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re: Crackpot ASOIAF Theories SPOILERS
Posted on 11/30/12 at 2:58 pm to DestrehanTiger
Posted on 11/30/12 at 2:58 pm to DestrehanTiger
quote:
Does anyone have a suggestion of a book series that would keep my attention half as well as ASOIAF?
Colleen McCullogh's Masters of Rome series. Historical fiction but in depth look at the collapse of the Roman republic. Obviously some spoilers if you know the history, but engrossing novels.
Posted on 11/30/12 at 3:40 pm to corndeaux
quote:
Colleen McCullogh's Masters of Rome series
I really enjoyed these. Her Sulla really grabbed me as one the most fascinating figures in history. And the parallels with modern American politics were downright chilling.
Posted on 11/30/12 at 4:07 pm to DestrehanTiger
quote:
I really, really don't want to hijack this thread, but I need a new book series to read. Finished my ASOIAF reread a month ago and read Abraham Lincoln Vampier Hunter after. It just couldn't grasp me anywhere close to ASOIAF. I've already read the Dunk & Egg tales. Does anyone have a suggestion of a book series that would keep my attention half as well as ASOIAF?
For a basic fantasy breakdown for you to consider, a number of guys I dig a bunch:
Joe Abercrombie- First Law Trilogy, three followup books set in the same world. He's got a similar gritty low magic world to Martin, lots of grey characters and bastards abound, as well as a dark sense of humor.
Steven Erikson- Malazan Books of the Fallen. Huge 10 volume door stopper series. Opposite of Martin and Abercrombie in that it's very high magic. Tons of Red Viper style badasses abound, and probably the best world building of most any series I've read. Can be a bit difficult to jump into the first book or two since he's a show and not tell sort of author, but he's top notch to me. This series has the advantage of being finished.
Scott Lynch- The Lies of Locke Lamora, Red Seas Red Skies. Dude had a divorce and a mental breakdown after the second book, so he's taking about as long as Martin to get the third book finished, but The Lies of Locke Lamora is probably the best fantasy novel I've read in the past couple decades outside of ASOS. Sort of ASOIAF meets Ocean's Eleven. The second book was kinda average, but hoping the third returns to form once it's published.
Pat Rothfuss- The Name of the Wind, The Wise Man's Fear. Both his books in this series have been very good, but much like Martin he's taking forever to get them out, so who knows when you'll see book three.
Jim Butcher- The Dresden Files. A wizard detective series set in a modern day setting where fae, vampires, werewolves, etc are all real. Starts off as a basic detective style series and ramps up to one of the better overall plot driven series around. These are short books in the 400-500 page range, but there are currently 14 of a planned 24-25 out, and he puts them out one a year pretty much. The first 2-3 are solid but not amazing, but the rest are awesome and it's one of my favorite series along with Martin and Abercrombie atm.
A few others I would put below those above, but well worth reading:
Glen Cook- The Black Company series
Richard Morgan- Takeshi Kovacs series starting with Altered Carbon (this is sci fi rather than fantasy, but awesome).
Mark Lawrence- Prince of thorns, King of Thorns
Matthew Stover- Caine series starting with Heroes Die
Paul Kearney- Monarchies of God series.
R Scott Bakker- The Prince of Nothing series
Robin Hobb- The Farseer trilogy
KJ Parker- The Scavenger trilogy, The folding Knife
Long list, but I think Abercrombie, Erikson, or Butcher could keep you entertained for a while, and Lynch and Rothfuss are well worth reading even if it takes 3-4 years for their next books.
This post was edited on 11/30/12 at 4:10 pm
Posted on 11/30/12 at 6:25 pm to auyushu
Thanks a lot for all of the suggestions. I'm glad you pointed out the slow start to the Malazan books, because that is what prompted my reread of ASOIAF. I was about 150 pages in, lost and bored. I think I may try Scott Lynch.
Posted on 11/30/12 at 8:30 pm to DestrehanTiger
quote:
Thanks a lot for all of the suggestions. I'm glad you pointed out the slow start to the Malazan books, because that is what prompted my reread of ASOIAF. I was about 150 pages in, lost and bored. I think I may try Scott Lynch.
Yeah, many people recommend starting with the second book of the Malazan series, then bouncing back to the first after that. The first just kinda slings you in the middle of everything and can get people lost with WTF is going on. The second book has a smaller cast of characters and eases things in a bit more.
But Malazan isn't for everyone. It tends to be a polarizing series, I love the hell out of it, but your mileage may vary. It has a much bigger cast of characters than ASOIAF, and the world is gigantic and complex, so it can be easy to get lost.
Lies of Locke Lamora by contrast is a very fast and easy read.
This post was edited on 11/30/12 at 8:32 pm
Posted on 11/30/12 at 9:27 pm to auyushu
Also look at Brent Weeks Night Angel series is fantastic and his new Lightbinder is also excellent
Bernard Cornwell is more historical fiction but the Winter King is one of my favorite series.
Bernard Cornwell is more historical fiction but the Winter King is one of my favorite series.
Posted on 12/3/12 at 12:33 am to BluegrassBelle
quote:
Seriously, Dany is definitely one of the most disappointing characters to me because she has soooooooooooooooo much potential and has just been incessantly lingering and bitching. I almost hoped her period was the bloody flux and that her arse was Dothraki grass at that point.
