’m somewhat biased in my review. For me, he is the most unique, and original, character that George R.R Martin has written. He is wise beyond his years and has developed an acute perception of things; he knows his own place in the world and he knows exactly what it is. Instead of letting it destroy him, like a lesser man would, he uses it to his advantage. He is often overlooked and drastically underestimated by his family, and players of the game, so when he is thrust into the role of King’s hand he does incredibly well, much to the dismay of all.

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This surprises no other more than Tyrion himself. So far he has been given no real opportunity to show the world what he is actually capable of, and when his chance comes he seize it and even comes to relish it. In this, we get to see the worth of the man. He is much more beyond the silver tonged drunkard he initially appeared to be; he is a man of great compassion, but also one who can be ruthless when he has to be. He learns to play the game, and he learns quickly to become its master.

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If you look further beyond that you get to see a man who is as fragile as he is wise. But, as ever, he has learned to prevent that from becoming his weakness. He has learnt that love is a necessary facet for man, and he has learnt to use it to his advantage. He loves but one man, his brother Jaimie. No harm can come from that as there is small chance of losing the master swordsman. His lover he keeps in secret so his enemies don’t use her against him; thus, he is not weakened by his need for love in the face of constant rejection. He hides his only weakness.

Through all this Tyrion plays the game with a steady hand and take no chances. He learns to succeed over the other schemers and solidifies his place at court. And, if that isn’t enough, he does all this without losing his good nature whilst being in the company of snakes. Indeed, it is only because of his nature and a practical form of honour, that Ned Stark completely lacked, does he do so well in the most dangerous city in Westeros. Well, at least until his father shows up.

Tyrion is great character, and is reason enough to love this series. He is hilarious, wise and brave, but at the same time one of the book’s biggest victims. His revenge thus far has been bitter sweet. I do hope he gets the ending he deserves.

A Song of Ice and Fire
1. A Game of Thrones- A life chnaging five stars
2.A Clash of Kings- An Impish five stars
3. A Storm of Swords - A Lannister loving five stars
4. A Feast for Crows - A flat 3.5 stars
5. A Dance with Dragons - A convoluted 4 stars

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Profile Image for mark monday.
1,737 reviews5,506 followers
February 15, 2011
Everyone seems to agree that George R.R. Martin and A Song of Ice and Fire are titans in the genre of Epic Fantasy. True, true.

Everyone also seems to agree that the best characters are Tyrion, Arya, and Jon Snow. They are indeed wondrous characters. They are heroes. They fail many times, but in a way they are infallible: they are so incredibly sympathetic, they are always trying to do the right thing, they have kindness & empathy & bravery & loyalty. In fact nearly every voice in the first two novels is of this type: the HERO. Sansa is one exception – however she is a victim, and I found her perspective to be very uncomfortable. But I found the tale of the novel’s other non-hero, barely even an anti-hero, to be particularly compelling: Theon Greyjoy. You’re the bomb, Theon.

The kid is an asshole, a smug and irritating asshole. He thinks he’s smarter than everyone else. He makes plans upon plans that seemed based entirely around the idea that because he is thinking these thoughts, they will no doubt occur. He is arrogant beyond belief. He has an annoying, self-pleased smirk whenever another character describes him. He is a rough sex-loving womanizer and he strings girls along. In the first novel, he kicks around a decapitated head like a soccer ball.

Favorite Theon part: getting a blowjob while thinking about how awesome his future successes will be. And then he climaxes as he considers how his great deeds will even overshadow those of his dear old dad. What a self-absorbed asshole! I couldn't help but laugh out loud.

And yet he has positive qualities too, he’s no cardboard cut-out. He has guilty feelings of loyalty. He is brave and quick-thinking and is no kiss-ass. His rapid response time saves a child's life. Unlike his men, he doesn’t enjoy cruelty or barbarism and actively stops their occurrence. He is thwarted repeatedly and never lets that stop him. He sees no point in the grim vendettas of the old. He is not, as they say, “all bad”. In Theon, perhaps the nurture of the Starks has had some slight impact on the nature of the Greyjoys.

I really appreciate that Martin included Theon’s voice because honestly, reading wall-to-wall heroic perspectives is enough to make me want to cut some throats. Theon is an asshole, but he’s the kind of guy I’d love to get a beer with, shoot the shit, and enjoy his various mean-spirited bitching and self-absorbed plans of conquest. He is seriously imperfect, quite unlike most of the other voices in the tale.
Profile Image for Melissa ♥ Dog/Wolf Lover ♥ Martin.
3,604 reviews10.8k followers
December 2, 2017
Re-Read

I freaking finished it! I have to admit I have watched, well own the boxsets, of all the shows up to the current one. I can't watch is because I don't have HBO! But I digress. There really isn't much more that I can say that hasn't already been said etc and so on. I will just add a few excerpts and some pictures and some thoughts. That stuff.

I love Jon Snow It seems like he didn't have much in the book. A few of the characters I love didn't have a lot of stuff going on in this book. But they will be back.



--->EXCERPT<---

The Dothraki named the comet shierak qiya, the Bleeding Star. The old men muttered that it omened ill, but Daenerys Targaryen had seen it first on the night she burned Khal Drogo, the night her dragons had awakened. It is the herald of my coming, she told herself as she gazed up into the night sky with wonder in her heart. The gods have sent it to show me the way.




I love Daenerys.

--->EXCERPT<---

Arya looked down at her ragged clothes and bare feet, all cracked and callused. She saw the dirt under her nails, the scabs on her elbows, the scratches on her hands. Septa Mordane wouldn't even know me. I bet Sansa might, but she'd pretend not to. "My mother's a lady, and my sister, but I never was."
"Yes, you were. You were a lord's daughter and you lived in a castle, didn't you? And you. . . gods be good, I never. . ." All of the sudden Gendry seemed uncertain, almost afraid. "All that about cocks, I never should have said that. And I been pissing in front of you and everything, I. . .I beg your pardon, m'Lady."




 :

I love Arya :-)

There really is no point in loving anyone in these books or shows because they all die!

I found a lot of the book boring and drawn out. I guess when it's not about the people you really like it's sort of... yawn.

I loved how most of the book was about Tyrion. Or it seemed that way to me. I Love Tyrion.



Because Tyrion is too cool.



and he does this ↓



And Brienne finally arrives on the scene. I love her too :-)



and Bran



to all of you I have loved before and still love, you will all die and I will miss you and I will hate that episode and so forth and so on!



and stop killing my damn wolves!

MY BLOG: Melissa Martin's Reading List
Profile Image for Mohammed Arabey.
709 reviews6,058 followers
May 8, 2019

مات ملك، أنبثق 5 ملوك كل منهم يري إنه الملك الشرعي..وأنقسمت البلاد

هذا غير ملك قادم بجيشه من أرض الجليد، وملكة قادمة من وراء البحار بالتنانين والنار
سبع ملوك في مملكة واحدة .. ماذا تتوقع أن يحدث؟

صـــراع الــملــوك
اﻷنشودة الثانية في أغنية الجليد والنار، إنشودة ملحمية لحروب الملوك علي عرشهم..وصراع اﻷبرياء للبقاء علي قيد الحياة في ظل لعبة الملوك


لعبة العروش

حيث 3 ملوك،خلفاء الملك السابق، أخويه وأبنه، يتصارعون علي عرش الممالك السبع..العرش الحديدي
و ملك ينصبه عشيرته ملك الشمال
وأخر يعترض وينصب ملك الجزر الحديدية
وأخر منصب نفسه الملك وراء الجدار
و ملكة وراء البحار تخطط لأستعادة عرش الممالك السبع كأجدادها..نفس العرش الحديدي
العرش الذي أغتصبه الملك السابق من والدها


الأحــداث
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صراع ملحمي، بدأ بعد مصرع الملك روبرت بأحداث الجزء اﻷول ، مع أن شراراته بدأت قبل ذلك بشهور...منذ أكتشاف جون آرين مساعد الملك خيانة الملكة ، وأن أبناءه منها ليسوا من صلبه، وإنما من علاقتها اﻵثمة مع أخيها ، أي أن العرش ليس من حقه فهو ليس من صلب عائلة 'براثيون' وإنما في هذه الحالة هو ينتمي لمنزل 'لانيستر' منزل عائلة أمه الملكة

لقد عرف إدارد ستارك الحقيقة باﻷنشودة اﻷولي "لعـبة العـروش"، ودفع ثمنها هو وأسرته غاليا كجون آرين المساعد السابق
والشخص اﻷخير الذي يعرف السر هو ستانيس باراثيون اﻷخ اﻷخر للملك روبرت ، وعليه نصب نفسه ملكا 'الملك في البحر الضيق' وسعي ليأخذ العرش الحديدي ، عرش الممالك السبع كأخيه الراحل وجهز جيشا ليستعد للأبحار عبر البحر الضيق لأحتلال 'أراضي الملك' فور أعلان جوفري براثيون ملكا وأمه الملكة سيرسي الواصية حتي يبلغ سن الرشد
ويساعده في ذلك الكاهنة الحمراء...التي تتبع دينا غريبا عن الممالك السبع , دين "أله النور" والقلب المشتعل


ولكن هناك ملكا أخر 'الملك في هايجاردن' هو رينلي باراثيون ، اﻷخ اﻷصغر للملك الراحل، والذي يري أنه اﻷصلح بعد أخيه لتولي العرش بعدما عرف الحقيقة من ستارك قبل القبض عليه، وباﻷخص ﻷنه يحظي بجاذبية وشعبية لدي الكثير من الشعب واللوردات بعكس أخيه المتزمت ستانيس..والحق يقال انه يملك فعلا مقومات الملك الجذاب..فقط لا غير .. فهو يجد س��ادته في تلك اللعبة .. لعبة العروش

وهو أيضا بدأ يعد جيشا باﻷشتراك مع كثير من لوردات الجنوب للهجوم علي 'أراضي الملك' للجلوس علي العرش الحديدي بتحالفه مع "هايجاردين" تلك العائلة العريقة حيث أنه سيتزوج أبنتهما مارجري

بينما علي العرش الحديدي أبن اخيهما المتوفي جوفري بارثيون والذي أثبت أنه من أكثر الشخصيات قسوة ووحشية بالرغم من أنه مجرد مراهق

وهنا أخيرا نجد شئ من شرارة ثورة الشعب, ثورة الجياع في "اراضي الملك ,كينج لاندينج" علي الملك المراهق المشكوك في نسبه وأصله
ثورة للاسف تخمدها حرس الملك..والحرب في صراع الملوك , في لعبة العروش


وفي الوقت الذي فيه روب ستارك الذئب الصغير والذي أختاره سادة ولوردات الشمال لمنصب ملك الشمال يحارب بيت 'لانيستر' الذي يغزو ويغير علي قري وبلدان قرب الشمال 'وسط قارة ويستروس' ..قرر بولون جرايجوي ،سيد الجزر الحديدية المعروف عنه بالتمرد والخيانة,فقام بغارات علي قري وبلدان بالشمال في غياب روب ستارك لبلدان النهر ليدافع عنها ونصب نفسه ملك الجزر الحديدية


أما في شمال الممالك السبع ، خلف الجدار الضخم بالشمال، فذهب الحرس الليلي ومن ضمنهم جون سنو للبحث عن عمه، والتحقيق في اﻷمور الغريبة التي تحدث وراء الجدار ليكتشف أن مانس رايدر الذي نصب نفسه ملك وراء الجدار يخطط ﻷمرا غامضا ، وضخما

وأخيرا سنتابع رحلة دانيريس تارجيريان، اخر عائلة التنانين، صاحبة عرش الممالك السبع شرعيا ، في منفاها في الشرق فهي 'الملكة عبر البحار' ..ولكنها لتعود للويستروس والممالك السبع تحتاج لجيش، و سفن.. وليس فقط ثلاث تنانين وليدة...فهل ستجد من يقدم لها هذا في مدينة كارث العجيبة بالشرق؟
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اﻷحداث هنا أكثر سخونه من الجزء اﻷول ولكنها أيضا اﻷكثر أرهاقا لكثرة اﻷسماء ووصف الحروب والمعارك والتحالفات... وكما أشرت في الريفيو اﻷول ، جورج آر آر مارتن مولع بالتفاصيل ودقة اﻷسماء ..والتاريخ والأساطير الخاصة بذلك العالم العجيب الذي أبتدعه

لا أنكر أن الخطط الحربية كانت جيدة جدا، ولكنها مرهقة في القراءة ومتعددة ، الغارات التي تحدث أيضا وتحالفات اللوردات والسادة ، ناهيك عن أن اﻷسماء متشابهة بشكل رهيب
وإذا ما قارنت بالمسلسل، فقد نجح المسلسل في كثير من اﻷختصارات التي بعضها كان يصلح ﻷن يحدث في الرواية دون الخلل بالقصة النهائية ، ججزء هارينهال وآريا ستارك ، وجزء ما بعد مقابلة الملك ستانيس والملك رينلي التي يرويها دافوس

ولكن دعنا نبدأ بمراجعة الشخصيات بالترتيب.. الشخصيات التي تطورت بشكل ملحوظ عن الجزء الأول , بأنخراطهم أكثر سواء بأرادتهم او رغما عنهم في .. لــعبة العــروش

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آريــا ستـارك
~~~~~~~~~~~~

نتابع رحلتها مع 'آيون' الحارس الليلي الذي ينقلها إلي الشمال لمدينتها ﻷنه كان يعرف والدها، متخفية كصبي مع مجندين جدد للحرس بجدار الشمال ... ولكن رحلتها تنقلب لمأساة عندما يغير عليهم جنود تابعين للانيستر ويأسروهم في هارينهول ، المدينة المحترقة

بالرغم من طول هذا الجزء ، إلا أن رسم الشخصية كان ممتازا ، تطور آريا من فتاة شقية أبنة أحد النبلاء، إلي التخفي بهيئة صبي فقير ، وشعورها الطبيعي وسط الخطر إنها مجرد فأر مذعور أحيانا , ثم جراءتها وشجاعتها ثم العودة لمجرد فتاة صغيرة مذعورة
ومن رعبها من مجرم خطير ثم التعاون معه بذكاء شديد فيما يخدم مصلحتها بل ومصلحة سادة الشمال..كل هذا جعل جزءها ثري، ومشوق حتي النهاية

من الشخصيات المثيرة هنا هو المجرم البافاروسي الغامض وهديته الساحرة 'فالار ماجوليس' والتي ستتعرف عليها بالأحداث

هناك أيضا جريندي اﻷبن الغير شرعي للملك روبرت والذي لا يعرف أنه كذلك، وهوتباي ، فتي الفطائر ..وكيف هذه الشخصيات قد تفضل أن تكون أسيرة عن حريتها في وقت ما خلال اﻷحداث طالما ينعمون بسلام عوضا عن الهروب والحرية في ظل الحروب

ولكن آريا تعلم أن لا أحد يسلم خاصا في منتصف الصراع، صراع الملوك

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سانـسا ستارك
~~~~~~~~~~~~
الحالمة التي تعيش أصعب كوابيسها، أغنيتها التي تحولت لنشاز ، وعد كانت تظنه حلما بأنها ستكون زوجة جوفري الملك، صار كابوسا علي وشك التحقق
واﻷدهي أن جوفري صار أسوأ ألف مرة...باﻷخص بعد قرع ناقوس الحرب سواء من أعمامه ستانيس و رينلي ، أو من تمرد أخيها روب ملك الشمال

من الشخصيات المثيرة في هذا الجزء هو الكلب 'ساندور كاليجان' وهي شخصية معقدة ومثيرة جدا بنفس الوقت، وغامض جدا تجاهها ، فهو يثير فزعها وفي نفس الوقت ربما هو الوحيد في حرس الملك الذي يحاول حمايتها

وهناك أيضا الملكة سيرسي، وهنا قدم المؤلف أثنان من أقوي المشاهد بهذا الجزء، عندما جلست مع سانسا تحكي لها عن تحولها لأمرأه، الولادة ، اﻷمومة ، وعلمها بمشاعرها الحقيقية تجاه جوفري
واﻷخر عندما وقعت 'كينج لاندينج' تحت الحصار
كم أتمني أن يصير لسيرسي فصولا خاصة بها
ولكن حتي سيرسي لم تختلف كثيرا عن سانسا في قلقها من صراع الملوك الذي قد يهدم حياتها وعرش أبنها في ظل لعبة العروش

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تايرون لانيستر
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هل منصب وكرسي يد 'مساعد' الملك مشؤم شؤم منصب مدرس الدفاع ضد فنون الظلام بهوجوارتس؟

اﻷنشودة اﻷولي كان إيدارد ستارك يلعب هذا الدور بشرف وأخلاص...ونال ما ناله
ولكن تايرون هنا يلعبه بدهاء، دهاء ومكر سياسي، متخذا كل اﻷحتياطات، واضعا الملك والملكة الواصية، أخته، تحت المراقبة قدر المستطاع وفي نفس الوقت يحاول حمايتهم وحماية المملكة من الحرب القادمة من ستانيس و رينلي، بجانب المؤامرات المتعددة التي تعج ب'أراضي الملك' سواء من الداخل أو الخارج، فلا يعرف بمن يثق
وضف فوق كل هذا ما سنراه ﻷول مرة هنا، ثورة الشعب ضد فساد الملك، ضد الفقر ، المطالبة بالعيش

وبالرغم من قسوة ووحشية جوفري، إلا أن كراهية الشعب تنصب علي القزم أو 'العفريت' كما يطلقون عليه تارة 'القرد' تارة أخري ..هو أكثر من حاول حماية الشعب والمدينة نال النصيب اﻷكبر من الكراهية

أما الجانب العاطفي المعقد لديه فهو أيضا مكتوب بعبقرية ، وإن كان في بعض اﻷجزاء جنسيا، ولكنه أقل من أجزاء شخصيات أخري كما يعد أقل من المسلسل

الشخصيات المثيرة بهذا الجزء، بجانب اﻷجزاء الممتازة مع سانسا، هي مرة أخري سيرسي، أخته التي تكرهه ولا تخفي ذلك، فتجد المشاهد بينهما كالقط والفأر ، ولكن المؤلف أيضا يذكرك في بعض المواقف أنها أخته في مشهد مؤثر وحيد بينهما الذي دار دون شجار أو خديعة

لورد فاريس ، سيد الهمسات، العنكبوت المخصي، من الشخصيات ذات الحضور القوي بهذا الجزء ، كما كان مع نيد ستارك في أخر الجزء اﻷول، شخصية عميقة أيضا ومثيرة
ولكن هل مساعدات فاريس ستخدم تايرون وقت صراع الملوك الشرس هذا؟

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بران ستارك
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في غياب أخيه الملك يجب أن يتعامل ك'لورد' وينترفيل، أو أميرها الصغير، ولكن صراعه الداخلي بأنه مكسور ، معاق عن المشي، يظل عائقا له
أعجبني تحول المؤلف في سرد هذا الجزء بين أفكار الفتي الصغير بران وبين أفكار ذئبه 'صيف' التي يشعر بها بران وقت حلمه

المشكلة هنا أن أعباء المحملة عليه كسيد الشمال ستزيد عندما يبدأ تمرد أحد الأبناء الغير شرعيين ﻷحد سادة الشمال "روز بالتون" وسبب مشاكل في بعض المدن بالشمال ، وأيضا تمرد ملك الجزر الحديدة وإغارة أبنه ثيون جرايجوي علي وينترفيل


في هذا الجزء سنري مصير وينترفيل في ظل تلك الصراعات , ومعاناة بران النفسية بالأخص في افتقاده لأخوته في مشهد مثير للشجن عندما كان في مأدبة مع سادة الشمال ,وحيدا دون باقي افراد اسرته
تذكر بران أخر مرة رأي والده يشرب من هذا الكأس في أحتفال
لقد كان هذا في ليلة الأحتفال بقدوم الملك روبرت وحاشيته إلي وينترفيل. الصيف مازال قائما. والديه شاركا روبرت والملكة المائدة , مع أخويها. العم بينجامين كان هنا أيضا متشحا بالسواد. بران وأخوته جلسوا مع أبناء الملك, جوفري و تويمن والأميرة ميركيلا التي قضت وقت المأدبة تتأمل روب بنظرات أعجاب. آريا تعمل وجوه مضحكة عندما لاينظر أحد وسانسا تسمع بشغف لأغاني الشجاعة التي يغنيها المغني الأعلي للملك , وريكون ظل يسأل لماذا جون لم يأتي معهم حتي همس له أخيه مضطرا "لأنه أبن حرام"


