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A Song of Ice and Fire #4

袩懈褉 蟹邪 胁褉邪薪懈

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袝褌芯, 褔械 褋 鈥溞熜秆€ 蟹邪 胁褉邪薪懈鈥� 袦邪褉褌懈薪 薪懈 锌褉械写谢邪谐邪 写褗谢谐芯芯褔邪泻胁邪薪邪褌邪 褔械褌胁褗褉褌邪 泻薪懈谐邪 芯褌 褋胁芯褟褌邪 胁械谢懈泻芯谢械锌薪邪 锌芯褉械写懈褑邪. 袪邪蟹泻褗褋胁邪薪芯褌芯 芯褌 胁芯泄薪懈 泻褉邪谢褋褌胁芯 薪邪泄-褋械褌薪械 褋械 芯泻邪蟹胁邪 薪邪 锌褉邪谐邪 薪邪 屑懈褉邪... 蟹邪 写邪 褋械 褏胁褗褉谢懈 胁 锌褉芯锌邪褋褌褌邪 薪邪 芯褖械 锌芯-褍卸邪褋薪芯 褍薪懈褖芯卸械薪懈械...
袠蟹谐谢械卸写邪 褌胁褗褉写械 褏褍斜邪胁芯, 蟹邪 写邪 械 懈褋褌懈薪邪. 袙芯泄薪邪褌邪 薪邪 锌械褌懈屑邪褌邪 泻褉邪谢械 薪邪泄-褋械褌薪械 械 蟹邪屑褉褟谢邪 胁 褌褉械胁芯卸薪芯 蟹邪褌懈褕懈械, 褋谢械写 泻邪褌芯 袛芯屑褗褌 薪邪 袥邪薪懈褋褌褗褉 懈 褌械褏薪懈褌械 褋褗褞蟹薪懈褑懈 褋邪 锌褉懈胁懈写薪懈褌械 锌芯斜械写懈褌械谢懈.
袧芯 泻邪褌芯 褋谢械写 胁褋褟泻邪 褋褗写斜芯薪芯褋薪邪 斜芯褉斜邪, 褋泻芯褉芯 蟹邪锌芯褔胁邪褌 写邪 褋械 褋斜懈褉邪褌 芯褑械谢械谢懈, 褉邪蟹斜芯泄薪懈褑懈, 褉械薪械谐邪褌懈 懈 谢械褕芯褟写懈, 蟹邪 写邪 褉邪蟹褉芯胁褟褌 泻芯褋褌懈褌械 薪邪 屑褗褉褌胁懈褌械 懈 写邪 褋械 斜懈褟褌 蟹邪 锌谢褟褔泻邪 薪邪写 懈蟹写褗褏胁邪褖懈褌械...
袙褉械屑械 械 屑褗写褉懈褌械 懈 褌谢邪褋泻邪薪懈褌械 芯褌 邪屑斜懈褑懈褟, 泻芯胁邪褉薪懈褌械 懈 褋懈谢薪懈褌械 写邪 锌褉懈写芯斜懈褟褌 芯锌懈褌邪, 褋懈谢邪褌邪 懈 屑邪谐懈褟褌邪, 蟹邪 写邪 芯褑械谢械褟褌 胁 锌褉械写褋褌芯褟褖懈褌械 褋褍褉芯胁懈 懈 卸械褋褌芯泻懈 胁褉械屑械薪邪. 袙褉械屑械 械 蟹邪 斜谢邪谐芯褉芯写薪懈褑懈 懈 锌褉芯褋褌芯谢褞写懈械, 蟹邪 胁芯泄薪懈褑懈 懈 褔邪褉芯写械懈, 蟹邪 锌谢邪褌械薪懈 褍斜懈泄褑懈 懈 屑褗写褉械褑懈, 写邪 褋械 褋锌谢芯褌褟褌 懈 写邪 蟹邪谢芯卸邪褌 褋胁芯懈褌械 褋褗写斜懈... 懈 卸懈胁芯褌.

832 pages, Paperback

First published October 17, 2005

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290k people want to read

About the author

George R.R. Martin

1,506books116kfollowers
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.



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Profile Image for Matt.
1,020 reviews30.2k followers
April 26, 2016
The context here is everything.

A Song of Ice and Fire began with the publication of A Game of Thrones in 1996. Thrones introduced us to the land of Westeros, a continent the size of South America but suspiciously similar to medieval England. We followed a handful of characters representing various factions of the Seven Kingdoms, squabbling for the right to sit upon the Iron Throne. Its grittiness, tactility, fully-realized characters, and high stakes (a major character loses a head) gave it a cult following.

Two years after Thrones, A Clash of Kings was published. It told the story of 鈥渢he War of the Five Kings.鈥� Though it started slowly, it built to a fine ending, which included the shocking loss of Winterfell (home to many of our main characters) and the epic Battle of the Blackwater. A phenomenon had started.

Like clockwork, the third novel in the cycle, A Storm of Swords came two years after Kings. It was the biggest book so far, and easily the best. It featured all the hallmarks we鈥檇 come to expect from author George R.R. Martin 鈥� swordfights, detailed descriptions of food, casual misogyny, laughably crude sex scenes, shocking twists, major character deaths, and a humdinger of a cliffhanger 鈥� but those elements were heightened. There are set pieces in Swords that are simply classic (see, e.g., 鈥渢he Red Wedding鈥�).

At the end of Swords, the fate of several major characters 鈥� beloved characters 鈥� dangled in the wind. Readers thirsted for the next installment. They began their wait.

And then crickets.

Nothing for five years.

After five years, we were given the present installment: A Feast for Crows. By this time, it was nearly impossible for any book to live up to the expectations of Swords. On this level, at least, Crows did not disappoint. It certainly met the expectation that it could not meet expectations.

As the old saying goes, the only thing worse than a bad meal is a small bad meal.

Not only did Crows fail to meet the challenge of Swords, it was over too quickly. When readers got to the last page, they were left to wonder, this is it?. Martin, you see, had allowed the manuscript for Crows to get so long, he decided to cut the thing in half. As he explained in a now-infamous postscript, Martin decided to split the book geographically, rather than chronologically. That meant that many of the best characters did not appear; none of the cliffhangers from Swords were resolved; and we were left to follow the dubious quests of various secondary personages. To make matters worse, Martin tentatively promised the next volume, A Dance With Dragons, would be published the next year.

That postscript was written in 2005.

Six years later, A Dance With Dragons was finally released.

Thus, it is a fortuitous time to review Crows. It is a much-maligned book, buffeted by two competing elements: the long wait before the book was published, and the longer wait after. In other words, the book has suffered critically because it took so long to come out and did not satisfy the pent-up demand. It also suffered because it did nothing to alleviate the long wait for Dragons.

Almost all agree that Crows is the weakest volume in A Song of Ice and Fire. Beyond that, opinions are split. Some people hate it with the light of a thousand suns. Some people love it like a pug dressed in a tuxedo. Others acknowledge its weakness while admitting that a subpar steak is still a steak.

The length of time it takes Martin to churn out his opuses creates some high passion amongst his fans. That passion, combined with the internet and thousands of basements belonging to thousands of moms has created a great deal of hyperbolic ire directed towards Martin. While this criticism is a minority report, it is loud, and has colored the merits of Crows.

I am immune to this misplaced anger. I am a latecomer to Martin鈥檚 work; accordingly, when I started reading Thrones, four books had already been published, with a confirmed release date for the fifth. I鈥檝e never suffered the long withdrawals between books that the early adopters have had to overcome.

Due to this tardiness, I feel like I can judge Crows based on its literary qualities, rather than its late arrival onto the Ice and Fire firmament. Unfortunately, the literary qualities of Crows are in short supply.

Most of Crows鈥� problems stem from Martin鈥檚 decision to divide the story by geography, and focus mainly on the action in Westeros that takes place south of the Wall. That means that the dwarf, Tyrion Lannister, Martin鈥檚 greatest creation, is missing. So are Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen. Not only are you losing fantastic, multidimensional characters with whom we鈥檝e traveled for hundreds and thousands of pages, you lose the heart of the story. As far as I can tell (and I鈥檓 sure I鈥檒l be wrong), Martin鈥檚 endgame seems to point towards two events: the struggle at the Wall against the onslaught of the walking dead (the song of Ice); and Daenerys鈥� struggle to reclaim the Iron Throne with the help of her dragons (the song of Fire). Neither of those crucial points get any play in Crows. Instead, it鈥檚 700 pages of B-side.

The viewpoint characters in Crows (Martin鈥檚 story is told in the third-person limited, with chapters that alternate points-of-view among various characters) are mostly new to the spotlight. Jaime Lannister, Samwell Tarly, Arya Stark and Sansa Stark are the only returning viewpoint characters. The other viewpoints go to Queen Cersei, Aeron, Asha, and Victarion Greyjoy, Areo Hotah, Brienne of Tarth, Aerys Oakheart, and Arianne Martell.

Some of these characters are brand new. Some have been barely mentioned. Most of them are confusingly named (it gets a bit tough keeping Arya, Areo, Aeron, Aerys and Arianne apart, at least for me; unfortunately, I鈥檓 not able to devote my entire life to these books). With some exceptions, their stories do not rise to the level of interest or intensity as the plotlines of Martin鈥檚 earlier books.

The bulk of this book, nearly a quarter of the pages, belongs to Cersei. Given space to develop her character, Martin is his usual strong self. Earlier in the series, Cersei was a terrifying, enigmatic peripheral character. In Thrones, she showed her smarts, and her cruelty, by getting the drop on Eddard Stark (admittedly not the sharpest tool in the shed). After the death of her son, King Joffrey, in Swords, Cersei鈥檚 transformation began. She became more guarded, paranoid, and megalomaniacal. Her descent into madness is marked by her growing certainty that all her decisions are correct. The most interesting aspect of Crows is Cersei鈥檚 long fall contrasted with the rise of a fanatical religious movement called the Faith.

Cersei is also beneficiary of one of Martin's weird peripheral-characters, the the fallen maester Lord Qyburn. Like Dr. Frankenstein, Qyburn toils away in the dungeons, doing odd experiments on living subjects, the result of which, it is obvious to see, will be half-human, half-monster. (Unfortuntately, Cersei's chapters are disadvantaged by a subplot concerning Westeros' outstanding loans to the Bank of Braavos. All the talk of high finance and trade federations harkened uncomfortably to another famous fantasy/sci-fi epic that lost its way).

Cersei鈥檚 brother/lover, Jaime, has the second most page-time. His evolution from villain to hero takes a big leap forward, as we see him go from murderous sister-humper to a canny leader pushing back against the excesses of King鈥檚 Landing. With Jaime鈥檚 chapters, Martin is able to tie up a few loose ends still dangling after the War of the Five Kings (for example, the dragging siege at Riverrun is finally concluded).

The balance of Crows is told in scattershot style through the ten remaining viewpoint characters.

We barely hear from Sansa, which is fine with me. Still, it is nice to see that she is developing at least a semblance of wit. I have a major problem with her character, mainly because Martin portrays Sansa as a real child; that is, as someone who is uninteresting and dumb. The problem with kids as characters is that kids are inherently boring. Kids aren鈥檛 clever, no matter what I see posted on Facebook. Only in a book or movie is a kid who can鈥檛 tie his shoes crafty enough to turn his house into a living version of Mousetrap to foil a pair of robbers. So far, Sansa is realistic in the sense that she is dull, frightened, mistake-prone, and hollow. This also means she is a weak protagonist. In Crows, despite a limited appearance, she finally starts to learn some of the finer points of deception.

