When you play the game of thrones, you win or you die. There is no middle ground.— Cersei Lannister, A Game of Thrones
A bestselling
Doorstopper epic fantasy series written by
George R. R. Martin. The first book out of
seven was published in 1996, and the series reached its fifth book in mid 2011. It has also spawned three prequel short stories, with a fourth in the works, and graphic novelizations of the first two short stories.
- A Game of Thrones (1996)
- A Clash of Kings (1998)
- A Storm of Swords (2000)
- A Feast for Crows (2005)
- A Dance with Dragons (2011)
- The Winds of Winter - not yet published
- A Dream of Spring - not yet published
- "The Hedge Knight" (a "Dunk & Egg" story)
- "The Sworn Sword" (a "Dunk & Egg" story)
- "The Mystery Knight" (a "Dunk & Egg" story)
- An as-yet untitled fourth story in the "Dunk & Egg", dealing with the eponymous duo spending time at Winterfell.
The series is primarily set on the continent of Westeros,
In a World where the seasons can last for years. Fifteen years ago, lords Eddard Stark and Robert Baratheon and their foster father, Jon Arryn, rose up in rebellion and overthrew the
Mad King Aerys. They appointed Robert to the throne and drove Aerys' children into exile, breaking the 300-year dynasty of inbred kings. Now, Eddard rules his northern homeland and raises his own family in peace. When Jon Arryn unexpectedly dies, King Robert ventures north to name his friend Eddard as the new Hand of the King, the most powerful man in the Seven Kingdoms after the king himself. The honourable Eddard must leave his home to join the corrupt court in King's Landing and find the truth about Jon's death, unwittingly setting in motion a civil war.
Meanwhile, the vengeance-mad children of King Aerys live in exile in the east and plot their return to the Seven Kingdoms across the sea, while Ned's bastard son Jon Snow is sent up North to The Wall, an ancient structure erected to keep out the
Always Chaotic Evil race of ice monsters known as The Others, and manned and protected by the order of warriors known as the Night Watch or the Black Brothers, now reduced to a pale reflection of their old number and composed of an
Army of Thieves and Whores. The Others are prophecised to return in The Longest Night, a Winter colder than any other lasting longer than any remember, and will last forever if the Others are victorious and manage to conquer Westeros and the rest of the world. Naturally, at the time these novels are set,
Winter is Coming, and it could not come at a worse time for Westeros which is soon to be engulfed in tyranny, war and an invasion by the lost Targaryen princess Daenarys, events orchestrated by shadowy interests with their own schemes, sitting right at the heart of power.
The series has been received with great acclaim, with TIME Magazine even going so far as to brand Martin "the American
Tolkien"—which is a bit of an irony, considering how different the two series are. The
Switching P.O.V. allows for a wide variety of
rounded characters, and there is arguably no central protagonist to be found. The series is located on the
far end of the
Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism, with
moral ambiguity very prevalent and few clear-cut heroes or villains. Despite the fantasy setting, actual magic is treated as rare and mysterious, generally spared for
wham moments. Martin plays for keeps with his characters, and
Anyone Can Die, no matter who they are, how safe they seem and how beloved by fans they are. There is no
Saving the World scenario yet, either, but it is apparent that the separate plotlines are coming together in a much-alluded
Myth Arc of great scope.
Martin's writing pace has slowed noticeably in recent years. There was a lengthy gap between
A Storm of Swords and
A Feast for Crows, and he continued to push back the arrival date for
A Dance With Dragons. The series had a severe case of
Schedule Slip; Martin and/or over-eager vendors would post a publication date and then miss that date with little-to-no explanation. Repeat this a few times, during which time fellow
Fantasy Doorstopper writer
Robert Jordan passes away, and the end result was a very worried fanbase. Confirmation of a release was finally made by George R.R. Martin himself, and
A Dance With Dragons was released on July 12th, 2011 to spend exorbitant amounts of time on the NYT Best-seller list and mass critical acclaim.
The series has expanded into the "Dunk and Egg" series of
prequel short stories.
A
TV adaptation is now airing on HBO. Scripted by Dan Weiss and David Benioff, the show plans to do eight seasons, with
A Storm of Swords comprising two seasons, the fifth and sixth seasons being a combination of
A Feast For Crows and
A Dance with Dragons but told chronologically rather than by splitting locations and characters as in the books, and all other seasons roughly corresponding to a single novel. It has received a very positive response, being renewed for a second season on the strength of the first episode's numbers alone.
A licensed video game,
A Game Of Thrones Genesis, has dramatized some of the stuff that's
All There in the Manual, covering the last thousand-or-so years of Westerosi history. It is to be joined by an
upcoming video game
, also called
Game of Thrones. A browser-based online
MMORPG called
Game Of Thrones: Seven Kingdoms is also in the works.
A cookbook,
A Feast Of Ice And Fire
and a map folio
The Lands Of Ice and Fire
have been confirmed.
And the Fandom Rejoiced.
As the page for the novels is already considerable and ever growing, please enter the tropes found only in the live action series and video game on their own pages. The series'
recap page currently covers the first book/season of the series/series, and incorporates bits from the books when appropriate.
For more information, see the
character sheet, GRRM's "
Not-a-blog
" and
Winter Is Coming
, a central nexus for news on the TV show.
Martin has released a sample chapter for
The Winds of Winter here
. It appears to take place before the last few chapters of
A Dance with Dragons.
This series provides examples of: