Wm. L. Roberts reviewed A Game of Thrones by George R. R. Martin (A Song of Ice and Fire, #1)
I like talking about ASOIAF more than I like reading it.
3 stars
My journey into fantasy began with a hole, and a hobbit, and so on and so forth. I read about children getting lost in the back of a wardrobe, and all their adventures. Eventually, I found books about great magic and the risks of working mighty deeds; but those stories were all rooted in Tolkien's concepts.
By the time I picked up A Game of Thrones, I had read enough gory fantasy to not be necessarily shocked by the way characters died, or the actions they took, but I hadn't necessarily put together that it's the War of the Roses and a horror series to boot. Admittedly, now, I find the fandom around ASOIAF far more interesting than the novels themselves, and I have spent hours and hours listening to talented storytellers in their own rights explain the layered imagery of these novels.
But I gotta admit, I …
My journey into fantasy began with a hole, and a hobbit, and so on and so forth. I read about children getting lost in the back of a wardrobe, and all their adventures. Eventually, I found books about great magic and the risks of working mighty deeds; but those stories were all rooted in Tolkien's concepts.
By the time I picked up A Game of Thrones, I had read enough gory fantasy to not be necessarily shocked by the way characters died, or the actions they took, but I hadn't necessarily put together that it's the War of the Roses and a horror series to boot. Admittedly, now, I find the fandom around ASOIAF far more interesting than the novels themselves, and I have spent hours and hours listening to talented storytellers in their own rights explain the layered imagery of these novels.
But I gotta admit, I don't love these books. They're just not for me.