Arya Stark is a more traditional fictional child. Despite her tender years, she performs great heroic feats. Her ever-growing darkness, however, makes her a joy to follow (I wouldn鈥檛 be surprised if, at the end of A Song of Ice and Fire, we counted her among the bad guys). In Crows, Arya is exiled to Braavos. She doesn鈥檛 do much of anything, and her chapters seem meant only to explore the islands of Braavos. This would鈥檝e been fine if Braavos was interesting. Instead, it鈥檚 just Venice, right down to the swaggering, arrogant, hand-talking men-folk.

Three characters, Areo, Arienne and Aerys, serve to give us entr茅e into Dorne. The set up here 鈥� the machinations of Dorne against King鈥檚 Landing 鈥� is obviously important. However, these chapters are rushed (and the Aerys chapters are so short and abrupt I have a hard time understanding their inclusion). The same goes for the chapters with the three Ironborn characters: Aeron, Asha, and Victarion. In perfunctory style, they are moved like chess pieces, put in place for further development down the road.

The chapters following Brienne are like walking on a treadmill. She鈥檚 given a lot of space to do things, but she never gets anywhere. Martin has her crisscrossing the ruins of a war-torn Westeros, searching for Sansa Stark. Of course, we know exactly where Sansa is; therefore, we know that Brienne is never going to find her. Also, for all her abilities, she is portrayed as a slow-thinker, a female Forrest Gump who鈥檚 handy with a sword. Even if we didn't know where Sansa was hiding, we鈥檇 have a pretty good idea that Brienne鈥檚 plan to find her would fail (it literally consists of her wandering around, asking where Sansa has gone).

These are structural problems. And forgivable, as long as the book鈥檚 quality had been consistent. It鈥檚 not. This is a poorly written book by Martin鈥檚 standards. His descriptions seem tired. His writer鈥檚 tics are more pronounced. The dialogue, which had been whip-smart and eminently quotable, is execrable. It is flat, repetitive (Jaime鈥檚 鈥淚 love you too, sweet sister鈥� is repeated on a loop), and filled with odd, obtrusive, never-before-used idioms. For some reason, the characters start referring to their uncles as nuncles, even though uncle had served just fine before. In one chapter, the insult 鈥渟toatish鈥� is used two or three times (as far as I can tell, it means weasel-like) and then dropped like a bag of flaming poo.

Despite taking five years to write, Crows feels like a first draft. There are brief glimmers displaying Martin鈥檚 mastery of both his world and his writing. For instance, even though Brienne鈥檚 dead-end quest is inert as a narrative, Martin鈥檚 evocation of a war-weary Westeros is captivating, with its fresh graves, burnt-out homes, and outlaw-infested roads.

Subpar writing can be saved by a propulsive plot or a great set piece. As I noted before, the plot grinds forward. Moreover, nothing exciting happens. Swordplay is kept to a minimum. There isn鈥檛 a battle to be found (in a way, Martin鈥檚 exhausted effort mirrors the tiredness of war-blasted Westeros). With the exception of Moby Dick, I try not to use the word 鈥渂oring鈥� in my reviews. Here, though, things get awfully close to the b-word.

To be sure, there are a few saving graces. The first is the sex scenes. They are just awful, and bound to put a smile on your face. The high/lowlight is a lesbian sex scene between Cersei and Lady Taena that involves an unfortunate comparison of a women鈥檚 nether regions to a swamp. It had me laughing my ass off.

Martin is also able to add a few twists at the end, including a cliffhanger that leaves one character dangling by the neck. Here, unlike in Kings, a strong ending isn鈥檛 enough to save the rest of the book. To the contrary, Martin should take lessons from M. Night Shyamalan: you can鈥檛 rely so much on 11th hour shocks or uncertain character fates.

At some point, A Song of Ice and Fire will be finished. Either Martin will complete the saga, or it will linger forever as a partially-completed near-great thing. When that time comes, it is very likely that the esteem for Crows will rise. It鈥檚 faults will be less glaring; its virtues will seem more virtuous.

Right now, though, I just want to move on to A Dance With Dragons and pretend Crows wasn鈥檛 half as bad as I know it was.
Profile Image for mark monday.
1,836 reviews6,048 followers
September 25, 2011
Behold: the Ugly Stepchild of A Song of Ice and Fire!
Behold: the Readers of A Feast for Crows: Angry, Sullen, Vengeful!


silly readers. i'm not sure i've ever read such a collection of resentful reviews for one book. one reviewer just decided to repeat the same phrase over and over and over again (sorry Joel, had to say it). another decided to note that "...kids are inherently boring. Kids aren鈥檛 clever..." er, wtf?

sigh. i suppose i can understand the backlash. Martin took a long-assed time to put this out into the world and then - WHAT THE HELL - reader favorites Tyrion & Jon Snow & Daenerys have dropped off of this book's radar. but i am also perplexed - despite the loss of these wonderful creations, this is an excellent and challenging novel. come on readers, grow a pair!

personally, i savored this book from beginning to end. the intricate plot, the propulsive narrative, the intelligent world-building, and most importantly the depth of characterization that were all hallmarks of prior volumes are still in place and undiminished in this installment. one of the things that is often overlooked about Martin is that he is a brilliant writer of quality prose. his descriptions are not just lavish, they are often quite beautiful. he has an expert grasp of language; the man knows how to create imagery that is by turns stark, subtly threatening, strangely enchanting, morbid, nostalgic, and ambiguous. the only reason the novel does not earn a top rating from me (but really, who cares anyway) is because of an unfortunately heavy reliance on repetition - mainly of key phrases and dream imagery. still, this novel should stand tall as an excellent continuation of this amazing series.

first and foremost, A Feast for Crows is A Story of the Women of Westeros. because this is set in a medieval land that has very little wish fulfillment in terms of rectifying gender imbalance, it is fated by its own nature to be an unsettling and unfufilling narrative.

CONSTANT SPOILERS FOLLOW

The Queen Regent. Cersei Lannister is this series' chief villain and so it was with much anticipation that i approached her POV chapters. they did not disappoint. quite unlike the POV chapters from her formerly villainous twin Jaime, there is not much redemption coming Cersei's way. she's such a fuckin bitch, as the saying goes. she remains cold, grasping, machiavellian, murderous, and extremely petty. she is also incredibly entertaining: a villain in the Grand Old Style, full of swallowed rage and sweetly-uttered put-downs and viciously cruel schemes. she takes to drink and she lets a fellow viper into her bed (which also allows Martin to indulge in an enjoyably laugh out-loud lesbionic interlude). she makes a classic mistake in allowing fanatics to arm themselves. in the end, she literally outsmarts herself, and is the victim of her own foul trap. best of all, she is going crazy! her dreams haunt her, dreams of her death and the deaths of her children. much of her villainous nature is explained by these dreams...what mother wouldn't stop at anything to protect her children? and so Cersei doesn't stop at anything.

but what i mainly took away from her chapters were two important lessons that i learned, oh, years ago, probably in my various college Gender Studies classes. first: a woman in power within a patriarchal structure is a woman in constant battle with her peers. she will not receive the automatic respect granted to men; she will have to "earn it", whatever that even means. she will be constantly reminded that her job is actually to marry and to bear children, and that her position of authority is somehow unnatural, against the natural order of things. i despised Cersei, but i also despised those around her who did not give her the automatic respect a man would have in her position. i appreciate that Martin made this inequity crystal clear: he is against Cersei (of course he is - she's the villain) but he also gives the challenges she faces in her new position a rather timeless quality. gender inequity is timeless.

and the second lesson: a woman who gains power within a patriarchal system by mirroring the gender essentialism that supports that system has, sadly, sublimated that structure as natural and right - and will therefore enact that chauvinism. Women's Studies 101, folks. Cersei does not "challenge gender imbalance" - she supports it. her interior monologues are full of the same bullshit as any sexist dumbass. she despises "weakness" in men. she condemns "slutty" behavior while indulging in it herself. she uses classic chauvinistic tactics to bring down a rival and even-more-classic male brutality to destroy men and women alike. as i mentioned...she's a fuckin bitch! but her character is a fascinating one to contemplate.

The Sand Snakes and The Dorne Princess. i suppose the chapters set in Dorne could contribute to many readers' disengagement with this novel. oh, whatever. i love Dorne! Dorne is the ugly stepchild of Westeros: matrilineal and distantly threatening, with a great big chip on its shoulder. but what a place it is: aggressive and volatile, sure, but also a land where women are automatically given the same respect as men, where a princess is the natural heir to the throne, where bastards are not automatically disrespected. the brief glimpses of the Sand Snakes, despite their inability to start the war they craved, were compelling in how differentiated they were in their various proposals to begin battle. and i also appreciated how fallible Arianne Martell turned out to be: a girl unused to schemes but still scheming away, a seductress who fell in love, a woman loyal to her friends and disinterested in cruelty, an heiress and misguided leader-to-be, one whose time in the limelight approaches.

Sansa/Alayne and Arya/Cat. sometimes a girl has to literally convince herself that she is someone else, simply to survive. sometimes a girl has to forget the parts of her that make her herself, in order to achieve her goals. of course in one case, this is a girl who has lived her life as a pathos-ridden pawn. in the other case, we have a girl who is slowly losing her humanity as she becomes a kind of living weapon. eh, so what? they both have my full support. go Sansa & Arya, go! survive this series, you can do it!

Catelyn/Stoneheart. and sometimes a woman fails. to accomplish her goals, to protect her loved ones, to save her children. i imagine that some women can get past this and can go on to define themselves anew. and other women cannot, or do not. they swallow their bitterness but do not forget: it becomes their fuel, their purpose for being. it can turn a heart to stone. and, um, it probably doesn't help having your throat slashed at your brother's wedding and then being revived as a monstrous quasi-zombie. and so Catelyn becomes a dread avenger, and not a pretty one. she is a killer without regard to reason or even justice, and she turns Dondarrion's Merry Men into a grim and bloodthirsty cabal. i never thought i'd see Thoros be so sad, so lost. i never thought Lemoncloak could be such an uncaring asshole. i never thought Catelyn would hang an innocent woman or a mere lad. well, i suppose that's what can happen. so i know that Brienne survives, that's obvious. but if Podric Payne dies, i'm coming after you, George Martin!

The Maid of Tarth. i saved one of my favorite characters of the series for last. i don't think Brienne is a lot of readers' favorite; i assume they find her constant integrity and her equally constant naivete, repetitiousness, and lack of imagination to be tedious. but that's not how i feel! i loved her from beginning to (probably not her) end. there is such genuine realism to her loyal, awkward, lovelorn character. she is a warrior woman, but this means nothing in male-dominated Westeros except constant and automatic disrespect. she is, i suppose, "physically unattractive" and is constantly reminded of that by nearly every person she meets. she is always Doing The Right Thing; that integrity causes her to be disrespected even more, and it often means nothing to the people around her. well it means a lot to me! her quest may have been aimless, but it was also useful in illustrating the true and awful tragedy of war: the lives lost, the tormented survivors, the bleak landscapes, the sense of a world turned dark and bloody and soulless - a world without meaning. seeing such a brave person travel through this blighted landscape and continuously, stubbornly, mulishly trying to do good was hard to read - but it was also what i really needed in order to truly connect with this novel: a hero, tried and true. her two fight scenes, vanquishing members of the appalling Brave Companions, were awesome. what a brave lady and what a unique addition to the fantasy genre's Hero Archetype. i love her. as i loved this book.

now on to the next one!
Profile Image for Joel.
580 reviews1,904 followers
October 22, 2010
A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. (A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair?) A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair.