من الشخصيات المثيرة هنا هي شخصية من عائلة رييد التي تسكن المستنقعات، والذي هو و أخته وبمساعدة البربرية أوشا سيحاولا فتح عين بران علي موهبته العجيبة في الحلم والرؤية بعين ذئبه وماهو اكثر من ذلك كما تقول الأساطير
مما أضاف لهذا الجزء شيئا من الغموض والسحر من تراث ذلك العالم العجيب ، عالم أغنية الثلج والنار
فهل سيصمد هذا الفريق الضئيل عندما يبدأ الملوك صراعهم؟

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جـــون سـنـو
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قرر أخيرا مورمون قائد الحرس الليلي الذهاب وراء الجدار للتحقيق في أختفاء عم جون سنو 'بنجامين ستارك' والتحركات المريبة للبرابرة وهجرانهم للكثير من القري إما للشمال اﻷقصي أو التسلسل من الجدار
هذا غير عودة الرعب من الموتي اﻷحياء كما ظهر باﻷنشودة اﻷولي

وفي هذا الجزء نتابع رحلة جون سنو وزملائه من ا��حرس الليلي خلف الجدار بدرجة وصف المؤلف التي ستجعلك ترتعد من برودة هذا الجزء ومشاعر الترقب التي به حقا لمعرفه سر ترك البرابرة لقراهم خاوية ، وما يخططه ملك وراء الجدار...وخطر الموتي اﻷحياء

من الشخصيات المثيرة والتي تطورت بهذا الجزء هو سام تيلي ، البدين الجبان، والذي بالرغم من أنه كان أجبن الحرس الذي خرج في تلك الدورية خلف الجدار إلا أنه بمرور الوقت تزداد شجاعته شيئا ملحوظا بالرغم من أنخفاضها بشكل أكبر بين زملائه، خاصا عند الشعور بالقلق تجاه مخطط ملك ماخلف الجدار ..ذلك الملك الذي قد يتسبب في صراعات اكبر في صراع الملوك

****************
كاتـلـين ستارك
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تماما كالجزء الماضي، اﻷم ، الأبنة والزوجة -عذرا اﻷرملة- كمية مشاعر حزن تعتصر قلبها بأبتعادها عن بنتيها ولا تعرف حقيقة مصيرهما كأسري لانيستر في أراضي الملك، أنباء عن تمرد جرايجوي في الشمال بينما أبنيها الصغيران وحدهما في الشمال ، أبيها علي فراش الموت ، بينما أبنها ملك الشمال الذي ترافق�� لا يروقه نصائحها ، ويسعي لأعطائها مهام تبعدها عنه ولو لبعض الوقت، فيرسلها للملك رينلي ليطلب منه طلب تحالف ضد آل لانيستر والملك جوفري ، العدو المشترك

من الشخصيات المثيرة بهذا الجزء شخصية راينلي باراثيون الملك، حيث في جزئها فقط يظهر في بعض المشاهد
راينلي شخصية محبوبة ولكنه مازال شاب صغير ، تقف كاتلين بينه وبين أخيه اﻷكبر ستانيس في صراع الملوك بينهما كلا يري أنه اﻷصلح ليكون ملكا...بينما هي -اﻷم- تحاول تذكيرهما إنهما أخوة -في مشهد ممتاز- ،ولا يصح أن يتقاتلا بينما العدو المشترك لهما مازال يضغي في الممالك السبع، ويراقب صراعهما بشماتة

الشخصية الثانية هي بيرني من آل تارث ، فتاة ضخمة الجسد ومتجهمة الملامح ، متواضعة الجمال -لقب بيرني الجميلة يعد سخرية صريحة- وهي شخصية قوية لها أبعاد وجمال دفين، مخلصة جدا لرينلي الذي يبدو أنها تحبه من طرف واحد ولذلك ترجوه أن يوافق علي تعيينها كحرس شخصي له، و ترافق كاتلين وقت وجودها في هايجاردن لعرض التحالف مع رينلي، وهذا قبل تصاعد اﻷحداث في صراع الملوك

*************
ثيون جرايجوي
~~~~~~~~~~~~

أثناء مشاهدتي المسلسل أعتبرته الشخصية الكريهة اﻷكثر ، وبلا أي أثارة في نفس الوقت -بعكس جوفري مثلا فهو شخصية كريهة جدا ولكن مثيرة جدا تلك اﻷحداث التي يكون بها-
شعرت كم هو بغيض، كريه ، حقود ، وشهواني جنسيا لدرجة مقززة
وفوجئت عندما وجدت أنه من الشخصيات الجديدة التي أضيفت للكتاب في فصول خاصة من وجهة نظرة مع باقي الشخصيات التي نجت من الجزء الأول

ما الفرق بين شخصيته في المسلسل والكتاب؟
الكتاب جعل في جزءه، والذي بالرغم من قلة عدد فصوله ولكنها أطول في الصفحات، كل المبررات الممكنة لكل الحقد، الكراهية ، البغضاء التي تعج بثيون جرايجوي -عدا اﻷجزاء الجنسية مازالت زائدة جدا عن الحد ومقززة كما بالمسلسل كما بالكتاب وربما أكثر من أي أجزاء أخري بالرواية والسلسلة نفسها-

شخصية معقدة للغاية ، من ضيف, أو رهين لدي عائلة ستارك كما تراه عائلته إلي ضاغية جديد علي المدينة التي عاش بها أغلب حياته فقط من أجل الحقد, وأثبات لأبيه أنه ليس ضعيفا
ورسم المؤلف شخصيته بشكل يجعلك تشعر أن كل هذا مبررا ولكن المهم هنا كيف ستسير اﻷحداث بالنسبة له، هذا هو ما كان مثيرا فقط في جزء ثيون جرايجوي وأخته آشا وأبيه المتمرد ملك الجزر الحديدية كما نصب نفسه في خضم صراع الملوك


***************
ديـفــوس
~~~~~~~~~~~~

فارس البصل، بحار ومهرب سابق نصبه ستانيس باراثيون بلقب فارس بعد مساعدته في حصار اﻷعداء له منذ سنوات بقلعة 'ستورم إند'
هو مساعد 'الملك' ستانيس ، وعين القارئ علي تلك الشخصية المتزمتة وخططها للإستيلاء علي العرش الحديدي ، عرش أخيه الراحل الملك روبرت


المثير في شخصية ديفوس أنه شخصية حتما ستجد ملامحها في الحياة في طبقات كثيرة، هو الجاهل أو الأمي الذي قد يكون له سوابق ولكنه تحول للشرف بعد عطف أحد اﻷسياد عليه
هو الرجل غير المتدين كليا ولكن يثير حفيظته بهجوم دين جديد -دين الآله الواحد آله النار- الذي تبناه سيده وقرر حرق رموز الآلهة السابقة
اﻷب لسبعة أولاد يري تدرجهم وصعودهم في الحياة السياسية وتحول أحدهم أيضا للدين الجديد الذي يثير حفيظته
ولكن من لا يستثار حفيظته عندما يري كاهنة هذا الدين، المرأة الحمراء، وأساليبها الشيطانية بأسم هذا الدين

