18 Jul
Posted by: Tahlia Havelock in: Top TV Shows
Easy as it is for fans to resent the six years it took George R.R. Martin to produce A Dance With Dragons, the fifth book in his bestselling Song Of Ice And Fire epic-fantasy series, now that the book has arrived, its easy to see where those years went. The thousand-page novel is staggeringly dense with interlaced characters, whose complicated interactions stretch back through hundreds of years of lineage, and it stretches to encompass Martins entire world, taking in POV characters from the entire series in order to cover events in a dozen locales. New fans only familiar with Martin from the recent HBO series A Game Of Thrones, which adapted the first Song Of Ice And Fire book, are likely to get a surprise when they see how much deeper Martins world goesDragons is the thickest of the novels to date, in terms of cast, background, and detail as well as pages. In retrospect, its surprising it only took him six years to write it.
It isnt precisely that the book has been worth the wait; some storylines continue from the fourth book, 2005s A Feast For Crows, but many more stretch back to cliffhangers from 2000s A Storm Of Swords, and series fans who havent revisited these books recently may get lost amid the welter of decade-old plotlines and endless personal agendas. Regardless, its an immense pleasure to finally slip back into Martins thoroughly immersive world. Its always been a joy to get lost in the flow of his words, even when its unclear where theyre leading. And Dragons shows him continuing to develop as a writer: It can be difficult, but its richly rewarding. Martin remains boundlessly creative, sketching out intricately realized new civilizations, societies, religions, and factions on one continent while continuing to complicate the established political agendas on another. No part of his world ever feels like an afterthought or an easy fantasy clich.
There are plenty of quibbles to be made with A Dance With Dragons. Martin returns too often to a handful of distractingly idiosyncratic pet wordsleal for loyal, dinted for dentedand to a handful of phrases and fixed ideas that his cast obsesses over like mantras, which leads to maddening repetition. His devotion to detail can be a distraction, as when he takes time to enumerate the physical attributes of seven unnamed slaves immediately before killing them all off in a couple of sentences, or lays out the personality traits of a handful of offscreen hostage-children who wont be seen again for the rest of the book. In both cases, his reasons for individualizing them all are clearhe wants to give weight to the slaves deaths in the first case, and to the decisions made on the childrens behalf in the second. But in a book where seemingly every paragraph is packed with names, bloodlines, heraldry, and history, the microscopic focus adds to the impression of wading through name soup.
More significantly, nothing much happens in Dragons first half. Tyrion Lannister travels and broods over his fathers last words. Daenarys Targaryen decides not to travel, and broods over the cruelty of the city shes conquered. Jon Snow weighs his options on the Wall, and broods over his loyalties and decisions. Brandon Stark travels, with little time to brood because of the difficulty of survival. Various other characters travel in order to offer alliances, or hunker down to plan or survive, while operating with limited information. Apart from a few small forts changing hands, few actual moves are made in the game of thrones; it sometimes feels like Martin is spinning his wheels, waiting for the half of his cast not featured in Feast For Crows to catch up to that books events. Once they do, though, and the timelines merge, the book picks up sharply and becomes a breathless charge toward another series of cliffhangers that may not be resolved for years.
From a sheer plot-movement perspective, Dragons can be unsatisfyingMartin knows his audience, and can be brutal about teasing them with small tastes of the information they most want. But given that its a middle book in a long series where the endgame is still far from sight, that was inevitable. Its more a book to be savored for its flavor, for Martins considerable talent at world-building, characterization, and interaction, for his characters humor, bravery, skullduggery, determination, and pathos. He gives the impression that he knows the life story of every last person in his vast world, and is perfectly willing to explicate them at length. Even if it takes a couple more decades to get it all down on paper.
Leave a reply