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A Storm of Swords

A Storm of Swords

List Price: $59.95
Your Price: $37.77
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beg Martin to write more...NOW!!
Review: Excellent! Bold writing, twists and turns, characters full of emotion and life...and death! I am a die-hard Donaldson fan, the Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, first and second, would be in the top spot on my bookshelf. This book, A Storm of Swords, and this series will now share that space! 1100 pages of gripping, read until dawn action! Robert Jordan who? The wheel of what?
Please Mr. Martin, I must have more of this story...NOW!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not for [everyone]
Review: ...I've come to the conclusion that this book is not for everyone... Look, do I think these books are better than Tolkien's grand epic, absolutely, but that's the point, it's my opinion. If you asked George, he would say "no way." So, instead of comparing it to the one sided characters of Lord of the Rings, you need to look at the characters of this book for what they really are, arguably the most human characters ever written in the Genre. The depth of Jaime Lannister and the other not so likeable characters is true compassion to the story. I am tired of reading [stuff] where the good guy always wins or a farm boy from the small province is really the long lost relative of the king...you know what I'm talking about. I can sit here for hours describing the precision and care that he puts into all his characters, the way he treats them equally and realistically, but there is no point doing that. I'm going to leave it at this. If you truly understand who we are as human beings, you will love these books, however if you are an ignorant zealot, you of course will not. So go read the Terry Goodkind or Robert Jordan or the bible if that's your kind of fiction.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not for the Stupid
Review: I'm sorry for the title of my review, but it just seems after reading the negative reviews for this book and series, I've come to the conclusion that this book is not for everyone, especially the stupid. Look, do I think these books are better than Tolkien's grand epic, absolutely, but that's the point, it's my opinion. If you asked George, he would say "no way." So, instead of comparing it to the one sided characters of Lord of the Rings, you need to look at the characters of this book for what they really are, arguably the most human characters ever written in the Genre. The depth of Jaime Lannister and the other not so likeable characters is true compassion to the story. I am tired of reading crap where the good guy always wins or a farm boy from the small province is really the long lost relative of the king...you know what I'm talking about. I can sit here for hours describing the precision and care that he puts into all his characters, the way he treats them equally and realistically, but there is no point doing that. I'm going to leave it at this. If you truly understand who we are as human beings, you will love these books, however if you are an ignorant zealot, you of course will not. So go read the Terry Goodkind or Robert Jordan or the bible if that's your kind of fiction.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Many Surprises In Store
Review: You will experience a broad range of emotions when you read this book. I did the same thing one of the other people who reviewed this book did when he threw it down in anger. But that only compels you to read on, because you know the good guys have to win sometime. The thing I liked best about this book was the introduction of the supernatural. It doesn't drown you in it like Goodkind and Jordan do, but it does add another level to the series. All in all this is one of the best written books I have read. The only negative thing I can say is that I get tired of Martin killing off the characters we grow close to.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Outstanding!
Review: In the third book of the predicted series of 6, Martin has managed to pick up the story and slam it home to readers that he knows how to write. Unlike book two, this book focuses on the key characters rather more precisely and concisely. Some of the detail is dropped, which makes it less devilish to tackle. There are rather fewer people to remember, which made it less hard on my brain and helped to deliver a focused, and overwhelmingly drawing story.

It is in "A Storm of Swords" that readers come to know the characters more closely and become drawn into their dilemnas, their choices and in some instances, their helplessness. Most of all, their temptations. It is these human aspects that brings the characters to life. And it's not stagnant - as in real life, the characters of this book change over time. We find an unlikely hero in the Hound, a sympathetic trait in Jaime Lannister, a demon in the Imp's whore. Arya, despite all her best efforts, never gets closer to home, and decides a new fate for herself. Jon Snow also meets with destiny, as does his half brother Robb. And there is sacrifice.

On the other side of the world, Martin demonstrates impressive writing skills in telling the story of Dany and the Unsullied (the short version was published independently, and I was attracted to it even then). Yet, she too, meets a limit to her power and exploits and learns that she needs to learn how to rule, not only to plunder and conquer.

It is the realism that Martin so successfully brings out in his characters that I particularly like. Each individual has hopes, desires, hates, loves, strategies that succeed and fail. They are, above all, human.

An outstanding effort from Martin and the most brilliant book in the series yet. Against my expectations, it was not tiring but invigorating, and has whetted my appetite for more to come in the series. I didn't even mind spending all the money on a hard-cover version!

An absolute "must".
*

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Wait a couple of years for Mr Martin to finish the story
Review: I normally never buy a newly released fantasy book because I have this strange desire of actually wanting a frickin' end to the stories I read. Seeing this third book released, I figured I was safe - oh, how wrong I was. Three thousand pages of story and very little is resolved. I recommend waiting a couple of years and then visiting your local half-price bookstore. In the meantime, go read something else.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great book but increasingly involves adult themes.
Review: I enjoyed the first three books in this series. I agree with some that this series is better than the Wheel of Time series because the plot actually moves with each book. The story line is great and here's to hoping that the next installments are just as good.

BUT

There are rather descriptive sexual scenes in these books. At first, it was just a scene or two but by this book there are several scenes and the descriptions continue to go into more detail about the various physical descriptions and actions of the characters. If there was any reason I would stop reading this series, it would be this. Actually, if the fourth book has similar descriptions, I'm done.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The plot thickens, the world unravels
Review: If you are reading this, then you've probably read the previous 2 books, and you must have liked them, or you wouldn't be interested.
Then, prepare to be : shocked, enthralled, disgusted, and betrayed. All these things and more, in a world that simplifies itself, then charges on ahead, where there are plans within plans, and where the threats come from the mnost unlikely places and persosn. Tyrion the Imp, shows his deep human side, and becomes the character I most like to identify with, except for Robb. Can somebody please kill Joffrey and his mother already. Jaime Lannister becomes less hateful, and the dog Clegane becomes an unlikely protector.
As the plot moves, or flies along, the twists and turns of the action become harder and harder to follow, and every few chapters, everything changes.
I can't wait for the next chapter, because, if Martin can tie all the loose ends together coherently he will have proven that he is an unsurpassed master at his craft.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful
Review: It seems obvious to me, by some of the reviews on here, that the crux of what this series is about is somehow lost. From the first book we've seen magic increase (the dragons, the lady in red, Danny's attempts to get an army, etc). Also, I find it amazing that anyone can comment on plot threads that haven't been resolved. The series is supposed to last six books, so obviously there are going to be things that aren't tied up neatly. Indeed, unlike his contemporaries (*coughcoughJordancoughcough*), Martin has REDUCED the number of main players in the series. Where there was once six factions trying to gain the throne, now there are a mere handful. Is there an overabundance of sex? It depends on individual tastes. However, what is written and suggested is not unrealistic. In almost every aspect, the feel of the series is more like that of medeival England than of any fantasy setting.

It is a series that narrows its focus on the characters while expanding its focus to the world at large. It is a series that is slowly adding magic into the mix, but does so with a sense of realism befitting the world he created. I hate to pigeonhole like this, but it could be called the Babylon 5 of fantasy; there are powers controling (or trying to control) what's happening, but ultimately it's up to the people of the world to decide the fate of the world. That is, if they can stop killing each other first.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great series but not for kids.
Review: This series pulls no punches it is a hard hitting affair. It is fast and brutal and some won't like that. Based on the War of the Roses (real life) it captures the cruelty of that era in a fantasy setting. No one is sacred and anything can happen. These elements combined with great characterization have made an awesomely entertaining series so far.


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