أساليب مظلمة ، يستعين بها سيده ، الملك ستانيس، في صراع الملوك

****************************************************
دانـيريـس
~~~~~~~~~~~~

وفي الشرق نتابع رحلة دانيريس ، أكثر الشخصيات التي مرت بمراحل صعود و هبوط كثيرة. من أميرة ضعيفة منفية إلي خاليسي 'زوجة ملك، زعيم' لقبيلة همجية الي أرملة وبدون حتى مسكن سوي رفيقها المخلص سير جوراه
هنا تذهب إلي مدينة كارث ، مدينة عجيبة يحكمها تجار ، نبلاء و سحرة
تستضيفها المدينة ليس ﻷسمها، أو أعترافا منهم أنها الملكة الشرعية للممالك السبعة بالغرب، وإنما ﻷنها أم التنانين، فقط الثلاث تنانين الوليدة هي ما أثارت فضولهم..وأثارت أطماعهم أيضا



ما يميز جزء دانيريس في اﻷنشودة الثانية 'صراع الملوك' - والذي ليس بجمال جزئها باﻷنشودة اﻷولي- هو تطرق المؤلف لعجائب تاك المدن الشرقية ، والسحر بطريقة غامضة ومثيرة وتصل أحيانا لشئ من الرعب
فالجزء الذي تلتلقي فيه دانيريس ببيت السحرة مثلا ملئ بالترقب، الرعب و النبوءات العجيبة مع ملامح من الماضي عن أببها، والملك المجنون
بل وعن أغنية الجليد والنار والتي تذكر في السلسلة ﻷول مرة بهذا الجزء ، ولا نعرف حتي اﻷن ماهي بالظبط

بما لا يكون جزئها هنا بقوة الجزء الخاص بها في الأنشودة الأولي ولكنه مازال يعج بالعجائب والشخصيات المثيرة ونظرية عجيبه عن السحر والتنانين

و يعتبره المؤلف فرصته للتجول في خريطة عالمه العجيب نحو الشرق بعيدا عن الغرب وصراعات الملوك به

ولكن لا تنس أن خطتها الأساسية بعد أن ينمو تنانينها الثلاث هي العودة إلي الغرب..لتستعيد عرشها ..العرش الذي يلعب عليه الجميع لعبة عروشهم


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النهاية
*******
جزء حافل بالأحداث والصراعات والعجائب
تطورات للشخصيات ورحلات مرهقة تنتظرهم للنجاة من ذلك الصراع الدموي

قد يكون تقييمي للرواية أقل قليلا من الجزء السابق لكن فعلا شعرت بمدي التفاني في تقديم قصة وعالم محكم, يحاكي صراعاتنا السياسية وحكوماتنا الجشعة التي لا تفكر سوي في لعبة المناصب
لعبة العروش

وإلي ريفيو الجزء الثالث


محمد العربي
من 30 مارس 2015
إلي 15 أبريل 2015
Profile Image for Matthew.
1,221 reviews9,501 followers
January 2, 2019
I finished this book on the cusp of New Year's Eve 2018 into 2019. At the time, I was too ready to party so I delayed my review. Now, on January 1st, I am recovered and ready!

A solid 4 stars - action, world building, interesting characters, political intrigue, etc.

I am not quite sure how this book is so big yet so little happens. Sure, a lot of things do occur, but if you take everyone's individual story line, it's only 3 or 4 chapters spread out over 1000 pages. In addition to this, much of the action is not even the focus of any of the chapters This is all really more of an observation than a complaint. It was just that as I closed it my first thought was "so many pages, and I didn't get very far!"

I do like the writing - it keeps me engaged throughout. It is a bit rougher than some other fantasy books I have read, but Martin's fantasy world is quite a bit rougher than some other fantasy worlds I have visited. I thought the first book in the series was pretty similar to other fantasy I have ready, but this one definitely upped the violence and sex (and, in my opinion, the raping stared to get a bit out or control and seemed a bit unnecessary even if it was to set an unpleasant tone)

I suppose in the end it was a bit cliffhanger-ish, but it is probably more accurate to say that it didn't feel like a complete novel in itself and just left off before the story was complete. I did like the way this was handled, though, and it has left me wanting more. In a few months I will watch season 2 of the show and then follow it up with book 3.
Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,564 reviews101 followers
December 21, 2021
A Clash of Kings (A Song of Ice and Fire #2), George R.R. Martin

A Clash of Kings is the second novel in A Song of Ice and Fire, an epic fantasy series by American author George R. R. Martin expected to consist of seven volumes.

It was first published on 16 November 1998 in the United Kingdom. Like its predecessor, A Game of Thrones, it won the Locus Award (in 1999) for Best Novel and was nominated for the Nebula Award (also in 1999) for best novel.

A Clash of Kings depicts the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros in civil war, while the Night's Watch mounts a reconnaissance to investigate the mysterious people known as wild-lings. Meanwhile, Daenerys Targaryen continues her plan to reconquer the Seven Kingdoms. ...

تاریخ نخستین خوانش: از روز ششم ماه آوریل سال 2015 میلادی، تا روز بیست و ششم ماه آوریل سال2015میلادی

جلد دو: نبر�� پادشاهان، شامل دو کتاب: کتابهای یک و دو؛

عنوان کتاب نخست: نبرد پادشاهان کتاب نخست از جلد دوم (نغمه آتش و یخ، #2)؛ نویسنده: جورج آر.آر مارتین؛ مترجم: رویا خادم الرضا؛ مشخصات نشر تهران، ویدا، سال1391، در629ص؛ موضوع داستانهای نویسندگان ایالات متحده آمریکا سده20م

عنوان کتاب دوم: نبرد پادشاهان کتاب دو از جلد دوم (نغمه آتش و یخ، #2)؛ نویسنده: جورج آر.آر مارتین؛ مترجم: رویا خادم الرضا؛ مشخصات نشر تهران، ویدا، سال1391، در662ص

نبرد پادشاهان دومین رمان، از سری رمان‌های «ترانه یخ و آتش»، در سبک خیال‌پردازی حماسی، اثر «جرج آر.آر مارتین» است؛ این مجموعه رمان گفته می‌شود که در هفت کتاب منتشر خواهد شد؛ این کتاب نخستین بار در روز شانزدهم ماه نوامبر سال1998میلادی در «بریتانیا» منتشر شد، هر چند انتشار آن در «آمریکا» تا ماه مارس سال1999میلادی رخ نداد، کتاب همچون کتاب پیشین همین مجموعه، با عنوان «بازی تاج و تخت»، برنده ی جایزه «لوکاس» در سال1999میلادی برای بهترین رمان، و نامزد جایزه «نبولا» در همان سال، برای بهترین رمان شد؛

داستان‌ها را «جان»، «برن»، «کتلین»، «داوس»، «دنریس»، «تیان»، «آریا»، «سنسا» و «تیریون»، روایت میکنند؛ جنگهایی که هفت پادشاهی را درگیر کرده است؛ اما از نظر مکانی در یک نقطه نیستند؛ «سنسا» و «تیریون» داستان آماده‌ سازی بارانداز پادشاه، برای حمله‌ ی پادشاه‌ های مدعیِ را روایت می‌کنند، «کتلین» خوانشگر را با «ریورران» و «تالی‌»ها همراه می‌کند، «آریا» خوانشگر را کنار «لرد تایوین لنیستر»، و سپس کنار شمالی‌ها نگاه می‌دارد، «داوس» هم از اردوگاه «استنیس» گزارش می‌دهد؛ از سوی دیگر «برن» و «تیان» از «وینترفل» میگویند، «جان» به پشت دیوار رفته است، و «دنریس» نیز آنسوی دریاهاست

تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 17/11/1399هجری خورشیدی؛ 29/09/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی
Profile Image for Candace.
1,179 reviews4,583 followers
May 15, 2016
Whew! Another one down. These have got to be some of the longest audiobooks that I've ever listened to. Yet, despite the length, I cannot pull myself away from this series. I am completely hooked on this sordid and gory saga.

The second book in the series, 'A Clash of Kings' picks up the story and submerges readers in action and adventure. With all of the new kings coming forward to lay claim to different lands and all of the battles, I found myself again, lost at times. There are so many moving parts and so many characters that it was hard to keep track of everything at times.

Although the storyline continues to be very complex and multifaceted, I have immensely enjoyed the evolution of the storyline and characters. Tyrion especially has grown on me, in spite of his horrible family. He seems to be the only one in his family that isn't entirely despicable. Thank goodness that he is doing damage control or his wicked sister and her depraved spawn would bathe the streets in blood.

With Robb growing his army day by day, he is getting closer to avenging the death of Eddard. Deals are made that will, no doubt, prove to be influential later in the story. In truth, I'm growing a bit impatient waiting for him to storm Joffrey's castle.

Meanwhile, with multiple stories running parallel to one another, I have been completely absorbed in this book, waiting for the next little piece of each story. Dani and her dragons find themselves in a perilous situation. There are huge changes in Winterfell with Bran. New kings are coming out of the woodwork. Arya struggles to survive under the guise of an orphan boy. Things that go bump in the night are proving dangerous near the north wall. Without a doubt, there is plenty of danger and adventure to keep your head spinning.

Overall, I continue to be engrossed in this epic tale. It is brutal and grim, but I'm loving every minute. The narration is done superbly, but it is still a tough audiobook for me to follow. There are just so many moving parts with this story that I've had to rewind a few times to keep up with what is going on. I highly recommend this series to anyone that loves action/adventure. I'm on to book 3 now.
Profile Image for هدى يحيى.
Author 10 books17.1k followers
February 24, 2021

لابد أن أقول أن مشاهدة العمل التليفزيوني قبل القراءة أعطت أبعاد مختلفة
الأمر يشبه لعبة النرد
فهناك مصائر تتغير
وخطوط أحداث تختلف
وكأنك تقرأ هنا ما كان يمكن أن يحدث
أو ما حدث في بعد آخر

أغنية الجليد والنار المعروفة شعبيا باسم لعبة العروش
إحدى أمتع الحكايات التي لا نعرف نهاياتها إلى الآن
ألف صفحة بعد ألف صفحة لا تشعر بمرورها
عالم آخر يجذبك إليه بقوة ساحرة

قررت قراءة الروايات لقراءة المزيد عن آريا
شخصيتي المفضلة من المسلسل
وكان قرارا حكيما
لأنني هنا أعيش في عقلها وأرى أفكارها مسطورة أمامي مستمتعة بكل واحدة منها

ولكني لم أتوقع كل هذه المتعة مع فصول تيريون
الذي هو هنا في الرواية أكثر دهاء ومكرا وشجاعة
إنه أحد شخصياتي المفضلة من الجزء الأول بالعمل الدرامي
ولكن هنا الروعة كلها
تيريون يتألق في كل فصل حرفيا

إلى عاصفة السيوف والمزيد من المتعة إذن
Profile Image for Kai Spellmeier.
Author 7 books14.7k followers
September 2, 2017
“Crowns do queer things to the heads beneath them.”

So. Many. Pages. But I did it! It was a great read, but less satisfying than A Game of Thrones . I'm not entirely sure why, but I think the many Kings and their battles were a little tiring.

So here are the many POVs, starting with the chapters I liked the most down to the ones I didn't:

Tyrion - Unexpected turns, witty and intruiging
Daenerys - New unknown lands and strange magic, dragons!
Arya - Danger, Jaqen H'ghar, and many different faces
Sansa - King's Landing's games and intruiges and Sansa struggling to keep her head up
Catelyn - Tired of her sorrow, but loved the parts with Brienne and Renly
Jon - Love Ghost, like Halfhand and Sam, annoyed by winter and cold
Bran - Again: love the Direwolves, like Osha, Jojen and Meera but just not interested in Bran
Ser Davos - Melisandre is the only interesting thing in those chapters
Theon - Vain stupid little dipshit only thinking with his cock

Find more of my books on Instagram
Profile Image for Emily May.
2,055 reviews311k followers
June 23, 2019
By far the two biggest adjustments I've had to make going into these books after watching the TV show are:

1) Reimagining major characters and war leaders as children (they benefited from being a few years older, IMO. 13/14 year olds leading armies is odd, regardless of how "medieval-inspired" your fantasy setting is.)

And 2) Realizing that my beloved Tyrion is actually a creep. Peter Dinklage brought so much charm to the character, but in the book his constant obsession with his cock, plus the way he talks about Shae , is really unpleasant to read.

Still, I can't deny this story is addictive. It's a combination of rich world-building and great dialogue that makes it work so well, I think. I'm scared for Theon's chapters in the next book, though...
Profile Image for Matt.
966 reviews29.1k followers
May 31, 2019
“Ashore, the arms of the great trebuchets rose one, two, three, and a hundred stones climbed high into the yellow sky. Each one was as large as a man’s head; when they fell they sent up great gouts of water, smashed through oak planking, and turned living men into bone and pulp and gristle. All across the river the first line was engaged. Grappling hooks were flung out, iron rams crashed through wooden hulls, boarders swarmed, flights of arrows whispered through each other in the drifting smoke, and men died…”
- George R.R. Martin, A Clash of Kings