A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair? A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair -- A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair.

A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair. A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair.

A highborn maid of three-and-ten, with a fair face and auburn hair!
Profile Image for Madeline.
813 reviews47.9k followers
June 27, 2012
Hey everyone, George RR Martin here. I thought I'd take some time off from planning my intricate and complex storylines (spoiler alert: everyone has sex with everyone and then kills each other) to introduce A Feast for Crows, the long-awaited fourth installment in my epic fantasy series! You guys are in for a treat, this one is awesome.

So the last book was quite a ride, huh? There was that craziness that was the Weddings of Death, Tyrion killed his father, , Jon Snow finally got cool and is now Lord Commander of the Night's Watch, Arya continued to be a tiny BAMF, Bran looked like he was finally moving towards a real plot, and Daenerys decided to temporarily shelve her whole unleash-the-dogs-of-war plan and be a queen for a while. Also I made Christmas come early for Madeline when I killed off Catelyn Stark, only to bring all her hopes and dreams crashing down when it turned out that Catelyn is a zombie now and will never die. Hee hee hee.

Anyway, with all that cool stuff, you probably thought that this book was going to be made of awesome, what with all the fallout from the stuff I described above. And it will be, but unfortunately my attention to detail and complex storylines finally came back to bite me in the ass, and it turns out I couldn't devote an entire book to all the plots I started in the last book. So I divided them into two volumes, and saved all the cool people for Book Five. Want to read about Jon Snow, Daenerys, and Tyrion? Too fucking bad.

Don't worry though, this means we get to meet lots of fun new characters, like Theon's crazy uncles and a lot of random people from Dorne. They each get just one chapter, of course, because they only exist so I can have a perspective to show all these events from (my changing single-character viewpoint structure has also begun to bite me in the ass, unfortunately) and you'll probably never see them again, but that's what makes it fun!

It's not all bad, at least - Arya's still here, even though she's not doing much murdering or really much of anything. This is where Arya learns how to be more awesome, so she can wreck everyone's shit later - or maybe not, because in the last chapter we see her in, she's just gone blind. Is it temporary, or permanent? You'll just have to buy the next book and find out (maybe)!

And hey, I gave you guys some Cersei chapters, finally. And yes, she's just as much of a psycho bitch as you always suspected. You're welcome. Also Jaime chapters - bet you didn't think he would turn out to be one of the only decent characters in the series, huh? (of course, if he's becoming one of the good guys, that means I'll probably murder him soon) And there are more Samwell Tarly chapters! Everyone loves reading about Sam, right? Guys? Guys? Where are you going?

Don't worry, the next book will be all about Tyrion and Daenerys and Bran (look, it's going to pay off soon, I swear. Really guys, he's going to be interesting eventually.) and all the other cool characters that I totally ignored in this book and that you really wanted to read about. As for all the character-based cliffhangers I established in this book, will they be resolved in the next volume? Probably not! I am George RR Martin, and I demand your money and your tears!

PS: Quit bitching at me to write faster. You'll get your books when I say you get them, and not a day sooner. Don't push me, or the next volume published will be titled A Siege of Tears and it'll be nothing but Jon Snow, Bran Stark, and Samwell Tarly sitting around and thinking about how inadequate they are. Do not test me on this, nerds.
Profile Image for Mark Lawrence.
Author听90 books55.2k followers
February 7, 2025
From a place of love, since I enjoyed the book a lot on my 2nd try.












...
Profile Image for Justin.
454 reviews40 followers
August 20, 2008
I'm not quite sure what happened, here.

As others have mentioned, Martin slows the pace of the story down considerably in this fourth installment of A Song of Ice and Fire, ostensibly writing this as the first half of a two-book volume, with a 3-5 year production time on each. As such, the book is by necessity filled with unresolved storylines, AWOL main characters, and lengthy travelogues where nothing of importance happens. Of course, this draws the inevitable comparisons to another famous fantasy series that started strong and became a sluggish, irritating morass (something to do with wheels and time, as I recall).

The pace isn't really the problem, here, though, as the story still stands on its own two legs. The problem is the writing.

Though the first three books were extraordinarily well-written as a whole, one could never classify Martin's prose as elegant. In this book, he takes three steps backward for some reason, and sounds almost amateurish in some chapters. The book is filled with phrases and sentences that are awkward, clich茅d, and sometimes downright hackneyed. Martin's prose may typically be spare and to the point, but I never audibly groaned while reading the first three books.

One of the biggest problems with this is Martin's sudden inclusion of colloquialisms that, so far as I can tell, never existed in the books before this one. Coz's, nuncles, and valonqars abound, even though we've never read any character use these turns of phrase before, and be prepared to hear "groats" referenced multiple times in a single chapter. This doesn't only present a continuity problem, for those of us wondering why these dialect oddities are so suddenly commonplace... Martin seems to have run out of patience for phrasing things differently, so the exact same idiom often gets used ad nauseum. I was weary of these invented clich茅s before I even truly understood what they meant.

By now, fans of the series thus far are used to the disturbing ubiquity of rape in Martin's world, but even that loses what little subtlety it had in this book, with at least two characters being described as "needing a hard raping" (another example of redundancy in Martin's writing... did that expression really need to be used twice in one book?). The consensual sexuality devolves in this book, as well; Martin uses strange fixations and blunt-force descriptions (the comparison of female private parts to a "swamp" was the high point for me, as it were) which make them seem almost bizarre, and therefore a lot more gratuitous than they were in the first three books.

I gave it two stars instead of one because the standout elements of this series are still evident in A Feast For Crows, despite Martin's apparent attempt to sabotage them with clumsy writing. The characters are multidimensional, unpredictable, and well-developed, and the overarching story is fascinating enough to keep me turning pages. However, I am genuinely concerned about the direction of this series, which has heretofore been my favorite fantasy series and often recommended to friends. I don't know what's going on with Martin's writing, but I truly hope the next book returns to the caliber of the first three. I would hate to have to do with this series what I do with Jordan's: recommend that people stop at Book 3 and pretend it's an open-ended trilogy. I'd much rather dismiss this one as "the mediocre volume" and go back to enjoying the series. Here's hoping.
Profile Image for Melissa 鈾� Dog/Wolf Lover 鈾� Martin.
3,622 reviews11.4k followers
December 5, 2017
The book was better than the first time around. I didn't like the narrator on this one so it ruined it the first time around. I still didn't love it but I was glad to have Arya & Brienne 馃槉



"Death is not the worst thing," the kindly man replied. "It is His gift to us, an end to want and pain. On the day that we are born the Many-Faced God sends each of us a dark angel to walk through life beside us. When our sins and our sufferings grow too great to be borne, the angel takes us by the hand to lead us to the nightlands, where the stars burn ever bright. Those who come to drink from the black cup are looking for their angels. If they are afraid, the candles soothe them. When you smell our candles burning, what does it make you think of, my child?"

Winterfell, she might have said. I smell snow and smoke and pine needles. I smell stables. I smell Hodor laughing, and Jon and Robb battling in the yard, Sansa singing about some stupid lady fair. I smell the crypts, where the stone kings sit, I smell hot bread baking, I smell the godswood. I smell my wolf, my smell her fur, almost as if she were still beside me. "I don't smell anything," she said, to see what he would say.




. . . and she leapt to meet his rush, both hands on her sword hilt. His headlong charge brought him right onto her point, and Oathkeeper punched through cloth and mail and leather and more cloth, deep into his bowels and out his back, rasping as it scraped along his spine. His axe fell from limp fingers, and the two of them slammed together, Brienne's face mashed up against the dog's head helm. She felt the cold wet metal against her cheek. Rain ran down the steel in rivers, and when the lightening flashed again she saw pain and fear and rank disbelief through the eye slits. "Sapphires," she whispered at him, as she gave her blade a hard twist that made him shudder. His weight sagged heavily against her, and all at once it was a corpse that she embraced, there in the black rain. She stepped back and let him fall . . .



*Old Review*

I don't have any idea when I started this so I just set it to today. I do that a lot when I don't add books to my currently reading. I get anal having too many books on my currently reading.

Anyway, I hate giving this a 3 star review but at some point I'm going to re-read it. I'm trying to listen to a lot of my chunkers on audio and mark my place in the book. Unfortunately, the narrator ruined it for me. I think he would be a great narrator for other books but not this one and that's just my opinion. When he was doing the voices they all sounded like whiny little boys or something. Do you think the evil Cersei sounds like that or the awesome Brienne or even Jaime? And he kept calling Brienne, Brain.

Anyway, it pretty much ruined it for me.

I did miss my fav characters but I'm fine reading about others. I love Brienne and Jaime. And Arya had some parts although she sounded like a whiny little boy. Ugh, it was bad

I will just have to physically read this one day because the audio is just no :-(
Profile Image for Kelly.
894 reviews4,763 followers
May 9, 2008
Dear George,

How do you do this lovely May morning? I'm terribly sorry to bother you, but I really did think that I must in good conscience warn you of this problem I have. You see, I know many people who read these books and absolutely adore them. Legions of fans. I'm sure you know that. Really, the books are quite high quality and quite enjoyable and whatever you need to do to get them to stay at that quality, please do it.

... within reason. It has come to our (the masses') attention that perhaps waiting three to four years between books is a bit excessive. Don't you think so?

Now, more importantly than the principle of the thing... I've noticed some very unhealthy side effects from these gaps in between the books. Namely, some severe mental complexes that are resulting in a personal hostility towards you. I thought I had an obligation to warn you that I have heard of several imaginative plots that many of my fellow readers have dreamed up to get you to finish these books. All of them involve house arrest, most of them involve chaining you to your computer, a few involve terribly cruel things with assorted war instruments like those you brutally describe in your novels. I've heard a few terribly distressing things along the lines of, "shoving a broadsword up his ass." I'm sure you can imagine the rest.

Now while I don't think that people would employ such plans now, I do notice that these mental complexes seem to get worse over time. So... who knows in the future?

Just thought you should know!

So, toodle pip, hope that put you in the mood for writing. (These people apparently think that such things will.)

A sincere fan.
Profile Image for 鈥� Lindsey Dahling 鈥�.
399 reviews790 followers
January 26, 2019
I鈥檓 aware I鈥檓 in the minority when I say this was my favorite book of the series, BUT JUST HEAR ME OUT.

Things I liked:

1. You get to hang out at King鈥檚 Landing A LOT.
Cersei Lannister is despicable and I love her with all my heart. I send the Lannisters my love (and they send it back because they don鈥檛 want it).

2. Daenerys isn鈥檛 in it.
I鈥檓 aware I鈥檓 also in the minority in enjoying her absence, BUT COME ON. Lady has three dragons and STILL no idea how to cross the ocean and take back 鈥渉er鈥� throne. The Baratheons called鈥攜our dad was a real dick and therefore your family鈥檚 throne privileges got taken away. Once you torture people for fun, you kind of don鈥檛 get to sit with us anymore.

Also, you freed a bunch of slaves and just CANNOT BELIEVE they鈥檙e now starving because NO ONE WILL HIRE THEM. WOW. Plot. Twist. Didn鈥檛 see that one coming.

Also, you can tell me all the live-long day that you鈥檙e a queen and a great leader and deserve everyone鈥檚 adoration. Well, actions speak louder than words, Dany. You can鈥檛 figure out how to cross an ocean with three FLYING dragons. Homegirl Cersei might be cruel, but at least when she says she鈥檚 going to blow something up, SHE FUCKING FOLLOWS THROUGH. As you鈥檒l see in this book.

3. Jaime鈥檚 Gryffindor side really shows.
He鈥檚 still in love with his Slytherin sister, but you see he鈥檚 really not a total villain.

4. Brienne is a badass Gryffindor who I could follow around all day.
Not in a creepy way.

5. Jon Snow isn鈥檛 in it.
HEAR ME OUT. JON SNOW IS GREAT. HE IS A LOVELY HUMAN AND SHOULD ACTUALLY BE SITTING ON THE IRON THRONE. I just don鈥檛 find him very interesting to read because he鈥檚 vanilla AF.

6. Asha Greyjoy.
Girl power.

7. Sam has more of a purpose than just being Jon鈥檚 Hufflepuff sidekick.
He鈥檚 such a cinnamon roll.

8. Arya is a queen.
I鈥檇 put her on the throne just to watch her get revenge on anyone who even looks at her wrong.

9. No Bran.
Call me when you鈥檙e ready to progress the plot.

10. SANSAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!
You get to watch her blossom into something other than a prim and proper lady. I still haven鈥檛 forgiven her for the direwolf thing in the first book, but this did help our relationship.



Things I didn鈥檛 care for:

1. No Ravenclaw Tyrion.
The Lannisters are such a well-rounded bunch.

2. Daenerys wasn鈥檛 killed off by a pride of lions.
Spoiler alert.
Profile Image for Petrik.
763 reviews58.4k followers
July 21, 2020
A Feast for Crows was quite good but it鈥檚 far below the incredible standard set by the previous three books.

I鈥檝e mentioned in my previous review that A Storm of Swords could truly be the height of Martin鈥檚 writing career and I still stand by that statement confidently. Unfortunately, there鈥檚 a huge chance that this book will be the other way around by being the lowest point of the series. There鈥檚 a lot of circumstances to consider here. If I鈥檝e waited 5 years before I read this book, I definitely would鈥檝e hated it and give this at max 2 stars rating. If I haven鈥檛 received any warning on the odd structure of the story and character鈥檚 POV choices, I most likely would鈥檝e disliked it more. If I haven鈥檛 watched the TV series, I probably would鈥檝e enjoyed or disliked it more. And if I haven鈥檛 read A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms or in the midst of reading The World of Ice and Fire, again, I most likely will dislike this book even more. Putting all circumstances into consideration, my experience of reading A Feast for Crows wasn鈥檛 as bad as I thought it would be but it was truly a disappointment after the brilliance of the previous book.

Picture: A Feast for Crows by Marc Simonetti



I don鈥檛 think there are any new pros or cons about this book I can convey in my review. Everyone who鈥檝e read this installment will know what my problems with it are. Let鈥檚 start with the odd structural choices that Martin chose. In most series, when you write a direct sequel, it鈥檚 simply insanity to not have the main characters (unless they鈥檙e dead) in it, especially when the main characters are pretty much majority of the reader鈥檚 favorites. Well, Martin did exactly that. He left out the main characters for the next book instead. Now, other writers have done this, but the things that made it worse in this book was that the characters that he focused on here were mostly uninteresting side characters of the series. In my opinion, the chapters that don鈥檛 feature any character鈥檚 name as the title in this book were just maddeningly boring; specifically the Ironborn and Dorne storyline.

鈥淲ords are like arrows, Arianne. Once loosed, you cannot call them back.鈥�


Reading the Ironborn鈥檚 story was easily one of the most boring and cringe-worthy experience I鈥檝e ever had in reading fantasy. Who cares about the Ironborn anyway? 鈥淲hat is dead may never die,鈥� is a stupid catchphrase. Try telling that to Reek鈥檚 dead cock and see if that would mean anything. I鈥檝e also heard from a lot of book purist that the TV series butchered the Dorne鈥檚 storyline. What is there to butcher when the story is super uninteresting already? I haven鈥檛 read A Dance with Dragons but from what I鈥檝e read so far, the Ironborn and Dorne storyline was utterly boring and uninteresting.

Finally, there was also a major problem with pacing. Despite this book being the smallest in word counts, there was a myriad of content that simply didn鈥檛 add any value to the story or characterizations; the book could鈥檝e been shortened and it most likely would鈥檝e made for a better reading experience.

鈥淗e was beastly tired, but it was hard to stop. One more book, he had told himself, then I'll stop. One more folio, just one more. One more page, then I'll go up and rest and get a bite to eat. But there was always another page after that one, and another after that, and another book waiting underneath the pile. I'll just take a quick peek to see what this one is about, he'd think, and before he knew he would be halfway through it.鈥�


That said, I was still able to finish the book in four days. I have always love Martin鈥檚 prose and his talent in characterizations鈥攅ven though most of the central characters here were uninteresting鈥攚as still great. The two Lannister featured as the main POV in this book鈥攚hether you love or hate them鈥攚as superbly written. The world-building remained intricate and although it wasn鈥檛 as expansive as the previous three books, combine with the knowledge attained from reading A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms and The World of Ice and Fire made me realize just how damn difficult it is to write this series. I also really wish that the TV series adaptation kept Lady Stoneheart; she appeared briefly near the end but her appearance completely spiked the intensity of this book. Finally, the last chapter of each character here was incredible and shows Martin鈥檚 terrific capability as a storyteller. However, I鈥檓 telling you now that all of them ended in quite a huge cliffhanger.

鈥淗istory is a wheel, for the nature of man is fundamentally unchanging. What has happened before will perforce happen again.鈥�


Overall, as I mentioned above, despite my enjoyment of reading Martin鈥檚 prose, A Feast for Crows ended up being a downgrade for A Song of Ice and Fire. If I鈥檝e waited five years for this book and went into it without any knowledge on the awkward structural choices, I'm sure I would鈥檝e been severely disappointed and rated it worse. One book left, A Dance with Dragons awaits me. Once I鈥檓 done with that, I鈥檒l be joining every reader鈥檚 wait for The Winds of Winter.

You can order the book from:

You can find and the rest of my reviews at
Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,562 reviews761 followers
February 10, 2022
A Feast for Crows: (A Song of Ice and Fire #4, Part 1 of 2), George R.R. Martin

A Feast for Crows is the fourth of seven planned novels in the epic fantasy series A Song of Ice and Fire by American author George R. R. Martin. The novel was first published on October 17, 2005, in the United Kingdom.

The War of the Five Kings is slowly coming to its end. Stannis Baratheon has gone to the aid of the Wall, where Jon Snow has become the 998th Lord Commander of the Night's Watch.

King Tommen Baratheon, Joffrey's eight-year-old brother, now rules in King's Landing under his mother, Cersei Lannister. Brienne, the Maid of Tarth, is on a mission to find Sansa Stark, aided by Jaime Lannister.

Sansa is hiding in the Vale, protected by Petyr Baelish, who has murdered his wife Lysa Arryn and named himself Protector of the Vale and guardian of eight-year-old Lord Robert Arryn.

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毓賳賵丕賳: 噩卮賳蹖 亘乇丕蹖 讴賱丕睾賴丕 賯爻賲鬲 賳禺爻鬲 丕夭 噩賱丿 趩賴丕乇 (賳睾賲賴 丌鬲卮 賵 蹖禺貙 #4)貨 賳賵蹖爻賳丿賴: 噩賵乇噩 丌乇.丌乇 賲丕乇鬲蹖賳貨 賲鬲乇噩賲 乇賵蹖丕 禺丕丿賲 丕賱乇囟丕貨 賲卮禺氐丕鬲 賳卮乇 鬲賴乇丕賳貙 賵蹖丿丕貙 爻丕賱1393貙 卮丕亘讴9786002910790貨 丿乇496氐貨 賲賵囟賵毓 丿丕爻鬲丕賳賴丕蹖 賳賵蹖爻賳丿诏丕賳 丕蹖丕賱丕鬲 賲鬲丨丿賴 丌賲乇蹖讴丕 - 爻丿賴21賲

毓賳賵丕賳: 噩卮賳蹖 亘乇丕蹖 讴賱丕睾賴丕 賯爻賲鬲 丿賵賲 丕夭 噩賱丿 趩賴丕乇 (賳睾賲賴 丌鬲卮 賵 蹖禺貙 #4)貨 賳賵蹖爻賳丿賴: 噩賵乇噩 丌乇.丌乇 賲丕乇鬲蹖賳貨 賲鬲乇噩賲: 乇賵蹖丕 禺丕丿賲 丕賱乇囟丕貨 賲卮禺氐丕鬲 賳卮乇 鬲賴乇丕賳貙 賵蹖丿丕貙 爻丕賱1393貙 卮丕亘讴9786002910806貨 丿乇474氐

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賳賯賱 丕夭 賲鬲賳: (氐亘丨 爻乇丿 賵 亘蹖颅乇賵丨蹖 亘賵丿貙 賵 丿乇蹖丕 丕夭 丌爻賲丕賳 爻乇亘蹖貙 倬乇乇賳诏颅鬲乇 亘賵丿貨 爻賴 賲乇丿賽 丕賵賱貙 卮噩丕毓丕賳賴 夭賳丿诏蹖 禺賵丿 乇丕貙 鬲賯丿蹖賲 禺丿丕蹖 睾乇賯颅 卮丿賴貙 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿賳丿貙 丕賲丕 賲乇丿 趩賴丕乇賲貙 丕蹖賲丕賳 囟毓蹖賮蹖 丿丕卮鬲貙 賵 賲丿丕賲 丿爻鬲 賵 倬丕 賲蹖夭丿 鬲丕 乇蹖賴 賴丕蹖卮 乇丕 丕夭 賴賵丕 倬乇 讴賳丿貨 芦丌乇賵賳禄 鬲丕 讴賲乇 丿乇 丌亘 丕蹖爻鬲丕丿賴 亘賵丿貙 賵 丿乇 丨丕賱蹖颅讴賴 倬爻乇讴 亘乇賴賳賴貙 亘乇丕蹖 賳賮爻颅 讴卮蹖丿賳 鬲賯賱丕 賲蹖颅讴乇丿貙 卮丕賳賴 賴丕蹖 丕賵 乇丕 诏乇賮鬲賴貙 賵 爻乇卮 乇丕 夭蹖乇 丌亘 賳诏賴 丿丕卮鬲賴 亘賵丿貨 诏賮鬲: 卮噩丕毓 亘丕卮貨 賲丕 丕夭 丿乇蹖丕 丕賵賲丿蹖賲貙 賵 亘賴 丿乇蹖丕 賴賲 亘乇賲蹖诏乇丿蹖賲貨 丿賴賳鬲 乇賵 亘丕夭 讴賳貙 賵 乇丨賲鬲 禺丿丕賵賳丿 乇賵 爻乇 亘讴卮貨 乇蹖賴 賴丕鬲 乇賵 丕夭 丌亘 倬乇 讴賳貙 亘丕卮丿 讴賴 亘賲蹖乇蹖貙 賵 丕夭 賳賵 賲鬲賵賱丿 卮賵蹖貨 噩賳诏蹖丿賳 賮丕蹖丿賴 丕蹖 賳丿丕乇賴貨 蹖丕 丕蹖賳讴賴 倬爻乇讴 趩賵賳 爻乇卮 丿乇 丌亘 亘賵丿貙 賳賲蹖鬲賵丕賳爻鬲 丨乇賮賴丕蹖 丕賵 乇丕 亘卮賳賵丿貙 蹖丕 丕蹖賲丕賳貙 亘賴 颅胤賵乇 讴丕賲賱貙 賵噩賵丿 賳丨蹖賮卮 乇丕 鬲乇讴 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿貨 丕賵 丌賳颅賯丿乇 鬲賯賱丕 讴乇丿貙 賵 賱诏丿 夭丿 鬲丕 芦丌乇賵賳禄 讴賲讴 胤賱亘蹖丿貨 趩賴丕乇 賲乇丿 亘賴 讴賲讴卮 卮鬲丕賮鬲賳丿貙 賵 倬爻乇讴 乇丕貙 夭蹖乇 丌亘 賳诏賴 丿丕卮鬲賳丿貨 讴卮蹖卮 亘丕 氐丿丕蹖蹖 跇乇賮鬲乇 丕夭 丕毓賲丕賯 丿乇蹖丕貙 丿毓丕 讴乇丿: 丕蹖 禺丿丕蹖蹖 讴賴 亘賴 颅禺丕胤乇 賲丕 睾乇賯 卮丿蹖貙 亘賴 芦丕賲賵賳丿禄 禺丿賲鬲诏夭丕乇鬲貙 丕噩丕夭賴 亘丿賴 賲丕賳賳丿 禺賵丿鬲貙 丿賵亘丕乇賴 丕夭 丿乇蹖丕 賲鬲賵賱丿 卮賵丿貨 亘丕 賳賲讴 亘賴 丕賵 亘乇讴鬲 毓胤丕 讴賳貙 亘丕 爻賳诏 賵 亘丕 丕爻鬲蹖賱貨 爻乇丕賳噩丕賲 讴丕乇 鬲賲丕賲 卮丿貨 丿蹖诏乇 賴賵丕蹖蹖 丕夭 丿賴丕賳 丕賵 亘蹖乇賵賳 賳蹖丕賲丿貙 賵 賳蹖乇賵蹖 倬丕賴丕蹖卮 丕夭 賲蹖丕賳 乇賮鬲貨 芦丕賲賵賳丿禄貙 乇賳诏颅倬乇蹖丿賴貙 爻乇丿 賵 丌乇丕賲貙 丿乇 丿乇蹖丕蹖 禺丕賱蹖 賵 鬲丕乇蹖讴 卮賳丕賵乇 卮丿)貨 倬丕蹖丕賳 賳賯賱