Yeah but she's just a child. She said so in her last chapter in ADWD. But she is going to come around for sure...she knows she lingered in mereen for too long and for no reason. Ser Jorah told her that in the grass whispers...
Posted on 12/3/12 at 12:38 am to CottonWasKing
quote:
I'm pretty sure Mance was still playing music for the lords in the great hall at the time.
Wait...what? Mance was the singer..? How did I miss that?
Posted on 12/3/12 at 12:49 am to Gugich22
quote:
Wait...what? Mance was the singer..? How did I miss that?
Well, we knew the 6 women with Abel were wildings, and that Jon Snow sent 6 spear wives with him. Not to mention Ramsay's infamous letter, which I don't see how he could know that unless he had actually captured Mance Rayder:
quote:
Your false king lied, and so did you. You told the world you burned the King-Beyond-the-Wall. Instead you sent him to Winterfell to steal my bride from me.
I will have my bride back. If you want Mance Rayder back, come and get him. I have him in a cage for all the north to see, proof of your lies. The cage is cold, but I have made him a warm cloak from the skins of the six whores who came with him to Winterfell.
Posted on 12/3/12 at 1:09 am to OMLandshark
I just completely missed that, I guess...
Posted on 12/3/12 at 2:18 pm to CottonWasKing
Firstly, Wow! Just Wow! I read this whole thread over a few days and it is all I could ever hope for. Almost all of the theories are well thought out with the exception of a few (R+L isn't J, come on!!). It has prompted me to re-read SOS.
Down to business. Melissandre faked the pink letter to Jon Snow so that he would break his vow to the Watch or cause the Watch to kill him so that he would be free of it. This way he rides to Winterfell and helps Stannis so that they can rally the North for the coming onslaught of the Others.
After they take back Winterfell, Davos shows up with Rickon and with the help of Lady Dustyn, the Karstarks, and the newly freed Great Jon (Thanks BWOB!), they begin to build a host and march back to the wall. Just before they leave, a short little lordling comes up with a few thousand frog spear wielders to lend a hand. But Lord Reed needs to talk to Jon Snow about a problem in Winterfell's basement, namely the evidence that is buried in Lyanna's crypyt. I think its either a sword (Hello Dark Sister!) or a confession written by Eddard.
Down to business. Melissandre faked the pink letter to Jon Snow so that he would break his vow to the Watch or cause the Watch to kill him so that he would be free of it. This way he rides to Winterfell and helps Stannis so that they can rally the North for the coming onslaught of the Others.
After they take back Winterfell, Davos shows up with Rickon and with the help of Lady Dustyn, the Karstarks, and the newly freed Great Jon (Thanks BWOB!), they begin to build a host and march back to the wall. Just before they leave, a short little lordling comes up with a few thousand frog spear wielders to lend a hand. But Lord Reed needs to talk to Jon Snow about a problem in Winterfell's basement, namely the evidence that is buried in Lyanna's crypyt. I think its either a sword (Hello Dark Sister!) or a confession written by Eddard.
Posted on 12/3/12 at 6:58 pm to Papercutninja
A question just hit me.
Why wasn't cersei forced to appoint A knight of the kingsguard as her champion when Tyrion was accused of killing the king?
Why wasn't cersei forced to appoint A knight of the kingsguard as her champion when Tyrion was accused of killing the king?
Posted on 12/3/12 at 7:32 pm to CottonWasKing
I guess they used Lannister's prosecution over the realm's, or something like that.
Posted on 12/3/12 at 7:41 pm to OMLandshark
The only reasoning I can come up with is that they were not defending the king or the regents innocence. However you would still think that it would be a matter that the kingsguard would be involved in.
Posted on 12/3/12 at 10:36 pm to Papercutninja
quote:
Firstly, Wow! Just Wow! I read this whole thread over a few days and it is all I could ever hope for. Almost all of the theories are well thought out with the exception of a few (R+L isn't J, come on!!). It has prompted me to re-read SOS.
I'm going to have to call you out on this and ask what is it about r+l=j do you disagree with?
Posted on 12/3/12 at 10:41 pm to Papercutninja
Solid post, but how can you deny Jon's parentage?
Posted on 12/3/12 at 10:41 pm to Papercutninja
or Others showing up looking for the Stark and high five Jon.
Posted on 12/3/12 at 11:10 pm to Carson123987
quote:
Solid post, but how can you deny Jon's parentage?
Yeah, rereading Game of Thrones has convinced me even more this theory has to be correct. Ned clearly think his lie has honor to it in sparing an innocent even from those closest to him, and that's surely a reference to saving Jon from Robert.
Posted on 12/3/12 at 11:42 pm to OMLandshark
Ned's honor would not have allowed him to keep his bastard's mother's identity from Catelyn. His honor would've demanded that he reveal her name to his wife. The only loophole is that Jon isn't actually his bastard and a promise was made concealing his parentage. "promise me, Ned"
The only other documented time that Ned forsook his honor was when he confessed to a crime he did not commit and for the sake of who?
An innocent family member
The only other documented time that Ned forsook his honor was when he confessed to a crime he did not commit and for the sake of who?
An innocent family member
Posted on 12/4/12 at 2:03 am to CottonWasKing
quote:
The only other documented time that Ned forsook his honor was when he confessed to a crime he did not commit and for the sake of who?
An innocent family member
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