When I picked up George R.R. Martin’s Thrones, the first installment in his Song of Ice and Fire cycle, I had tempered expectations. That is to say, I really did not have any expectations at all. I’d watched the first ten minutes of the Game of Thrones television series and was intrigued enough by an early decapitation to try the first book.

A Game of Thrones was good in a way I had not expected. Never much for fantasy, I discovered instead a fascinating world of complex characters, unique weather patterns, and a social system besieged by its own tangled history. Yes, there were hints of magic that eventually became explicit, but there was also a tactility and earthiness to the proceedings. This was a book that took J.R.R. Tolkien’s tropes and did awful, terrible things to them.

About halfway through A Game of Thrones, a strange thing happened. I looked up and discovered I was hooked. I knew I was going to need the next volume right away. So I ordered it online.

Now, I should add, this was back in the day before free two-day shipping. Thus, when I finished A Game of Thrones, I did not yet have A Clash of Kings in my grubby hand. This led to that quintessential junkie’s moment, when you realize your stash is gone and your wallet is empty. I needed to continue the journey – and nothing else could fill that void. I tried reading a slim piece of literary fiction by Stuart O’Nan, but the stakes were too low. I tried reading a biography about George Washington, but all I wanted to do was learn more about the Mad King Aerys Targaryen.

It was a strange fate, to suddenly need something that, only shortly before, I did not know existed. The withdrawal symptoms hit me hard. I started refusing to eat anything that wasn’t skewered. I would only take liquids from a flagon, and those liquids had to be wine. I went to a Ren Faire and bought a sword – a sword! – and then I practiced with it, as though I were Syrio Forel, the First Sword of Braavos.

When the book finally came, it was like being a kid again, when reading was brand new and everything was unexpected and wonderful. My heretofore nonexistent expectations were suddenly cloud-high.

(I should note here that plot-points for A Game of Thrones must necessarily be discussed).

The thing about George R.R. Martin, though, is that he does not care about your expectations.

When A Game of Thrones ended, King Robert was gone, as was his Hand, Ned Stark, the man most thought would be our main hero. Robert’s “son” Joffrey, actually the product of incest between the brother-sister tandem of Jaime and Cersei Lannister, is now king. Due to Joffrey’s perceived illegitimacy, however, there is a scramble for the throne, with Robert’s two brothers (Renly and Stannis), the lord of the Iron Islands (Balon Greyjoy), and the now-Lord of Winterfell (Robb Stark), all vying for the seat of power (which is constructed of melted swords).

Rather than hopping right back into the machinations, Martin begins – as is his tendency – with a prologue starring unfamiliar characters in an unfamiliar setting. Here, that character is Stannis Baratheon’s maester, a man concerned about his lord’s newfound religiosity.

Once that throat clearing is done, Martin leads us back to the story left dangling at the end of A Game of Thrones. Ned Stark’s young, tomboyish daughter Arya, is led north by the ranger Yoren, disguised as a boy joining the Night’s Watch. Arya’s dimwitted sister Sansa is held captives by the Lannisters, and is subjected to brutal torments at the hand of Joffrey. In Stannis-land, the smuggler-turned-knight Davos watches uncertainly as his king falls under the spell of a priestess who serves the Lord of Light. Theon Greyjoy, the Stark’s ward from, returns to the land of his father, in preparation for an invasion of the north. All the while, the widowed wife of Khal Drogo, Daenerys, wanders the desert with her dwindling band of blood-riders and three dragons, birthed at the end of A Game of Thrones.

This is a summary that just scratches the surface of the overall plot. There is a lot going on, and Martin spends a great deal of time methodically putting his pieces into place, which often requires long journeys larded with dense expositions on various houses, their interlocking loyalties, and the burdens of the past that weigh upon them all.

The first time I read this, it all became a bit much. It is easy to get confused, especially if you don’t watch the show (which provides a streamlined and more-manageable version). Even rereading, knowing where it’s all going to go (at least, knowing how the show and the last book Martin has published ends), it requires concentration to keep all it all straight (though Martin does a decent job of giving you little nudges to help you recall how all the characters intertwine).

As with A Game of Thrones, A Clash of Kings is written in the third-person limited style, with alternating chapters from the viewpoint of nine characters, not including the prologue. Most are returning, though we are introduced to new blood in the person of former-smuggler Davos Seaworth (Martin loves his aptronyms!).

Having read through the entire series several times now, it is interesting to go back and attempt to discuss these characters objectively, since they have become like old friends (even the bad ones). Tyrion was great from the jump, but others, such as the self-righteous Catelyn Stark, the dull damsel-in-distress Sansa Stark, and the utterly disconnected Daenerys Targaryen, are simply not that pleasant or fun (though they evolve with time).

The alternating viewpoints serve an important purpose by defining the boundaries of the story and limiting its scope. Without confining the novel to nine narrators, the plot would simply explode like an overloaded blender. I totally understand why Martin has chosen to craft A Song of Ice and Fire in such a matter.

That being said, the structure has severe drawbacks. I first noticed these drawbacks in A Game of Thrones, but I was so dazzled and under the spell of discovery I didn't really care. In A Clash of Kings, they become more noticeable. As is often the case, once I started noticing, I couldn’t stop.

First off, let it be said that A Song of Fire and Ice is filled with awesome characters. In the first volume, I loved the bluff and blustery King Robert, the sly, ever-shifting Varys, the charismatic Kingslayer, Jaime Lannister, and the silver-tongued Baelish. In A Clash of Kings, some of these surviving characters, such as Varys, have important roles. Others, such as Jaime Lannister, almost disappear. Meanwhile, new figures spring up in supporting roles. (Such as the mysterious Jaqen H’ghar, who speaks in the third person and is very particular in the promises he makes). Unfortunately, the best characters (in my opinion), the ones who glitter with the most wit and inventiveness, disappear for long periods of time.

In their place we are stuck with the nine men, women, and children chosen by Martin to convey his epic tale, but who are hampered with some serious liabilities. Sansa, who spends the whole book as a captive, is a cipher. In the first book she was in love with Joffrey because the plot forced her to be in love with Joffrey, so that she would have a motivation to unwittingly betray her father. In the second book, she’s no longer in love, but she’s just as dimwitted. She keeps getting beaten for saying stupid things, but that doesn’t stop her from continually saying stupid things. The counterargument to this critique is that Sansa is just acting as any thirteen-year-old child. In that case, it is valid to question why Martin felt the need to have children shoulder the burden of an adult story.

(As I mention in my review of Fire and Blood, Martin displays certain weird predilections in his novels that show up so often they form a disturbing pattern).

The character deficits are underscored by Martin’s decision to highlight indirect, rather than direct action. Because his story is told through only nine characters, you end up looking at the wide world of Westeros as though through a pinhole. You only learn what is before the faces of these nine people. Thus, there are huge swatches of the story you never witness firsthand. You never learn much about Renly Baratheon or Tywin Lannister, except when the main characters come into contact with them. Everything you find out about Stannis comes from the perception of Davos, who often as not is not in Stannis’ presence. The viewpoint characters, oddly enough, often seem to exist only to tell us what more important characters are doing.

The ultimate consequence of Martin’s narrative style is that much of the action in the first two-thirds of Kings is hearsay. It consists of one character telling another character about something that happened. A lot of times, these conversations are really interesting. More often than not, they concern a battle that has been fought off-page. Once this happens three or four times, without any actual battles happening on-page, I started to get annoyed. Allegedly, the land of Westeros was engaged in “the War of the Five Kings.” Unfortunately, I wouldn’t know that, because I’m stuck with Sansa in King��s Landing.

Things get more wizardly in this second installment, which I thought might cause me to lose interest (I’m here for the swords and ale, not the magic). The gods are still indifferent, but sorcery has entered the picture. The overarching system is not exactly consistent, but more importantly – for me – is remains grounded, and the drama flows through the characters, not their superpowers.

While this was certainly a slower read than I expected, the final third of the novel forgives all sins. There are unexpected plot developments and shocking surprises and twists and turns and some people die and some people don’t and the stakes seem real and there is wildfire and swordplay and a castle siege and a naval battle and enough blood to slake the thirst of any fantasy reader. It is an incredible late-inning surge. When I finished, I was awed by Martin’s genius. All the talking, all the dense plotting, all those wasted pages of Theon receiving oral sex and then hitting on his sister are forgotten as the various storylines collide in an epic manner. Say what you will about Martin, but he knows (or at least, knew) how to make a long-game pay off.

A Song of Ice and Fire was originally conceived as a trilogy; in that sense, A Clash of Kings is the perfect middle book. It delivers a damn fine action sequence while leaving the main characters in precarious cliffhanger situations. In that way, it’s a bit like The Empire Strikes Back, right down to the weird brother and sister stuff.

Unlike The Empire Strikes Back, however, it does not have a lofty reputation. Indeed, it tends to be a bit forgotten. It lacks the freshness and air of originality of A Game of Thrones. And though it neatly avoids the morass of irrelevancies and dead-ends found in A Feast for Crows and A Dance With Dragons, it pales before the masterpiece that is A Storm of Swords. Still, it is a worthy entry, if only for its showcasing of how to effectively set up a big sequence, and then allow it to pay off.

This is a feature sadly lacking in this series’ later entries.
Profile Image for Lyn.
1,914 reviews16.9k followers
February 19, 2019
George R.R. Martin demonstrates in Clash of Kings, his second Song of Ice and Fire novel, that he is the American J.R.R. Tolkien.

Raymond Richard, born in New Jersey, differs from Ronald Reuel, born in what is now South Africa, in many ways, but their fantastic world building is what puts them in a class with few others. If any.

