Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
A Storm of Swords

A Storm of Swords

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

<< 1 .. 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 .. 60 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another fine episode in the series
Review: George Martin is such a strong writer--one wonders why he wastes all that time editing. This book is everything that the recent episodes of Robert Jordan's once promising, drone-on series isn't. Despite the length of Storm of Swords, it is always focused, always well plotted, and the minor characters move the plot forward to involve the major ones at various junctions that regularly occur.

I won't spoil the book btw--but let's just say if you thought you knew where Martin was going with the series, you were wrong. He has created a powerful plot, with stunning surprises that you won't ever forget.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Prepare for an excellent read
Review: Looking for a host of beautiful and invincible heroes and heroines? A rollicking, straightforward Good vs. Evil epic? Look elsewhere in the Fantasy section, then, because George R.R. Martin offers something rather unusual for his genre: a somewhat more (if you discount the black magic, etc.) realistic yarn that still manages to be a very, very good story. Be prepared to cringe, squirm, and genuinely fear (often with good cause) for a character's life. Also prepare for more of the major changes that have marked the previous books in A Song of Fire and Ice. And finally, prepare to set aside a chunk of time when you will not want your reading to be interrupted--and for the anticipation with which you will join those awaiting the next book in this incredible "fantastorical," as Anne McCaffrey appropriately termed it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Becoming a very strong series
Review: I was tough on Martin's 1st book, giving it only 3 stars. Well, his 3rd effort had me reading 100 pages a day. I couldn't put it down.

Martin has such a knack for making characters you can care about. I find myself liking the Lannisters as much as I like the Starks, and there are not any characters whose fate I'm bored by. (Unlike Robert Jordan, where I find I skip a lot of Nynaeve chapters :)).

Martin is also deft in his handling of a rather intricate plot. His world is not as politically diverse as Jordan's, but I think the story benefits from this. His pacing and timing are fabulous, and there was never a time I felt the plot dragging. Martin is driving us toward a thundering climax, and he keeps us on our toes with his numerous clever twists.

Epic fantasy has suffered so much from the formulaic plots and paper-doll characters of many of the authors that it's been hard to stay with the genre. Only a few authors have broken the mold; Jordan with his Wheel of Time, Tad Williams with Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn, and Martin is well on his way with his Song of Ice and Fire.

There is only one thing that kept me from giving five stars for this book. Martin's characters often use vulgar language and there are some moments of descriptive sexuality that I think are unnecessary. Thus 4 stars instead of five.

The last caveat: I'm sick of waiting for the next book to come out! I've been waiting for Jordan's books since the 9th grade when I started reading them. I'm 25 now. Will I still be around to finish the series?

All that said, A Storm of Swords was a great read and highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Heart-Racing Sequel
Review: I have just finished reading A Storm of Swords (And the other two books in the series) for the second time and I must say it is a awesome addition to this groundbreaking series. This book is the turning point of the series. All of the characters are where they need to be in order to meet the oncoming Winter.

The War of the Five Kings is winding down to a conclusion, and the much greater threat that looms from beyond the wall has finally been recognized by one of the Five Kings. Martin keeps with the tradition of boldy killing off main characters and including huge twists and turns in his lively, descriptive writing.

With this book the fact that the Song of Ice and Fire is destined to be one of the best epic fantasy series' ever written is apparent. This is GOOD storytelling.

The Wheel of Time is trudging along in boring-land,with little or no progress in some of the latest additions (Though I do see a hint of flickering hope in the end of the Winter's Heart and the upcoming Crossroads of Twilight) while the Sword of Truth seems to be taking the same course as the Wheel of Time at this point, going nowhere fast.