鬲丕乇蹖禺 亘賴賳诏丕賲 乇爻丕賳蹖 02/02/1400賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 20/11/1400賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 丕. 卮乇亘蹖丕賳蹖
Profile Image for Candace.
1,179 reviews4,884 followers
May 28, 2016
Although this epic fantasy has me captivated, I have to say that 'A Feast for Crows' didn't hold as much appeal for me as the earlier books. That being said, it is still an extremely well-written story. I have no doubt that the new characters, places and events will serve to further the plot.

While hearing Cersei's viewpoint was somewhat enlightening, it got tiresome. Cersei is as cold and cruel as Joffrey was. Being "stuck" in her mind was torture. She was constantly scheming and manipulating. Honestly, does this woman never stop? Just hearing it was exhausting.

Arya and Sansa continue to do what they have to in order to survive. It is interesting to see how they evolve as their circumstances change. I would've liked to hear more about the Stark girls, but maybe next time.

This book also introduced some new characters...and brought back some old ones. I'm still trying to wrap my mind around the back from the dead Catelyn Stark. She's definitely changed in more ways than one. Sometimes, things are better left alone. I'm struggling to accept this particular twist.

Mostly, I was disappointed to find many of my favorite characters noticeably absent in this book. Daenerys is my favorite. I longed to hear about what was going on with her and her dragons. How is their journey going? Unfortunately, I didn't get that information.

Similarly, Tyrion Lannister was nowhere to be found. As a character, he really grew on me. His disappearing act left me feeling a bit bereft. Like Daenerys, information on Tyrion was noticeably absent. I'm dying here!

Like the last one, this one ends with a bit of an upheaval. Cersei finds herself in a bind and calls upon her knight in shining armor to save her. I'm hoping that she finally gets what she has coming, but I'll have to wait and see.

Overall, I'm still very much addicted to this series. The writing is spectacular, as is the narration. I'm on to the next book. Based upon the title, I'm expecting to hear more from Daenerys and the dragons. This may have been my least favorite of the books so far, but it still blows most other books away.
Profile Image for Shannon.
925 reviews272 followers
April 23, 2014
Whew, this is a tough book to review simply because it doesn't follow on the expectations of the readers after A STORM OF SWORDS.

Now some people are already saying that the book is horrible and a great letdown and others go to the other extreme and hold faithfully that it's just as good as the previous books.

I don't feel either take is fair or accurate.

To be fair, yes, the book doesn't move like the previous books, especially a STORM OF SWORDS. There are simply not the same level of WHAM BAM big moments nor shocking realizations (i.e. who killed Jon Arryn?). Additionally, some of the favorite characters of readers, like Jon, Dany and Tyrion, are not in this novel. Lastly, there are two new main POVs so we need to adjust to those. BTW, since other readers are spoiling the mystery POVs, did most of you notice that Brienne is apparently a descendant of Dunk from THE HEDGE KNIGHT. Pretty kewl. :)

Getting back to the debate, remember that:

(1) This is only half of a mega-sized book. GRRM is putting out only half of it and the other half is going to be in the next book. So, in essence, for those complaining he's taking too long, this is like four books as the average novel is 400 pages. Additionally, remember the guy has been writing for something like 30 + years and he's finally getting national acclaim. He has been asked to write scripts to some of his old novels, there's a game based on his series that he looked over, he's also gone over the HEDGE KNIGHT comic strip, he's written two novelettes on the hedge knight, hes been asked to attend dozens upon dozens of readings at various book/convention events (and, most recently, the prestigious one in D.C. where he was asked to give a long speech), he tends to answer the emails he gets from everyone which is in the thousands, he taught at the Odyssey program for about six weeks back east, etc. Most of these in the last two years.

So, bully for him as he's getting more acknowledgements but keep in mind the guy has said he can't write except back in New Mexico. Things are going to go slower; and

(2) While several of the POVs don't have resolutions, also keep in mind that they may show up in the next book with all those WHAM BAM moments everyone is seeking. Additionally, it probably isn't fair to view this as a stand alone simply because book four and five are like one book. The reason he broke it up, per his webpage at [...], is that his publishers demanded he get it out. For all we know, book four may be the midpoint of the story and book five is going to have a lot of climaxes.

AFFC is really a come down from several climaxes. As the dust settles, lots of information is shared. There's a great deal of focus on characters. Lots and lots of characters, even if fleeting. As a result, not as much seems to happen. To some, this might be seen as meanderings, and, well, yes, some of it probably is. lol For those who want to know more about the world, here's your chance. Just don't expect it to be like ASOS.

I remember several complaints by earlier reviewers of previous books that there wasn't enough about context and almost nothing about the religion of the times. People complained that one would think the religion would have a greater impact and political power base than shown in the last three books. Well, you get it in this book. Big time.

Another thing to keep in mind: there are probably about 35-50% more character POVs simply because there are several small focuses on various characters all over the globe. We get a lot of focus on Dorne and the Iron Isles as well as King's Landing. There are sprinklings in other areas, too, like Oldtown and where Brienne travels (i.e. don't want to spoil it so I won't say where).

As result, these characters slows the story down from having big moments because there's more to tell.

While I get this is probably the least popular book of the four, assuming we were to take a tally, I still feel GRRM is the best living fantasy author out there if you want tales that don't overuse archetypes and have complex characters and plots.
I challenge anyone to email me to suggest a better author.

On that note, for people who haven't read the previous books, here's why GRRM is a superb writer from my previous review on ASOS:

First off, I'm a heavy duty fan of GRRM. I've read over a 100 different fantasy authors in my time. Took about 5 years off from the genre b/c I felt it was all getting too formulaic and cliched. Typical archetype character who turns out to be the missing heir or boy wonder who saves the world against the Dark Lord.
So, when I came back to fantasy at the end of 1999, I read the usual: Goodkind, Jordan, etc. and then someone told me about GRRM and man, that was the kicker!

Here are the reasons to choose GRRM. I've also listed the reasons not to choose him to make it fair b/c I know their are certain personalities who won't like this series:

WHY TO READ GRRM

(1) YOU ARE TIRED OF FORMULAIC FANTASY: good lad beats the dark lord against impossible odds; boy is the epitome of good; he and all his friends never die even though they go through great dangers . . . the good and noble king; the beautiful princess who falls in love with the commoner boy even though their stations are drastically different . . . the dark lord is very evil and almost one sided at times . . . you get the idea. After reading this over and over, it gets old.

(2) YOU ARE TIRED OF ALL THE HEROES STAYING ALIVE EVEN THOUGH THEY ARE UNDER CONSTANT DANGER: this gets even worse where the author kills a main hero off but that person comes back later in the story. Or, a hero does die but magic brings him back.

This sometimes carries to minor characters where even they may not die, but most fantasy authors like to kill them off to show that some risked the adventure and perished.

(3) YOU ARE A MEDIEVAL HISTORY BUFF: this story was influenced by the WARS OF THE ROSES and THE HUNDRED YEARS WAR.

(4) YOU LOVE SERIOUS INTRIGUE WITHOUT STUPID OPPONENTS: lots of layering; lots of intrigue; lots of clever players in the game of thrones. Unlike other fantasy novels, one side, usually the villain, is stupid or not too bright.

(5) YOU ARE INTERESTED IN BIASED OPINIONS AND DIFFERENT TRUTHS: GRRM has set this up where each chapter has the title of one character and the whole chapter is through their viewpoint. Interesting tidbit is that you get their perception of events or truths. But, if you pay attention, someone else will mention a different angle of truth in the story that we rarely see in other novels. Lastly and most importantly, GRRM doesn't try to tell us which person is right in their perception. He purposefully leaves it vague so that we are kept guessing.

(6) LEGENDS: some of the most interesting characters are those who are long gone or dead. We never get the entire story but only bits and pieces; something that other fantasy authors could learn from to heighten suspense. Additionally, b/c the points of views are not congruent, we sometimes get different opinions.

(7) WORDPLAY: if you're big on metaphors and description, GRRM is your guy. Almost flawless flow.

(8) LOTS OF CONFLICT: all types, too; not just fighting but between characters through threats and intrigue.

(9) MULTILAYERED PLOTTING; SUB PLOTS GALORE: each character has their own separate storyline; especially as the story continues and everyone gets scattered. This is one of the reasons why each novel is between 700-900 pages.

(10) SUPERLATIVE VARIED CHARACTERS: not the typical archetypes that we are used to in most fantasy; some are gritty; few are totally evil or good; GRRM does a great job of changing our opinions of characters as the series progress. This is especially true of Jaime in book three.

(11) REALISTIC MEDIEVAL DIALOGUE: not to the point that we can't understand it but well done.

(12) HEAPS OF SYMBOLISM AND PROPHECY: if you're big on that.

(13) EXCELLENT MYSTERIES: very hard to figure out the culprits; GRRM must have read a lot of mystery novels.

(14) RICHLY TEXTURED FEMALE CHARACTERS: best male fantasy author on female characters I have read; realistic on how women think, too.

(15) LOW MAGIC WORLD: magic is low key; not over the top so heroes can't get out of jams with it.

REASON TO NOT READ GRRM

(1) YOU LIKE YOUR MAIN CHARACTERS: GRRM does a good job of creating more likeable characters after a few die. But, if that isn't your style, you shouldn't be reading it. He kills off several, not just one, so be warned.