While Tolkien’s Middle Earth is more poetic and his language more lyric, Martin’s Westeros and Essos is more adult (by far), and with more graphic violence and sex. More modern and more American.

Clash of Kings reveals more of the jaw dropping world building that made A Game of Thrones so much fun. I had compared this to Tolkien and Frank Herbert, but Martin might be king of the hill as this universe has enough detail and backstory to make a Western Civ professor choke on his Starbucks.

And have you seen the Interactive map?

OMG – I started exploring and an HOUR after I came up for air, still putting all the pieces together and absolutely enraptured with this story.

The king is dead, long live the king. Except little Joffrey Baratheon is a smug little s*** and his uncles and Robb Stark and the Greyjoys are getting in on the action too. (Thus the cool title).

Meanwhile, a world away, Daenerys Targaryen is in BFE Essos gathering her forces for a return to the Seven Kingdoms and her small but growing band now includes some juvenile (but getting bigger) dragons.

As in Game of Thrones, Martin divides up his narrative between several point of view characters and this lets the reader keep up with all the action across the enormous playing field. The backstabbing intrigue is as entertaining as the sword and sorcery action and Martin’s cornucopia of intriguing characters keeps the pages turning.

This time around we get to know the Greyjoys – a piratical kingdom in the islands off the western coast – as well as Davos Seaworth and some other new characters and we get to know the Starks and Lannisters better. Tyrion Lannister, the LITTLE brother to naughty Jaime and Cersei, takes over as the Hand to the king and proves he’s more than half a man up for the challenge. Tyrion knows how to play the game and keeps a copy of Machiavelli’s The Prince in his back pocket (but I think he has it fully annotated and memorized.) Matter of fact, Tyrion gets my STEAL THE SHOW award for this novel as the IMP makes this even better.

For all the great characters and action, though, the real hero is Martin himself and his incredible world building as he takes the baton from Tolkien and keeps running.

description
Profile Image for Baba.
3,752 reviews1,149 followers
July 29, 2022
Song of Ice and Fire book 2, and I presume season 2 of the great HBO series. After the fall of King Robert and his Hand, Joffrey is on the Iron Throne. Where we have a clash of kings and the Seven Kingdoms becomes a battleground… yet to hear that dragons have once again deigned to grace the world. Possible the biggest, and yet very well fleshed out cast in any book or series I have ever read... superb... roll on Book 3! 9 out of 12, and same again for 2015 reread.

2012 read; 2015 read
Profile Image for Charlotte May.
756 reviews1,204 followers
October 10, 2017
"Power resides where men believe it resides. No more and no less."

If A Game of Thrones was the introduction to the characters, setting the scene for the later trials and conflicts; then A Clash of Kings is the angrier, battle fuelled brother.

Four men strive to take the Iron Throne from the newest King currently sat on it. All the while Daenerys is over in the east with her Khalasar looking for ships and growing more famous as the Mother of Dragons day by day.

We are introduced to the new religion of The Lord of Light, powered by Red Priestesses who strike fear into even the strongest of hearts.

"For the night is dark and full of terrors."

All the characters have moved on from their previous location - for good or for bad. The entire Stark family is separated. New loyalties are created while old ones are destroyed. Fights are begun, and won. But this is only the beginning.

"A day will come when you think yourself happy, and suddenly your joy will turn to ashes in your mouth and you'll know the debt is paid"

The Lannisters still hold Kings Landing but for how much longer?

A Song of Ice and Fire is the only series to continually shock me. We never know what is around the next corner. Who will still be alive in the places where everyone is out for them and theirs.

"If you step in a nest of snakes, does it matter which one bites you first?"

As if I could give any less than 5 stars! Outstanding fantasy and world building. An entire host of characters who drift in and out of importance as it goes on. I am entranced. The magic just gets better and better.

"Valar Morghulis"
Profile Image for Steven Medina.
212 reviews1,126 followers
February 10, 2021
¡Muy difícil calificar este libro!

En realidad 4,5

¿Cuatro estrellas? ¿Cinco estrellas? En ocasiones como estas, es muy difícil decidir una calificación para un libro que me ha gustado el 85% de su contenido, pero que ha tenido una guerra y un tramo final que no me ha terminado de convencer. El problema, es que recién finalicé el libro mi disgusto por esa parte fue muy grande, pero ahora que ya han pasado varias semanas, mi perspectiva es diferente y siento que aunque no fue de mi gusto, el desarrollo por parte de GRRM ha sido correcto. ¿Me estoy contradiciendo? Tal vez sí, pero tal vez no, intentaré explicarme.

El inconveniente de este libro comienza justamente cuando finaliza Juego de tronos porque allí, en las últimas páginas, solo reinaba el caos y era inevitable que se presentara una gran guerra; guerra que debía ser la protagonista en Choque de reyes. Y sí, por supuesto que ese conflicto es el eje principal de este extenso volumen, pero honestamente, como lector, esperaba que en un libro tan largo fueran narradas las batallas y «choques de reyes» más importantes de la historia porque —como mencioné en mi reseña de Juego de tronos— esta historia es un juego de ajedrez, y como tal, deseaba personalmente ser testigo de las jugadas usadas por los combatientes que arriesgaban sus vidas en el campo de batalla. Desafortunadamente no fue así, volviéndose desilusionante conocer el método de GRRM para informarnos sobre los resultados de la guerra: Usar a los personajes que no estaban participando. Tantas páginas y que solo nos narrara una batalla fue muy desconsolador, y más con la corta extensión de la presentada. Si en este momento pudiera viajar al pasado, hablaría conmigo mismo y me diría: «Léelo, te encantará, pero no esperes nada relacionado a la guerra porque si lo haces te sentirás defraudado.» Pero, por otra parte, si se toma «la guerra» como el contexto de la historia y no como evento principal, tal y como ocurre en innumerables libros históricos, entonces llegaría a la conclusión que este conflicto presentado por GRRM es estupendo. Todos viven la guerra de una forma distinta, dependiendo de su rol y sus posibilidades, por lo que mostrarnos tantas perspectivas y reacciones diferentes, es un valor agregado muy alto que demuestra la calidad que posee el autor para crear historias y personajes bien desarrollados. Es tanta su calidad, que incluso el mismísimo cometa que es anunciado en la sinopsis puede servir de ejemplo para corroborar esta afirmación, ya que cuando se presenta ese fenómeno, todos, sin importar el reino, la edad o el sexo, al observarlo creen que es un mensaje revelador que les está indicando la decisión o camino que deben tomar en sus vidas. Este evento, solo nos ayuda a confirmar, que los personajes parecen reales y que la iniciativa la toman ellos mismos. Por lo tanto, ¿esta guerra ha sido una genialidad, o un engaño del autor? Resuelvan esa pregunta ustedes mismos porque yo, personalmente, no he podido contestarla.

El aspecto negativo más popular de este libro es la lentitud de su primera mitad: Y sí, efectivamente algunos capítulos se sienten muy lentos. Las descripciones, la presentación de personajes nuevos y las mini-historias que permanentemente están en continuación sin ofrecernos casi emotividad, causan que el lector sienta una clase de prisa por avanzar páginas y llegar a una sección con más adrenalina. Esta primera parte se asemeja a un carro que acelera a más de 100 km/h, frena repentinamente y luego vuelve a acelerar. Sin embargo, si analizamos la composición de este libro descubriremos que incluso ese aspecto está bien desarrollado. El problema no es el estilo del libro, el problema somos nosotros porque estamos acostumbrados a que la intensidad de los libros con historias paralelas vaya en aumento progresivamente hasta el final. Muchas obras que manejan ese sistema tienen el mismo funcionamiento, donde, entre más páginas vamos avanzando mejor se vuelve la historia, y donde las últimas páginas nos esperan con un nivel de adrenalina de otro mundo. Pero este libro no funciona así. En Choque de reyes cada historia presentada tiene un ritmo diferente, por lo que mientras algunos personajes están huyendo por su vida enfrentándose al mundo entero, otros muy tranquilos y sin amenazas no presentan novedades en los capítulos dedicados a ellos. Lo curioso es que ese funcionamiento es correcto porque la vida real es así: Mientras unos ríen, otros lloran; mientras unos están tristes por la muerte de sus seres queridos, otros están felices por el nacimiento de su hijo; mientras unos están cansados de dormir con su pareja, otros ansían tenerla; mientras unos desean llegar a su casa, otros quieren irse de ella. Así podría seguir sucesivamente citando ejemplos pero creo que no es necesario. Claramente GRRM escribe con mucha calma y delicadeza, lo que ayuda a que sus personajes e historias tengan el tiempo suficiente para madurar. Si el autor acelerara tan solo un poco la historia en esa sección podría llegar a alterar las personalidades de sus personajes, o simplemente exagerarlos, lo que llevaría a la indiferencia del lector cuando ellos son mencionados. Por tanto, ¿el inicio es lento, o nosotros como lectores somos muy ansiosos? Yo pensaría que lo segundo. GRRM ha tardado más de veinte años escribiendo esta saga y aun no la acaba, y no se ha precipitado con su finalización ni siquiera con la presión de los millones de seguidores que aclaman desesperados la sexta y séptima parte; ni siquiera siendo consciente de que su tiempo de vida puede no ser suficiente para lograrlo. Pero él, sigue haciéndolo con calma, y sin preocuparse por los acontecimientos futuros. Si él lleva tanto tiempo dedicado a este proyecto, ¿por qué nosotros como lectores nos desesperamos por unos cuántos capítulos «lentos»?

Pero no todo en esta saga son guerras y narración: Por supuesto que no. Uno de los mejores aspectos del libro sin ninguna duda es la inmersión de magia y poderes sobrenaturales a esta historia. Son detalles espectaculares que le dan a esta saga la chispa de misterio, suspenso e intriga suficientes para tenernos atrapados en todo momento. Me muero de curiosidad por conocer en los siguientes volúmenes todo lo relacionado a estos temas; temas, que fueron tan interesantes, que por momentos me hicieron olvidar que existían batallas, personajes con mil y una artimañas, y que todo giraba en torno al poder del trono.

Sobre los personajes siento que no es prudente escribir. La mención de algunos de ellos se convertiría en un spoiler para quienes van en el primer libro, o aún no han iniciado, porque ya conocerían que —por lo menos hasta aquí— X o Y personaje no morirá. Por otra parte hablar con la etiqueta de spoiler tampoco es de mucha utilidad porque aún me faltan tres volúmenes por leer y mis palabras solo estarían cargadas de ingenuidad e inocencia por mi ignorancia. Sin embargo, lo que sí puedo decir es que sigo creyendo firmemente que los personajes están muy bien desarrollados y que sus roles son correctos para ayudarnos a conocer más a fondo este mundo de fantasía creado por GRRM. Eso sí, me pareció imposible memorizar los nombres de la cantidad de personajes y familias que se introducen en este volumen: Son demasiados. En bastantes ocasiones confundí guerreros de ambos bandos y de no ser porque suelo hacer anotaciones me habría visto obligado a tener que repetir el libro desde el principio para orientarme. Ahora comprendo porque los lectores de esta saga deciden releerla una vez han finalizado: No es un capricho, ni fanatismo, es una necesidad.



