The Friday 56

Friday 30 March 2012

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Hosted by Freda's Voice.

Sometimes when I visited my family at home I felt awkward telling them anything. My new life was taking over the old.
- pg. 56, "Girl with a Pearl Earring" by Tracy Chevalier

Theme Thursdays (Ending)

Thursday 29 March 2012

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Theme Thursdays


Then she got down on her knees and prayed to be forgiven.

 - taken from "Scary Fairy Tales" by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya

The Friday 56

Friday 23 March 2012

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Here's a fun new meme I'm trying out, hosted by Freda's Voice. If you fancy joining in all you have to do is grab a book, open to page 56 and write down a phrase from that page. Easy peasy!

"There was something fascinating about tall thin men, the way their bones and Adam's apple lurked so unconcealed beneath the skin, their bird-like faces, their predatory stoop." 
                                                                          - pg 56, "On Chesil Beach" by Ian McEwan

George R. R. Martin - A Song of Ice and Fire (Series)

Sunday 11 March 2012

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Well, it's been a little while since my last review, but I like to think I have a reasonable excuse. After hearing so much about George R. R. Martin's series A Song of Ice and Fire from my brother (mostly about how it was the most amazing thing ever written and how I had to read it) I finally got around to it and picked up the first book: A Game of Thrones. It says a lot for the series that I couldn't stop there and went on to read the follow up books: A Clash of Kings, A Storm of Swords and A Feast for Crows and I am currently waiting for the fifth book, A Dance with Dragons, to be released in paperback (in a few days). While I wait, I thought I'd do a review of the series so far.

Well, you might have already guessed that I absolutely loved the series. Heck, my brother (who, by his own admission, is not much of a reader) adores it. It's the kind of series that you have to talk to someone about and I phoned my brother quite a few times to rant about how much I was enjoying it and what did he think of this character, or that plot twist and how did he think the story was going to go from here. Even my dad and my fiance are now involved and we're starting to form a little club of obsessed fans. I don't think my family has bonded over literature like this since Harry Potter!

I won't even attempt to write a proper synopsis for the series. There are too many plot threads to follow, to many characters and too many spoilers that I might inadvertently reveal. I'll settle for telling you that it's a true fantasy epic - bloody battles, family feuding, royal shenanigans, a little bit of magic and mystery... all you could possibly want - and it's done on a truly mind-boggling scale. And at the same time, it manages to avert some of the old cliches that have become synonymous with the fantasy genre. One of the first things I was told about the series was: "Don't get attached to any of the characters. Odds are, they're going to die". Good advice, but nearly impossible to follow, because even if you hate a character... you love hating them and it's almost disappointing to see them go. But that's one of the great things about the series. You really can't anticipate what's going to happen. Sometimes hints will be dropped and you can take a guess, but most of the twists that Martin sends your way tend to leave you re-reading the last couple of pages, in case you hallucinated what was printed there (A Storm of Swords in particular had me doing this... and calling up my brother at the end to ask: "What the hell did I just read!?")

If I must be critical of anything in this series (and I will be, in the spirit of fairness) then two things spring to mind. First, there seems to have been a problem with the editing of some of the books. Sometimes paragraphs appear in odd places (near the end of someone's speech and without the usual quotation marks to show that it was done deliberately to break up the paragraphs). Sometimes words ran together likethis whichwas ratherannoying. One or twice words were repeated like like this. Not often enough for me to give up on the series... but often enough for me to mention it in a review. It seems a shame that an otherwise fantastic series should suffer from poor editing.

The second problem I have is more of a personal quibble. Now, I mentioned earlier about the mind-boggling scale of the series. In terms of setting this is a great thing, but it almost becomes a drawback for the plot and characters. Inevitably, as you go through the series, you find characters that you are more interested in hearing about and plot threads that your are more eager to follow. Unfortunately, the narrative dances between the various characters, and you often have to spend a chapter following a character that, although interesting, is not always as interesting as some of the other characters. It became tempting to skip ahead to chapters that focused on my favourite characters, but I didn't dare in case I missed some new development that would prove important later in the series. As a result, certain chapters dragged a little for me, but this may not be as much of a problem for others, and there's always the possibility that I'll realise (during a re-read of the series) that I actually enjoy some characters a lot more second time round.

So, all in all, an amazing series. I owe my brother a big hug for talking me into reading it (and giving my fiance and I several of the books as Christmas/birthday presents). I highly recommend this to anyone, even those who wouldn't normally think of themselves as fantasy fans.

WARNING -  I'll just add an extra little piece of advice, since it ties in with one detail of the books I really loved: DO NOT READ THESE BOOKS ON AN EMPTY STOMACH. Martin's descriptions of food are mouth-watering and since most of the narrative takes place amongst the wealthy lords of the realm, you're guaranteed plenty of sumptuous feasts, with such delicacies as hot crab pie, quails drowned in butter, honeycakes baked with blackberries and nuts... the list goes on Just remembering makes my stomach rumble.