(2) DO NOT CARE FOR GRITTY GRAY CHARACTERS: if you like more white and gray characters, this may unsettle you. I suggest Feist or Goodkind or Dragonlance if you want a more straight forward story with strong archetypes.

(3) MULTIPLE POINTS OF VIEWS TURN YOU OFF: if you prefer that the POVS only go to a few characters, this might be confusing for you.

(4) SWEARING, SEX: there's a lot of it in this book just as there is in real life. If you have delicate ears, this book may upset you.

(5) YOU DEMAND CLOSURE AT THE END OF EVERY BOOK: this isn't the case for all stories in the series. Some are still going on; some have been resolved; others have been created and are moving on.

(6) IF YOU WANT A TARGET OR SOMEONE TO BLAME: this can be done to some extent but not as much. This is b/c he doesn't try to make anyone necessarily good or evil.

(7) ARCHETYPES: some readers like archetypal characters because it's comfortable; we like the good young hero (sort of like Pug in Feist's THE RIFTWAR SAGA); it's familiar and we sometimes like to pretend we're this upcoming, great hero. You wont' get much of this in GRRM with the exception of one or two characters. There really aren't any super heroes compared to all the other characters as it's more grittier and no one is shooting fireballs every millisecond or carrying around some super powerful sword.

(8) LENGTH: you don't want to get into a long fantasy epic series. In that case, look for shorter works as this is biiiiiig.

(9) PATRIARCHY: men are most of the main characters with lots of power (one female exception). While this is realistic of the medieval era, some readers may not prefer this if they want more girl power, so to speak.

By the way, if you don't want to commit to a big book until you know the author better, check out his short story, THE HEDGE KNIGHT, in LEGENDS.
Profile Image for Kim.
286 reviews895 followers
August 31, 2008


George R. R. Martin is a blowhard.


I mean that with respect, I suppose. I guess any author that got me to read over 2400 pages of his writing garners some respect, right? A smattering, maybe? I don鈥檛 know, maybe it鈥檚 because I was raised Catholic, or maybe it鈥檚 my sense of follow through or maybe just the fact that I鈥檝e invested so much time in this damn series鈥� whatever. I鈥檓 here, I鈥檝e finished book #4. Yay.



Okay, so the reason I鈥檓 grumpy is that it took me 480 pages to get into this. Which left me 200 pages to actually enjoy. That鈥檚 not fair. And this isn鈥檛 the first time, this is a pattern with this guy. I spend all this time trying to remember who is who and why I care that I鈥檓 either confused or bored silly. Okay, for example: We have Elys who is married to Alys and we have Belwas and Boros and Balon . And Pate, Pod and Peck (don鈥檛 ask me to explain who is who, please) and then we have Sansa who is now Alayne ---not Arianne, she鈥檚 someone else--- and we have Arya who was Weasel and then was Arry and then became 鈥榥o one鈥� and then became Cat of the Canals, who shouldn鈥檛 be confused with Cat who was Caitlyn who became 鈥楾he Hooded Woman鈥� and then later 鈥楲ady Stoneheart鈥�. Do you see what I mean?

This is worse than Days of Our Lives because then you really only need to watch maybe a day or so to catch up. Oh, and if Jaime and Brienne don鈥檛 hook up, there will be hell to pay, Mr. R.R. Martin. HELL. And, thank you for having Sam lose his virginity; that gave me hope. (oh, come on, are you going to get on me for spoilers?? If you鈥檙e even reading this review, it鈥檚 because you鈥檝e invested as much time in this series as I have.)


罢丑别苍鈥� THEN I come across this little gem:


鈥樷€滺ey, wait a minute!鈥� some of you may be saying about now. 鈥淲ait a minute, wait a minute! Where鈥檚 Dany and the dragons? Where鈥檚 Tyrion? We hardly saw Jon Snow. That can鈥檛 be all of it鈥︹€�

Well, no. There鈥檚 more to come. Another book as big as this one.



Bastard.


Okay, so I鈥檓 whining. I know. Of course, I鈥檒l read 鈥楢 Dance with Dragons鈥� (oh, and another thing, George? Can we get you to work on better titles? Because when I鈥檓 sitting there reading these tomes and someone comes up to me and says 鈥榃hatcha readin鈥�?鈥� I鈥檓 a bit hesitant to say 鈥楢 Feast for Crows鈥� or 鈥楢 Game of Thrones鈥� without rolling my eyes and explaining that I鈥檓 NOT into D&D, just a suggestion. Thanks) but I will do so reluctantly.
Profile Image for 鈾ワ笌 Heather 鈿�(Semi-Hiatus).
960 reviews3,746 followers
February 9, 2024
One thing is for sure... I'm no Lannister fan. 馃ず


Silence is a prince鈥檚 friend. Words are arrows, Arianne. Once loosed, you cannot call them back. 鈥� Prince Doran Martell of Dorne 鈽赌锔�

No fight is hopeless till it has been fought. 鈥� Asha Greyjoy 馃寠

There have always been men who found it easier to speak vows than to keep them. 鈥� Ser Arys Oakheart 馃尡

Sometimes there is no happy choice, Sam, only one less grievous than the others. 鈥� Maester Aemon Targaryen 馃悏

Trust is earned. Like gold. 鈥� Lady Brienne of Tarth 馃洝锔�

A false smile and a true one may look alike, but they are as different as dusk from dawn. Can you tell dusk from dawn? 鈥� The kindly man of Braavos to Arya Stark
馃幁馃恶

If I don't put this on my currently reading, I'm going to procrastinate even longer... it's time to go back to Westeros! 鈿旓笍鉂わ笍馃恶

鈥淢y old grandmother always used to say, Summer friends will melt away like summer snows, but winter friends are friends forever.鈥�

'All men lie when they are afraid. Some tell many lies, some but a few. Some have only one great lie that they tell so often that they almost come to believe it 鈥� though some small part of them will always know that it is still a lie, and that will show upon their faces.'

馃┒馃枻馃 House Stark Forever 馃┒馃枻馃
鉅赌鉅赌
Profile Image for Steven Medina.
250 reviews1,258 followers
January 11, 2022
Misma esencia, poca acci贸n. Imposible mantener el nivel de Tormenta de espadas.

En realidad 3,2

Cuando en una saga encontramos un libro tan impresionante, como lo es Tormenta de espadas, lo m谩s l贸gico es que el libro posterior sea de menor calidad porque es muy dif铆cil mantener el alto nivel. Es una situaci贸n que no solo ocurre en el mundo de la literatura sino tambi茅n en el cine, por lo que no es una sorpresa decir que Fest铆n de cuervos est谩 muy por debajo de la categor铆a de los primeros tres libros de la saga: Ni siquiera el gran George R.R. Martin ha logrado romper con este paradigma. A pesar de ello, no deseo menospreciar el trabajo del autor. Fest铆n de cuervos ha sido un libro lento, largo, y aburrido en muchas ocasiones, pero es un libro en el cual se expone con claridad lo que es un mundo despu茅s de la guerra, la llamada postguerra. Despu茅s de leer en vol煤menes anteriores, escenas con sangre por todas partes, batallas, traiciones, giros inesperados, frenes铆 y locura, es completamente normal sentir aburrimiento por una postguerra que se asemeja mucho a la vida actual que viven los gobiernos, en la cual se buscan permanentes alianzas (en el caso de este libro con matrimonios), vencer batallas sin combatirlas, reorganizaci贸n del poder, etc. De hecho, podr铆a catalogar este volumen como el libro 芦pol铆ticamente correcto禄 de la saga.

驴Por qu茅 me ha parecido un libro lento, largo, y aburrido? Eso es sencillo de responder. Como lectores, siempre solemos sentir afinidad por ciertos personajes, pero si ellos, nuestros favoritos, no vuelven a aparecer, naturalmente sentiremos desagrado por no tener nuevas noticias de quienes realmente nos interesa. Leer tantas p谩ginas y no encontrar un cap铆tulo de nuestros personajes favoritos no es f谩cil de procesar, a pesar de que te lo adviertan, a pesar de que ya est茅s enterado de que en el pr贸ximo volumen s铆 tendr谩n participaci贸n. Inconscientemente queremos conocer as铆 sea un m铆nimo detalle, lo que sea, todo para calmar la ansiedad que sentimos por culpa de la intriga. Adem谩s, si no logramos conectar con los nuevos personajes presentados, pues ese desagrado, pereza, y cansancio, ir谩n aumentando poco a poco a trav茅s de nuestra lectura. Esa sensaci贸n la he sentido en gran parte de este volumen, y aunque naturalmente el libro tiene muy buenos cap铆tulos, y escenas interesantes 鈥斆﹑icas incluso鈥�, no fue una caracter铆stica constante ni en el ritmo, ni en el argumento que presenta el autor. Por momentos, y sin exagerar, sent铆 que estaba leyendo una empalagosa telenovela repetitiva. Lento, debido a las nuevas presentaciones de personajes; largo, porque cada cap铆tulo ten铆a una duraci贸n m谩s extensa que en vol煤menes anteriores; aburrido, por la falta de acci贸n y giros inesperados. Repito y aclaro: Por supuesto que hubieron cap铆tulos muy interesantes, escenas que aplaud铆 por su gran elaboraci贸n, y conversaciones ladinas que me entretuvieron, pero fueron muy escasas teniendo en cuenta que estamos leyendo el cuarto volumen de la saga.

Comprendo la decisi贸n del autor de dividir su historia en dos vol煤menes (Fest铆n de cuervos y Danza de dragones) porque iba a resultar muy extensa; sin embargo, no es una decisi贸n que comparto. No la comparto porque soy de los lectores que prefieren un libro largo, pero completo, que uno publicado, pero inconcluso. La situaci贸n de este libro me hace recordar a Aldous Huxley, quien en su libro Un mundo feliz, afirma que pudo alterar su historia en ediciones posteriores simplemente porque 茅l encontraba bastantes defectos en la trama. Sin embargo, prefiri贸 dejarlo as铆, porque una modificaci贸n de la estructura o de cualquier detalle de su historia, podr铆a afectarlo todo, causando que los lectores ya no sintieran los mismos sentimientos o pensamientos que 茅l quer铆a transmitir. Pienso que eso es exactamente lo que le sucede a este volumen. Quiz谩s, esa alteraci贸n en el orden de la historia, y esa omisi贸n de cap铆tulos que colocar铆a en un volumen m谩s adelante, afect贸 seriamente el ritmo de la historia. A veces necesitamos conocer la informaci贸n en un orden concreto para comprender correctamente una idea, pero si alteramos ese orden, tal vez esa idea ya no ser谩 importante para nosotros. Es como cuando hablamos con los ni帽os sobre sexo; obviamente no podemos decirles toda la informaci贸n referente en un solo d铆a, pero tampoco debemos omitir temas importantes porque de lo contrario no tendr谩n una buena educaci贸n sexual: No es lo mismo aprender sobre sexo con tus amigos, a que te expliquen tus parientes.

Despu茅s de dejar claro que el gran problema de este libro no es la postguerra que se vive en la historia, sino la falta de constancia en la intensidad de la obra, puedo pasar a valorar lo destacable. Primero que todo, independientemente del argumento, la prosa es muy buena como siempre. Este se帽or podr铆a tener 40, 70, 100, o 400 a帽os 鈥攐bvio s茅 qu茅 no podr谩 llegar a la 煤ltima cifra鈥� pero siempre escribir谩 bien. Es su don, y lo sabe hacer, eso no se puede reprochar. Asimismo, como GRRM ambient贸 todo para que los personajes vivieran una postguerra, entonces requer铆a personajes con roles de sabidur铆a y meditaci贸n. Y, afortunadamente, los que ha creado lo han hecho bien, expresando en el momento indicado algunas frases para que los personajes importantes de la historia sufrieran un cambio en sus pensamientos y comportamientos. A veces este tipo de roles secundarios no se tiene mucho en cuenta pero son necesarios, y aqu铆 el autor los ha usado s煤per bien.