En resumen, un libro con una historia extensa, pero con una gran calidad en su desarrollo, en sus personajes y en su argumento principal. Encontraremos violencia, crueldades, giros inesperados, estrategia, injusticias, manipulaciones, magia, grandes misterios y una gran aventura por conocer. Ya para terminar quiero hacer tres recomendaciones para esos nuevos lectores que se sienten interesados en esta saga: La primera, que hagan un mapa mental, anotaciones, etc., de los nombres de los personajes que sientan que serán importantes más adelante; la segunda, que de ser posible, lean esta saga conjuntamente con otra persona para que tengan con quien conversar sobre los acontecimientos que se presentan: En mi caso, lo estoy leyendo con mi hermano, aunque me lleva dos libros de diferencia; y la tercera, que bajen sus expectativas con respecto a las batallas que puedan presentarse. Siguiendo estas recomendaciones disfrutarán esta saga mucho más.

Es un libro que se merece las cinco estrellas, y que me gustaría otorgárselas; pero procedo a puntuarlo con 4,5 por la inconformidad inicial que sentí en el momento más esperado del libro. Mi próximo destino será Tormenta de espadas, libro del cual tengo las expectativas muy altas por sus innumerables halagos y por ser considerado como el favorito de la mayor parte de seguidores de esta saga de GRRM. Es momento de continuar.
Profile Image for Madeline.
779 reviews47.8k followers
May 16, 2012
"Kill your darlings" is a popular piece of advice given in creative writing classes - it's the concept that you shouldn't ever be afraid to take drastic and destructive action on your precious baby of a novel in order to move the plot forward or improve the story. George RR Martin should be held up as the gold standard of this rule, since his books might as well come labeled with a giant "Don't Get Too Attached" warning. It isn't just major and beloved characters (Eddard Stark, you will be avenged!) that get killed off in the space of a sentence; entire plots that have been building slowly for hundreds of pages are laid to waste with a single action so a new clusterfuck can get started.

If Martin spent A Game of Thrones carefully constructing a miniature world and showing us around its various towns and characters, A Clash of Kings is when he suddenly starts stomping on everything and making Godzilla noises. Major characters aren't the only ones who get the axe (sometimes literally) here - towards the end of the book, one of the major setpieces of the story, a place whose geography I was just starting to understand, is burned to the ground and abandoned. Just like that.

Even if these books aren't your particular cup of tea (and they happen to be my particular cup of crack cocaine), you have to admire Martin's ruthlessness when it comes to this world he's created. Nothing and no one is safe, which makes reading the books a delightfully tense experience - nothing is off limits here, and I look forward to seeing how far Martin can push things.

(why only three stars, you might ask? Simply because this book, as I said in one of the comments, doesn't really have much of a plot, when you think about it. This book really feels like the second of a trilogy, which means it's mostly setting up events that will come around in the next installment. Still, I can't wait to see what Martin rebuilds in the wake of the destruction he wreaked in A Clash of Kings)
Profile Image for Issa Deerbany.
374 reviews547 followers
June 26, 2018
بعد ان اصبح هناك عدة ملوك. اصبح عددهم يقل تدريجبا.

.صراع رهيب باسلوب مشوق. ممالك تسقط واخرى تقوم وما زال الصراع محتدما.

مصير عائلة ستارك اصبح مجهولا بعد تشتت العائلة.

من اروع روايات الخيال ومتحمس لقراءة الجزء الثالث"عاصفة السيوف"
Profile Image for Ryan.
1,047 reviews
August 12, 2016
While reading A Clash of Kings for the second time, it struck me that George R.R. Martin makes writing fantasy seem insultingly effortless. At first glance, Martin hardly bothers to do more than sketch his characters, yet they become legends so quickly.

For example, Quorin Halfhand is a brother in the Night's Watch. He eats an egg and has perhaps five lines, but he is a character that readers will find difficult to forget. Why is he called "halfhand?" Well, he lost all but the thumb and an index finger of his right hand and had to learn to fight with his left hand. They say he's even more dangerous with a sword now than he was before. What about Roose Bolton? He's the lord of the Dreadfort, he uses leeches to purify his blood, and his sigil is a flayed man. He speaks quietly but no one dares to defy him. Behold.

Usually characterization has to be done well to create a memorable character, but all Martin needs to do is come up with a nickname, a slogan, and a sigil. Maybe a cool sword or a notorious deed.

Like it or lump it, it's tough to forget these characters.

Martin also has a talent for architecture. Here's how long it takes Martin to transform Lord Balon Greyjoy's distant castle into the coolest keep in Westeros:

Drear, dark, forbidding, Pyke stood atop those islands and pillars, almost a part of them, its curtain wall closing off the headland around the foot of the great stone bridge that leapt from the clifftop to the largest islet, dominated by the massive bulk of the Great Keep. Farther out were the Kitchen Keep and the Bloody Keep, each on its own island. Towers and outbuildings clung to the stacks beyond, linked to each other by covered archways when the pillars stood close, by long swaying walks of wood and rope when they did not.

I would rather not see Pyke in a movie if only so that I could continue to remember it as I imagine it now. In fact, I find that I have carried these characters and castles with me since I first read this story ten years ago.

It's easy to get caught up in the Tyrion's intrigues and Jon Snow's adventures, but even Arya's scrappy determination to exact revenge on everyone that has wronged her makes for a compelling storyline. Each night, Arya recites a list of villains that have wronged her, ranging from the Lannisters to Ser Gregor Clegane to Raff the Sweetling. After Arya rescues Jaqen H'ghar and his two companions from certain death, he declares that he will kill any three people she names to even the stakes. Could he kill King Joffrey in King's Landing? Jaqen explains

Speak the name, and death will come. On this morrow, at the turn of the moon, a year from this day, it will come. A man does not fly like a bird, but one foot moves and then another and one day a man is there, and a king dies.

Arya is a courageous underdog, but perhaps the best part of her story is that she always attracts memorable mentors. Jaqen H'ghar is neither the first nor the last of Arya's guides, but like Syrio before him and after, he is impossible to forget.

It just doesn't seem fair that Martin is able to come up with so many great characters, and it seems criminal that he introduces and dismisses them so callously.

So I was happy to notice upon re-reading A Clash of Kings that Martin's seemingly effortless world building and characterization are largely due to a carefully structured series of revelations. Quorin is only impressive because of the many ways he stands out amongst the Night Watch's rangers. He is clean shaven, well mannered, and surprisingly loyal to the Wall's mandate. Roose Bolton is not just a strange lord with leeches: there are legends that the Starks once lost a battle to one of their bannermen -- who not only killed the Stark but also wore his skin as a cloak. Pyke isn't just a castle in the sea. It took the might of the realm to put down the Greyjoy rebellion. Jaqen H'ghar isn't just a strange man. Daenerys was betrayed by a maegi in the first novel that had occult knowledge that is tantalizingly similar to Jaqen's. Clearly, there is a great deal of thought that goes into these novels.

Thank goodness. The first time I read A Clash of Kings, I was struck by the hypocrisy of Westeros' ideals. Perhaps history teaches us that power and wealth shape our lives more than ideals and principles. So A Clash of Kings is sometimes quite depressing. However, this time, it struck me that talent counts for little without hard work, and I find that encouraging.
Profile Image for Melanie.
1,220 reviews101k followers
December 16, 2016
1.) A Game of Thrones ★★★★★



#readASOIAF Read-Along - Hosted by Riley from Riley Marie, Elizabeth from Liz Loves Literature, and Kayla from BOOKadoodles. ♥

Well, no one said this title was misleading. When GRRM named this A Clash of Kings he couldn't have been more right. This review will contain SPOILERS! Please refrain from reading if you have not read this book or its predecessor, A Game of Thrones.

So, we have the king sitting on the Iron Throne, Joffrey. We have Theon's father crowing himself King of the Iron Islands. We have both of brothers of the late King Robert, Stannis and Renly, calling themselves kings and proving they will do anything to keep their titles. We have Robb Stark, the young wolf himself, proclaiming he is King of the North. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, we have the lovely Daenerys trying to throw her hat crown in the ring, while trying to find a fleet of ships to take her to Westeros.

“The contents of a man's letters are more valuable than the contents of his purse.”

I absolutely am in love with the start of this book. Each chapter is a new POV with a new character within the Seven Kingdoms seeing Daenerys' red comet for the first time. We, as readers, know that the comet is because of the birth of her three dragons at the end of A Game of Thrones, but each character tells their own interpretation of what omen they think the falling comet brings with it.

“People often claim to hunger for truth, but seldom like the taste when it's served up.”

We finally meet my favorite character in the ASOIAF world; Davos. I always loved Davos in the books, and then Liam Cunningham playing him on the show, just completely sealed the deal for me. I don't have high hopes for him living throughout the entirety of this series, but I completely live for his chapters in these five books that are out. My heart bleeds for him at Battle of the Blackwater. Actually, my heart just continues to bleed for Davos. He always does the right thing, not the selfish right thing that other characters in this world trick themselves into thinking is the right thing, but the actual right thing. Please, GRRM, leave my precious little cinnamon roll alone!



Seeing Stannis act like a jealous twelve-year-old girl, because Robert's BFF was Ned and that he gave Renly Storm's End, is always hilarious. I know many, many people want/wanted him to be the true king, but that theory never, ever resonated with me. Stannis always seemed so childish, the only redeeming quality he ever has going for him is his daughter, Shireen.

Catelyn's chapters where much more bearable for me than they were in A Game of Thrones. I actually could feel her pain and regret, and she really impacted me much differently this time around. She actually made some pretty strong decisions, and this whole story would have gone much differently if Robb would have taken some of her advice.

