Les sables de Dorne

French language

Published July 16, 2007

ISBN:
978-2-290-00297-1
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4 stars (36 reviews)

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, with a United States edition following on November 8, 2005.In May 2005, Martin announced that the "sheer size" of his still-unfinished manuscript for A Feast for Crows had led him and his publishers to split the narrative into two books. Rather than divide the text chronologically in half, Martin opted to instead split the material by plot location, resulting in "two novels taking place simultaneously" with different casts of characters. A Feast for Crows was published months later, and focuses mainly on southern Westeros. The concurrent novel A Dance with Dragons, which focuses on other locations such as the North, the Wall and Essos, was teased to be …

24 editions

reviewed A Feast for Crows (A Song of Ice and Fire, #4)

Review of 'A feast for crows' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

After the set-up in the previous installment, this book was really not what I was expecting and, as such, it took quite a bit of getting into. It certainly picks up by the end but it does feel a lot like George R.R. Martin is mainly concerned with wrapping up several of the characters ready for the next book.

Which means, of course, my expectations for the next installment are already way too high.

Review of 'A Feast for Crows' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

The best bits are when a 'lowborn' (a dispossessed) gets the change to point out to a 'highborn' (a privileged) 'this is what happens to us when you lot play your game of thrones'. So universal and timeless.

Now, on with the merciless critique:

Endless lists and descriptions of things that seem to have no relevance for the scene in question, or anywhere else in the book for that matter. Then into the action, which has to be explained by flashback of events that happened in the past, some times interlaced so much with the 'present' that you don't know if you are in the room described or in the fields years ago.

Then the chapter stops in the middle of the action, or in the middle of a conversation, to leave you in a 'cliffhanger'.

The next chapter that will relate to that character will be a few chapters …

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