Otro cambio importante que sufren algunos personajes es que al no estar centrando su energ铆a y atenci贸n a combatir en una guerra, entonces ese tiempo libre empiezan a usarlo para pensar en el pasado, en sus relaciones, en sus sue帽os, y en su vida personal en general. S铆, es una situaci贸n que perjudica la acci贸n, pero nos ofrece la oportunidad de conocer la verdadera esencia del ser que se esconde tras una coraza. Estos personajes son como cebollas, con distintas capas ocultas en lo m谩s profundo de su interior. Conocer sus pasados es un viaje inesperado, y de hecho podr铆amos llegar a pensar que esa informaci贸n ni siquiera es necesaria, pero es una manera de seguir d谩ndoles profundidad a los personajes. No todo es guerra, sangre y muerte, el pasado tambi茅n es importante para entender el presente.

A pesar de la experiencia, los 煤ltimos cap铆tulos son los que te generan esa curiosidad suficiente para seguir leyendo el siguiente volumen y para desear m谩s libros de este autor. Si el final no te dejara con esa chispa de curiosidad, posiblemente no te sentir铆as atra铆do de comprar el siguiente volumen y seguir leyendo. Con este libro podemos quedar muy inconformes por no encontrar un contenido con calidad cercana a su volumen predecesor, pero es una historia infinita que puede tener mil caminos diferentes, por lo que tantas posibilidades convierten el futuro en algo impredecible, aumentando much铆simo tu curiosidad de conocer el camino que el autor les destinar谩 a sus personajes. Puede que el camino no te deje satisfecho, puede que prefieras conocer otro tipo de informaci贸n, pero el mundo creado por GRRM ya tiene vida propia desde hace mucho, por lo que sientes la necesidad de seguir leyendo a pesar de todas las objeciones. Eso me pasa mucho con esta historia. Por eso sigo leyendo, y por eso leer茅 el quinto volumen, y por ello tambi茅n estar茅 esperando ansioso la sexta entrega (si alg煤n d铆a la p煤blica).

Aparte de varios de mis personajes favoritos, tambi茅n he extra帽ado mucho la presencia de magia en esta historia. La magia es lo m谩s intrigante del libro, junto con los sue帽os, por lo que su ausencia me ha dejado un poco entristecido. Como lo dec铆a dos p谩rrafos m谩s arriba, no todo es guerra, sangre y muerte. Esta saga entra en el g茅nero de la fantas铆a; fantas铆a que pr谩cticamente no apareci贸 en todo el libro. Menciono esto, para aclararle al futuro lector, lo que hay, y lo que no hay, y para que las expectativas no le jueguen a nadie una mala pasada: Se deben tener mucho m谩s bajas de lo normal, quiz谩s as铆 se disfrute m谩s el libro.



En resumen, un libro que sufre directamente las consecuencias de un volumen anterior completamente 茅pico, pero que tambi茅n sufre por culpa de las fallas de su creador que, al intentar evitar hacer una obra muy extensa, malogra su estructura de forma inconsciente. Para que la mayor铆a de sus lectores recomienden y prefieran leer ambos vol煤menes al tiempo (cuarto y quinto), es porque precisamente ese era el orden en que la historia deb铆a publicarse desde un inicio. Intensidad media, partes aburridas, partes entretenidas, pero en general un libro que mantiene la esencia de Juego de tronos. La esencia de traicionar, asesinar, tomar el poder, y crear alianzas para intentar hacerte m谩s fuerte. Un tres de calificaci贸n me parece una justa valoraci贸n. Una mayor, ser铆a insensata; una menor, ser铆a sanguinaria.

Pr贸ximo destino, Danza de dragones.
Profile Image for Sean Barrs .
1,122 reviews47.4k followers
July 13, 2016
There鈥檚 only one problem with this book, and that鈥檚 the point of view characters. As a reader I鈥檝e grown somewhat used to things like this:

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So, when I'm just given things like this instead it鈥檚 bound to disappoint:

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There are massive pacing issues with the most recent (ha! that鈥檚 a joke) two books of the series, and I mean massive. There鈥檚 a whole lot of nothing in this one. Cersei鈥檚 chapters are excruciating to read. That鈥檚 not surprising considering she is probably the least likable of characters within this series. This doesn鈥檛 make the book bad because of this. I think she needed some point of view chapters, but what she didn鈥檛 need was a never-ending amount of them; it was just too many. By doing this it meant that there were very few chapters that were enjoyable to read; there was no Tyrion, Dany, Jon Snow or Bran in the book.

I think George. R. R Martin made a massive mistake when he decided to have this and A Dance with Dragons occur at the same time. The story clearly got away from him and became a little convoluted. The pacing is terrible; there is no real payoff in either book (unlike its predecessors). The book comes to an end at a random point of the story, which just didn鈥檛 feel quite right. Personally, I think he should have continued the trend he set with his the previous books in the series. It just needed one straightforward time arc. We don鈥檛 need events happening at the same time across books; it didn鈥檛 need to become that complex; it鈥檚 already perfectly complex. He鈥檚 clearly wrote himself into a corner with it. Hence the time it鈥檚 taken him to get the next book out.

Well, that being said, there is still a lot to take from this book. The story does, of course, develop and become even more engaging. If anything this book made me count down the days to the release of A Dance with Dragons. But, that鈥檚 not really a good thing. I think most people tend to forgive Martin for his slip into convolutedness because the previous books were so damn good. I just hope he has tamed the amount of new point of view characters in the much anticipated six book. I think it鈥檚 far too late to add so many point of views into the series. One or two is understandable in a book of this type, but when it鈥檚 like six or seven it becomes a little bit of a joke. It takes away from the central stories. I鈥檓 moaning again here. I began to lay down the positives which just developed into another rant!

Redeeming features

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This books not all bad, far from it. Arya鈥檚 story takes a most interesting turn, and Jaime begins to search for his lost honour. These are amongst interesting characters of the entire series, so there points of view saved the book. And then Sam gets his moment in the light. Things do develop and go forward; we see the politics from a different angle. But, I still think it should have been all along one time arc; it would have been a lot easier. See what I mean? I just can鈥檛 focus on the positives, so I鈥檓 going to leave it here.

I may complain about this book, but in reality it鈥檚 only because I love this series so much. There are obvious problems with it, though it doesn鈥檛 stop me from reading on or re-reading previous books. I may grit my teeth and cringe when I read certain chapters, but I鈥檒l read them again and complain about them again. This series is what got me into reading in the first place, so I do owe a lot to it even if this book fell below the benchmark Martin set himself.

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
Profile Image for Baba.
3,948 reviews1,405 followers
October 6, 2022
Game of Thrones book No. 5 / A Song of Ice and Fire, book No. 4 focuses on goings on in Kings Landing, Dorne, Hightower, Bravos, the Iron Islands and the roads between them. Catching up with the missing Starks and the on-the-road Samwell, the tentative(?) Lannister alliance, Jamie's search for meaning and the heart rending quest of Brienne, too name just a few of the many character journeys being undertaken! The Five King War has ended, but from the ashes of war arrives chaos, anarchy, and the rise of religious fanaticism. The weakest book so far, but still very good considering. Just scrapes in as a Four Star, 8 out of 12

2015 read; 2012 read
Profile Image for Lyn.
1,973 reviews17.3k followers
February 24, 2019
How do you follow up after an epic throw down, a no holds barred monster truck rally demolition derby Hulkamania caged grudge match?

By doing something different.

George R. R. Martin鈥檚 third Song of Ice and Fire book, was this epic Andre the Giant kegfest. Many fans have lamented and complained about the fourth book, A Feast for Crows, first published in 2005. It鈥檚 not exciting enough, not enough INYERFACE!! action and we don鈥檛 even get to hang out with some of the cool recurring characters.

But there was NO WAY IN WESTEROS that Martin was going to top ASOS immediately after writing. It would be like following a great act on stage, he鈥檚 got to mix it up, follow a fastball with a change of pace, and he did. A Feast of Crows is a darker, more brooding work and serves to further expand his world building, to more fully develop some of the other characters and to introduce some upcoming sub-plots.

Fans first figured out that Martin was going off the beaten path when Eddard Stark went from 5鈥� 10 to 5鈥�2. This was going to have brutally realistic elements and people were going to die (a lot of people) so calling in new cast members is an important part of his success. Learning more about the Iron Isles, Dorne and The Vale was stimulating and expanded his already amazing vision.

And am I not the only one who wants to learn more about Braavos? Hell, I want to GO there. Arya鈥檚 story, as expected and hoped for, takes some attractive twists.

So Tyrion and Daenerys are just fine and we鈥檒l get back to them, this was a cool book on its own and a fun jaunt away from the main events thus far.

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Profile Image for Kai Spellmeier.
Author听7 books14.7k followers
September 3, 2017
鈥淲ords are like arrows. Once loosed, you cannot call them back.鈥�

This took me - compared to it's prequels - "only" a month to read. As always, there were chapters that I enjoyed more than others. Sometimes so intruiging I did not want to stop reading, other times I wondered why in seven hells someone would bother wasting their time writing such pointless words.

Here's the list of POV's from most to least liked:

Cersei
Sansa
Arya
Jamie
Samwell
Arianne Martell
Aeron Greyjoy
Asha Greyjoy
Areo Hotah
Arys Oakheart
Victarion Greyjoy
Brienne of Tarth

Arya:
I've never been a big fan of Arya's chapters. They bored me in the same way Brienne's do now: lots of aimless wandering around Westeros, from one disaster to the other. I'm glad she arrived in Bravos and can't wait to find out more about her life under the eyes the Many-Faced God.
Brienne:
Why. Why bother. We all know she won't find Sansa in the Riverlands. We all know exactly where Sansa is. To me there was nothing more pointless in the whole series than her chapters. Luckily her plotline got more exciting towards the end of the book.
The Greyjoys:
It was interesting to read about the Iron Islands, especially about the Kingsmoat. But I could live happily ever after without those Ironborn, who only stir up more trouble. It's not like there's not enough misery already.
The Martells:
While I always wanted to know more about Dorne, the chapters did not really add much to the big plot. Again, it seemed a little pointless to me, but yes, I loved finding out about Dorne's secret plans and affairs.

Profile Image for NickReads.
461 reviews1,367 followers
February 4, 2019
I didn't like this as much as the others. Still a great book.
Profile Image for Ryan.
Author听0 books39 followers
March 31, 2008
I was fully prepared to be disappointed by this book, for several reasons. First of all, the last book, A Storm Of Swords, ended with a very large cliffhanger and I knew that it was a cliffhanger that wasn't going to be fully explained/explored in this volume.

Additionally, I knew that in general the story was not going to feature the characters that I was most interested in (namely Daenerys, Theon, Tyrion, and especially the whole issue of Jon and the Night Watch). That being said, the volume was surprisely enjoyable, and helped to better explore the entirety of the Seven Kingdoms. There was tons of action in the first three volumes - I was actually a little set back by the amount of violence that was featured in the series altogether. This volume takes a somewhat quieter approach - characters die, but most of the death takes place off-page. Perhaps this means that A Dance With Dragons is going to feature much higher levels of action.

Plot-wise, only certain amounts of progress are made of advancing the plot. We learn nothing more about the advancement of the Others, and no word is made of Daenerys' flight towards the west. Instead we get political maneuverings in King's Landing, and Sam's travel from The Wall to Oldtown. What we do get is quality material, though - I was on the bus when I got to the part of the story that featured Cersei's downfall, and I almost started cackling with joy to see her get her final comeuppance. Also of interest was the expanding story of the Seven Kingdoms, as we learn more about the cultures of both the Iron Islands and of Dorne. Interesting material, definitely, but material that feels much like it is build-up for the eventual landfall of Dany from the east, rather than material in its own right.[return:][return:]One of the benefits of the multiple-POV perspective that Martin employs is that it allows the reader to learn about characters not only from how they see themselves, but how they are viewed by those around them. Cersei Lannister, the most prominent character in AFFC, is the most obvious example of this - when she was presented mostly as a scheming mastermind, but in her POV chapters, she's seen as someone almost paralyzed by paranoia. Similarly, we see Jaime as either a sterling knight (from Brienne's perspective) or a craven weakling (from Cersei's perspective). When we see Jaime's one POV, though, we see that he thinks he is how Cersei sees him, but he hopes to become what Brienne believes him to be. It's a very effective literary technique, and easily builds suspense and complexity to a story of this size.
Profile Image for Charlotte May.
821 reviews1,277 followers
December 15, 2017
鈥淚n the game of thrones, even the humblest pieces can have wills of their own.鈥�

4.5 stars rounded up!

Another fantastic instalment in the A Song of Ice and Fire series.
Sparrows have flocked to Kings Landing and created uproar! No one is safe - even the royals.

鈥淗ow much can a crown be worth, when a crow can dine on a king?鈥�

Jaime and Cersei become estranged from one another, he is sent to reclaim lands for the crown while Cersei attempts to rule through her son, and remove his new Queen.

鈥淨ueen you shall be...until there comes another, younger and more beautiful, to cast you down and take all you hold dear.鈥�

Brienne is on the road hunting for Sansa - facing many godawful villains along the way.
Arya takes on a new identity in Braavos, currently residing in the temple of the many-faced god.
Sansa too has a new name, hiding in plain sight in the Eyrie.
Samwell Tarly has left the wall, under instructions to study to become a Maester.

There are also many other new POVs we experience including some of the Ironborn and the Dornish, which certainly brought different perspectives.

My only gripe is the POVs that are left out - no Dany, Jon Snow, Davos or Tyrion! This meant I found this one harder to plow through as frankly I can鈥檛 stand Cersei and Jaime鈥檚 chapters were just average. I lived for Sam and Brienne鈥檚 chapters mainly.
Still fantastic storylines as this world constantly moves and changes. Time for A Dance with Dragons!

鈥淚t is being common born that is dangerous, when the great lords play their game of thrones.鈥�
Profile Image for John Mauro.
Author听7 books903 followers
May 15, 2023
My complete review is published at .

A Feast for Crows is the fourth and most polarizing volume in George R.R. Martin鈥檚 epic grimdark series, A Song of Ice and Fire, which began with A Game of Thrones and continued with the excellent A Clash of Kings and A Storm of Swords. Although A Feast for Crows falls short of these three previous volumes, there is still a lot to love here, particularly in the detailed psychological portraits painted of Cersei and Jaime Lannister.

On the negative side, several of the main characters from the first three books are simply not present in A Feast for Crows. Daenerys Targaryen, Jon Snow, and Tyrion Lannister are all sorely missing from this fourth volume. As the most compellingly drawn character in the series, Tyrion鈥檚 absence is particularly regrettable.

Instead, A Feast for Crows grants point-of-view status to a cadre of side characters who aren鈥檛 even provided names in their chapter headings. These chapters are given titles such as 鈥淭he Prophet,鈥� 鈥淭he Captain of the Guard,鈥� and 鈥淭he Soiled Knight.鈥� With such a large cast of characters already in A Song of Ice and Fire, it is difficult to justify the page space devoted to these new additions. It鈥檚 also frustrating for readers who just want to find out what happens to the main dramatis personae of the series. Unfortunately, the chapters devoted to these side characters mostly serve to slow down the main plot and interrupt the flow of the story. Despite its slow start, A Feast for Crows picks up the pace later in the book and has an especially strong finish.

Cersei Lannister steals the show as a first-time point-of-view character in A Feast for Crows. George R.R. Martin thoroughly immerses us in Cersei鈥檚 twisted mind as she descends deeper into jealousy, paranoia, and hysteria. Martin鈥檚 analysis of Cersei鈥檚 psychology is superb and, frankly, worth the entire book.

The relationship between Cersei and her brother Jaime is damaged beyond repair in A Feast for Crows. Jaime is obsessed with Cersei鈥檚 many infidelities, unable to force the list of her illicit lovers out of his mind. Ever the loyal knight, Jaime is also trying to find a new purpose for himself after losing his sword-wielding hand in the previous book. The phantom sensations that Jaime feels from his missing hand brought me chills.

Brienne of Tarth is another favorite character in A Feast for Crows. After spending A Storm of Swords guiding Jaime back to the Lannisters, Brienne now sets off in search of the missing Sansa Stark. The highlight of Brienne鈥檚 story occurs when she meets Lady Stoneheart, the zombified Catelyn Stark who is hellbent on revenge against those who betrayed her at the Red Wedding massacre in the previous book. I鈥檓 surprised that Lady Stoneheart was left out of the HBO series, as she is such a haunting and menacing presence in A Feast for Crows.

The Stark sisters, Sansa and Arya, are given three chapters each. Littlefinger has rescued Sansa from the Lannisters and rechristened her as Alayne Stone, pretending to be his illegitimate daughter. Littlefinger is captivated by how much Sansa looks like her mother, Catelyn, for whom he has a longstanding infatuation. Littlefinger鈥檚 interactions with Sansa alternate between creepiness and education in the fine art of political manipulation.

Meanwhile, Arya continues her aimless wandering, this time sailing to the foreign city of Braavos, where she adopts yet another pseudonym. Arya鈥檚 storyline ends on a cliffhanger, so I鈥檓 excited to see what happens next.

Despite its flaws, A Feast for Crows is still a great book. Although it falls short of its predecessors, the chapters devoted to Cersei, Jaime, and Brienne are all outstanding, and it also carries the story forward for Sansa and Arya. If readers can forgive the unnecessary diversions from the side characters, there is still much to love here.
Profile Image for Lazaros.
271 reviews599 followers
March 31, 2015
鈥淗istory is a wheel, for the nature of man is fundamentally unchanging. What has happened before will perforce happen again.鈥�


I think this may be my favorite novel in the series. Not because it was the best but because I felt so connected to the story, more than I have ever felt before while reading this series. And while I can admit that the plot was poorer in comparison with its predecessors and there weren't all of the characters we've grown accustomed to reading about, I still feel like Mr. Martin is one of a kind and his writing is one of the best I've ever had the luck of reading and I could never ever give this book anything less than 5 stars for the simple reason that with this book, the series has finally found a place in my heart.

This book, as many of you may already know, is mainly focused upon King's Landing and some might say the South but I'm not so sure about that. In this book we read for the first time from Cersei's perspective and I have to admit that getting inside her head and seeing firsthand how her brain works, well, it was truly amazing. We see every single bit of malice the lovely Queen Regent has and how far she's willing to go to ensure that Tommen remains safe and sound from whoever tries to do him harm.

The story, despite the absence of some of the characters, such as Tyrion, Daenerys & Jon, was still just as riveting and I think that was principally because of the fact that the plot twists and revelations were scattered throughout the book so it actually kept me on the edge and had me intrigued the entire time.

In addition to Cersei, there's also quite lots of Jaime and I clearly saw him changing throughout the entire novel, from the tiny bits of details regarding how his brain works to the fact that he finally distances himself from Cersei and sees her for what she really is. He's sent to do Cersei's bidding and his last chapter in the novel, left my brain whirring.

Apart from Cersei & Jaime's perspectives, there are bits and pieces of the Iron Islands, told from the point of view of Asha, Victarion & such. Balon Greyjoy is dead and someone has to succeed him.

In the South, Oberyn's daughters, the Sand Snakes, want to avenge their father, so Doran is forced to prison them before they do something that will jeopardize everything. There's also a little bit of plotting from Arianne's side, who's Doran's daughter and his rightful heir. I never thought I'd like Arianne that much. She's quite bold and she has the guts to do what her father refuses to.

This book was big enough and I understand why Mr. Martin divided the story into two parts. It would just be too huge if he had tried to write about all of the characters in one book and I understand he has a lot to write and a lot to give to us through his stories so honestly I'm not disappointed, if anything, I'm happy that he did that. The more the books, the merrier I'll be.

The fact, that a person can build such an amazing world, with the tiniest of details, it's truly amazing and inspirational. I don't get how he does it and honestly I get why his books take so long to come out, I mean they're huge, they're full of made-up history. I mean I wouldn't even be able to remember the names if I were him. I admire his talent and I hope there are more amazing books to come. I cannot wait to get my hands on the next book, I'm anxious and ready for Jon, Dany & Tyrion's stories in the next book.
Profile Image for Collin.
61 reviews13 followers
February 29, 2008
I feel like giving this book 3 stars is being harsh to my man, George Martin, but I'm trying to separate the truly great books in this series from the merely good ones.

Bottom line: fans of the series waited too long for this and therefore were in a position of being impossible to please once this finally came out. This coupled with the facts that numerous spoiler chapters had been available online for years and that George cut his original manuscript in 2 to produce this and the subsequent (as of now, published) volume serves to diminish the stature of "A Feast For Crows" in the context of the whole series.

Still, as its been said elsewhere, Bad George is still better than Excellent Crap. Since I am a completist I was going to love this book no matter what, and I do, but to the more casual fan this will definitely seem like a weak effort, and I think there's justice to this point of view.

The writing here feels uneven to me -- so much time in the real world has passed that I feel like George's writing style has actually changed here. His characters begin using terms that they never used before in the preceeding books ("nuncle" and "coz", in particular). There's also an egregious amount of "not giving a groat" here. I'd hate to be a groat merchant in Westeros at this point. What the hell IS a groat?

The interesting point of view structure of the previous books has been salted with an overabundance of "prologue" chapters that break with the structural traditions that George has already established. Enough with the Prologues! We're under siege here! Just give us one and hold on to some of that story telling goodness -- we already know you rule.

For fans, I think the Brienne chapters feel like wasted time, though Martin tells us that there were stories that needed to be told in "Feast" lest the whole tale would suffer (and I can only presume he includes the 'Brienne' bits in that proclamation). I will reserve judgment here and wait to see.

Also, the fact that only half the POVs (points of view) are represented in "Feast" leaves many fans cold. For myself, I needed me some more Tyrion and I didn't get it here.

I believe once the remaining books are published, the profile of this book may improve. But this is clearly well-seasoned asparagus next to "A Storm of Swords'" filet mignon.
Profile Image for April.
146 reviews271 followers
November 26, 2016
"I have a hole where my heart should be, she thought, and nowhere else to go."

// God, this book. George R.R Martin writes so beautifully. Beginning this I did miss Tyrion's, Daenery's, and Jon's POVs, but this book was exceptional even without them. Cersi despite not liking her in the show I actually grew to love her parts. Especially her writing to Jaime for help and reading his response in turn had to be my favorite.
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