Robb was actually the Stark I couldn't stand in A Clash of Kings. He was so heartless about even attempting to get his sisters back. Then, he made stupid decision after stupid decision. I feel like maybe he has to be a bastard, too, because I cannot believe this is the son of Ned Stark with his actions. I know people who were upset that Robb never got any chapters, but during this reread I was extremely thankful for that.



Another one of my favorite characters is introduced in this book, which is Brienne of Tarth. You know, I've been on the fence about if Brienne actually killed Stannis in S5E10, but after rereading her love for Renly, I completely believe she did in the TV show. Regardless, Catelyn made her first good decisive choice, in my eyes, by rescuing Brienne from a very unfair situation. And we all know Brienne goes forth to repay that debt tenfold.

Speaking of the TV show, one thing that the TV doesn't show is all the foreshadowing the book does about Arya's wolf, Nymeria. There are so many passages hinting about this new wolf pack leader that is ruling the Riverlands, and scaring the hell out of a lot of people.

Poor Arya, she might have the worst deal of them all in this book. After having to witness the public execution of her father, she is forced into hiding by Yoren, who helps smuggle her out with a group of boys and wishes to take her to Castle Black to be with Jon. She ends up making friends, Gendry (Robert's bastard) and Hot Pie, but after even more unfortunate events in her life, Yoren winds up dead and the group captured. She then ends up being Roose Bolton's cupbearer, but the whole situation seems kind of weird for me. Arya did not know the Bolton's already were traitors against Robb, I imagine she would still think they were one of the Stark's banner men, no? And if she thought this, like I imagine I would, I would bet she would tell him who she really is! I mean, in hindsight we know she made the much, much, much better choice keeping her identity a secret, but the situation felt a little strange for me this read-through.

Regardless, Arya also meets, and we are introduced to, Jaqen H'ghar in this book. They have a few very intense moments, and he leaves her with his coin and explains to her that if she ever needs to find him to give the coin to anyone in Braavos.

"valar morghulis"

Roose Bolton isn't the only Bolton that is in Clash of Kings; his bastard son, Ramsey, is as well. Okay, now I know Ramsey goes down on the TV show as the most evil villain ever, but that's why I freakin' love him! Actually, ASOIAF is so good because GRRM really does write the best villains, and you can see where every one of them is coming from! Ramsey will do anything, and I mean anything, to prove to his rather that he should have the last name Bolton.

“In the songs all knights are gallant, all maids are beautiful, and the sun is always shining.”

Theon, another character that can be seen as a villain that is willing to do anything to please his father, has betrayed Robb and decided to take Winterfell for himself. If only Rob acutally listened to his mother this time. Unfortunately Robb didn't listen and unfortunately Theon will never be as cunning as Ramsey, who is posing under the guise of Reek, even though the real Reek died after having sex with a dead body of a girl that Ramsey had just raped and killed, who is now a prisoner in Winterfell. It is so genius, and so well executed by GRRM I will applaud him until the day I die. Twists and storylines like this is why this series is a step above the rest and completely deserves all the praise it receives.



I guess I should always state a disclaimer, like with all of the books in this series, that there are many very graphic rape and gang-rape scenes. I couldn't even list all of the triggers for sexual abuse in this book, so please use caution when reading if this is something that concerns you. As scary as the sexual violence is to me, I think it is very believable in this world and helps to show people that the real monsters aren't just beyond the wall; they are human beings capable of very evil things.

"To omit them from a narrative centered on war and power would have been fundamentally false and dishonest, and would have undermined one of the themes of the books: that the true horrors of human history derive not from orcs and Dark Lords, but from ourselves. We are the monsters. (And the heroes too). Each of us has within himself the capacity for great good, and great evil," GRRM even says (perfectly) himself, via The Guardian.

I feel like this book doesn't have enough Jon POVs, but every chapter we got a POV of him was phenomenal. I have always liked Ygritte more in the books, and this reread proves no different. We get to see Jon kill his first wildling, and then see something in Ygritte he hasn't been able to see in another living soul. I get teary-eyed just thinking about this sub-plot. Jon obviously doesn't kill Ygritte either time he is "supposed" to, while being north of the wall looking for his uncle, Benjen, and I cannot wait to start my reread of A Storm of Swordsjust for Ygritte and Jon alone.



And speaking of crows north of the wall, can we just talk about how Jeor Mormont is the real MVP? Like, not only has he completely taken Jon under his wing (hehehe) and is guiding him like a father should, I'm kind of thinking his raven is more important that what we are lead to believe in this book. With what we know from the TV show, which will probably be canon for the book as well, we have this raven saying "king" and all these other questionable word choices.

Who are my other personal MVPs of this book? Howland Reed and his kids, Meera and Jojen. Not only was Howland maybe the most loyal man to Ned Stark, but now his two children have run away with Bran, after Winterfell is under siege, to help him on a much bigger journey ahead. I mean, where the hell would the Starks be without the Reeds? I mean, besides dead. I know Howland has never had a POV in this series, yet, but I can't help but dream of the day he will. Hopefully it will be in The Winds of Winter.

Lastly, in Westeros, we have King's Landing. Thanks to Tyrion and wildfire, they have defeated Stannis' army at Battle of the Blackwater. Sadly, this had also driven the Hound away, because he is scared of fire and it breaks my little black heart every time. Joffrey is still the crowned king after the victory, but many people are opposing it. Cersei is trying to guide him as best she can, while also giving Sansa some pretty sound life advice about women in this world and what they need to do to protect themselves. Sansa is also somewhat saved, considering her father is now seen as a traitor to the crown, who has no money or men willing to fight because Robb has them, so her marriage proposal to Joffrey isn't looking as good to the Lannisters. House Tyrell on the other hand, has lots of money and fifty-thousand swords they are willing to bring with a marriage proposal. After this marriage proposal is deemed more worthy, Margaery is sent for, because Renly, her now late husband, was killed by Stannis.



It is pretty crazy how intricate this story is, and how everything works out. I've said it before, and I'll say it again, George RR Martin truly is a genius and words cannot express how much I love this world he has created. I mean, I sure in the hell wouldn't memorize all these names for just any old author.

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May 13, 2023
My complete review is published at Grimdark Magazine.

A Clash of Kings, George R.R. Martin’s epic second volume of A Song of Ice and Fire, is a masterclass in grimdark fantasy, somehow improving upon the already excellent first volume, A Game of Thrones, in every respect. Having already established the key characters in A Game of Thrones, A Clash of Kings jumps right into the action and never lets up.

The scope of A Clash of Kings is enormous: six warring families, all vying for power following the deaths of King Robert Baratheon and Lord Eddard Stark. The battles and strategic maneuvering among the six families are accompanied by a healthy dose of intrafamily drama and betrayal.

Although the storylines are sprawling, they work so effectively because they are presented from the eyes of a vibrant cast of well-realized characters. All the same point-of-view characters from A Game of Thrones are retained in A Clash of Kings, except for Eddard Stark. There are also two additions: Theon Greyjoy and Ser Davos Seaworth. Theon is the more interesting of the two, and his sister, Asha Greyjoy, is a delight.

Davos serves more as a vehicle for learning about King Robert’s brother, Lord Stannis Baratheon, who declares himself to be the rightful King of Westeros. These chapters also introduce us to Melisandre, a red priestess and powerful shadowbinder in the service of Lord Stannis. She is one of the most fascinating new characters in A Clash of Kings, bringing additional elements of magic to the story.

The real star of A Clash of Kings is Tyrion Lannister, who has been appointed by his father to serve as Hand for King Joffrey. Over the course of fifteen chapters, Tyrion becomes the most fully realized character in the series so far. Ever witty and insightful, Tyrion is a cunning master at political maneuvering, especially in the face of his sister, Queen Cersei. Tyrion also has a warm heart. His love for Shae is especially touching, as are his attempts to protect Sansa Stark.

Poor Sansa. She is betrothed to the temperamental boy-king Joffrey, who abuses her both physically and psychologically. Sansa is essentially a hostage and used as a bargaining chip for the Lannister family in trying to free Jaime Lannister. Although presented as a rather superficial character in A Game of Thrones, Sansa grows a lot during A Clash of Kings and starts to see how she is being manipulated by the Lannisters.

Sansa’s younger sister, Arya, is given significantly more focus in A Clash of Kings compared to the previous book. Arya has escaped the clutches of the Lannister family and now assumes various false identities as she attempts to find her way back to her own family. Arya spends much of the book disguised as a peasant boy, Arry, trying to survive in the cruel world of Westeros.

Meanwhile, Bran Stark oversees Winterfell while his brother Robb, now King of the North, is leading their military campaign. Bran has developed a mental bond with his direwolf, Summer, giving him unusually realistic dreams from the direwolf’s perspective. He soon learns that the bond with Summer is much deeper than originally thought.

Further north, Jon Snow helps lead the Night Watch’s exploration beyond the Wall to investigate the disappearance of several rangers, including Benjen Stark. Like Bran, Jon develops a powerful bond with his direwolf, Ghost, enabling him to control the direwolf’s actions.

Of the main characters established in A Game of Thrones, Daenerys Targaryen is the only one given significantly less page time in A Clash of Kings. Daenerys has named her baby dragons after her deceased husband and brothers and spends most of A Clash of Kings laying the groundwork for an eventual return to power in Westeros.

A Clash of Kings is a feast for grimdark fans, masterfully building upon the already strong foundation of A Game of Thrones while taking the story and characters to new heights.
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