If you want a series whose turning point is at book 3 as opposed to book 10, a series that is moving along like a speeding train screaming toward a awe-inspiring and gripping conclusion, then jump onto the Martin bagwagon and discover what good fantasy writing is.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Who Cares Anymore?
Review: At the end of the second novel I could not wait for the next book. Now who cares? Martin has killed every character worth following in the series. By eliminating the vast majority of characters one feels attached to in the first 2 books he leaves the reader with an emptiness that I don't see being fufilled. The plot is now spread in so many directions that following a long complicated novel only to see who you cared for killed seems a waste of energy. This is not to say the thought, detail, and writing are bad, quite the opposite, which makes this book all the more disappointing. By killing or regulating the only people that one cares for to uninteresting circumstances Martin has destroyed the reason for reading the following installments. Normally at the end of a series one looks forward too and genuinely misses the characters, but why should I care about anyone whose left? It is a rare ability to make such a great series into something where I could stop reading right now and no longer care about the story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Winter is coming...but it's not as bleak as it seems
Review: Why did it take me so long to read this series? I have been encouraged to read 'A Song of Ice and Fire' for some time and held off thinking it was a standard sword n'sorcery type epic. However, I read Martin's short story 'The Hedge Knight' in the excellent TOR anthology 'Legends 3', which was set about a century prior to A Game of Thrones and decided to give his epic a try.
It was certainly worth it. This was a very hefty book, yet the story lines are actually getting tighter and the action more furious than in the previous two volumes. A word of warning though: I am not averse to starting series in the middle but I wouldn't try it with this one. A lot of the denouments in this novel are actually twists on denouments in previous books, so the full effect would be lost if the first two haven't been read. That's just beside the extreme complexity of this series which would make it difficult to pick up partway.
The style is what could be termed 'historical fantasy', which other authors such as Guy Gavriel Kay and Kate Elliott, and also perhaps Robin Hobb, are having great success with at the moment. I think several of the features of this style are apparent here, such as little or no magic, a cast of thousands, a marked resemblance to a real historical period, and also the tendency to be very 'cruel' to protagonists. A number of readers of his work seem to find the main characters' spiralling loss of control over events, sometimes resulting in their death, as very difficult to deal with or otherwise very brave and skilled on the part of the author. This is really noticeable when contrasted with traditional fantasy where everything works out okay in the end, with the good guys triumphing over evil.
Historical fantasy takes an approach a lot closer to real history or historical fiction: people are rarely black and white, and heroes often don't make it to the end (for example, most of Sharon Kay Penman's historical fiction sees the hero dead before the end of the novel, or the same in GGK's fantasy). This doesn't mean it is all without hope; invariably if a dream was worth dreaming or a mission worth undertaking, the dream will live on even after its heroes fall by the wayside, the banner caught up by others and raised again.
'A song of Ice and Fire' has been said to have a War of the Roses feel; if you go into it keeping that in mind I think it doesn't seem as bleak. in the War of the Roses, the war was equally tragic for Lancastrians, Yorkists and England, and in the end Henry Tudor was probably one of the last people who should have got the disputed crown. Yet, the result of Tudor getting the crown was the sucessful Tudor dynasty, producing two of England's most famed monarchs (Henry VIII and Elizabeth I).
I have no pretensions to being able to predict where this series will end up; Martin is too good at building false trails and setting up suprises. But I do feel that in the end, even if winter is coming, summer will follow after.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent but mature read
Review: So far, all three books have been excellent, but there are a few things I'd like to point out. They are frequently infuriating as so many pages lie between character threads. I sometimes forgot what was happening to a character by the time the story revolved to them again, sometimes well over 100 pages later, and had to go back for a quick refresher.

The stories are also quite sad, as you 'watch' well-developed and well-loved central characters get killed off in brutal fashion. What happens to the survivors is sometimes nearly as bad, so keep this in mind. If you want an upbeat story, look elsewhere. Also, be warned that this is definitely not fantasy along the lines of Jenifer Roberson or R.A. Salvatore. I'll have to wait a few years before I let my son read this series as some of the content is just too mature with adult language, sex, and violence (including rape).

Like a lot of good things, this series is a mixed bag because while it is very well-written and quite compelling, it is so dark that I almost regret having started it. But that's only because my favorite characters are now either dead or might be better off dead.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Keeps you absolutely riveted, enthralled, engrossed....
Review: Martin's series continues to get better and better, and that's no mean feat given the extremely good quality in his first two installments of the series. It seems everyone these days is writing "epic" fantasy, presumeably because the stories cannot be contained in one volume and enhance book sales. Martin is almost unique in that, while certainly guilty of assuring continued income by writing a six part series, he actually writes WELL, and has an ENGROSSING story to tell. There are plot twists and circumlocutions galore.

In this volume, we get to study the motivations of Ser Jaime, the champion of house Lannister. In what has to be one of the best written examples of turning one's preconceptions onto their head, we find out that Jaime, one of the key villains in Books 1 and 2, despite his incestuous relationship with his sister and an unfortunate tendency to inafanticide, really isnt that bad of a guy...you actually grow to kinda LIKE him. The Red God, the sinister god whose priestess uses necromancy and dark arts to defeat the enemies of the direct heir of the throne, is gradually being revealed as a vengeful god with good intentions, uniting the southern kingdoms against the threat from the North by any means necessary (VERY Old Testament, in fact). Just as we find out that Jaime isnt all bad, we also discover that some of the characters we assumed as being "good" had their despicable moments, mainly through recollections of the war against the house Targaryen and the atrocities committed by our "heroes" to ensure that the family line dies out. Just as he takes characters you initially detest and pray for comeuppance and reveals them as actually quite nice guys, he takes characters in whose mouth butter wouldnt melt and reveals them as mean spirited, despicable and thoroughly deserving of a good caning.

Another Martin trademark, we say "good-bye" to several key characters introduced during the first few books. The author invests a tremendous amount of character development into what become key characters, so much so that you find yourself subconsciosly assuming that these "friends" will be with you throughout the series. Martin's intent, clearly, is to make you so fond of these characters that, when they do die, most often horribly, you definitely experience an emotional response. To put it mildly, he succeeds in this very well. Im wondering who will die next ... no character is safe. The political intrigue is sufficiently byzantine to keep one enthralled, as well.

Finally, the book ends in one of the most heart wrenching examples of betrayal I have read to date, though you get some small measure of revenge, as well as a shock, in the epilogue. The book, while slowly adding more fantasy elements like magic and dragons, makes the fantasy elements tertiary to the story and character development. I am not alone in eagerly awaiting the fourth installment in this truly gripping series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Plot Thickens
Review: In this massive novel George R.R. Martin does an even better job than the first two books of this amazing series. The plot is more riveting than the first two books and this is easily the darkest of the three. This book opens up a while after the events in "A Clash of Kings" but Martin grabs you like the pro that he is and with his fantastic prose you will be sucked into this rich and complex story.

Many things have happened since the battle on the Blackwater Rush this book starts off with what has been going on. There are many plots and you are introduced to two new charcaters' points of view as well with your old favorites. As said above, this is much darker than the first two novels in this series as Martin starts to kill off many, many characters and dreadful things take place. One of the big questions to ask yourself while reading this is, "Who will survive?"

Martin is my favorite author and he ha redefined the fantasy genre. He has introduced a whole different type of fantasy epic in a tale of a medieval world that is full of knights, warlocks, princes, princesses, lords, ladies, sailors, kings, queens, and many more. The world that Martin has created is so real that you feel like everything that is happening in "A Storm of Swords" really took place at some time in history. Each castle, town, city, or kingdom is crafted so well and you will feel like you are there witnessing what is happening.

The detail in this novel is amazing. There is a history and story behind every person, object, or place that you are introduced to. What is different about Martin telling about something compared to another author is that Martin actually makes you have an interest in what he's describing where other authors can bore you to tears. George R.R. Martin's words paint a picture in your mind like no other author's words can.

Before starting this wonderful novel you must be sure that you have read the first two books in the "A Song of Ice and Fire" series, titled "A Game of Thrones" and "A Storm of Swords." Througout every page of this novel you will be enjoying the luscious story. This is my number one favorite novel of all time. I cannot wait to read the next book in this series, titled "A Feast for Crows." This is a novel that is not to be missed by anybody.

Happy Reading!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Terrific plot and characters
Review: All three books were terrific...original plot, and characters of every kind. It is a grey world in the Song of Ice and Fire series - nobody is completely good; nobody is completely evil. Also, there are so many different storylines going on together that the promise of the different threads coming together just makes you beg for the next installment of this series. Also, it takes a tremendously talented author to "stay in character" when he's switching from the point of view of one character to another character, but George R. R. Martin does it beautifully.


<< 1 .. 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 .. 60 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates