The second season of the TV series was adapted from the plot of 1998’s A Clash of Kings, as a civil war breaks out in the Seven Kingdoms for control of the Iron Throne. Many fans consider A Game of Thrones the best book in the series-or second-best, after A Storm of Swords-and it earned a spot on our list of the 50 best fantasy books of all time.Īfter a shocking conclusion to A Game of Thrones, Martin expands the scope of the series in the second book by exploring new locations and adding new characters like Brienne of Tarth, Davos Seaworth, and the red priestess Melisandre. Meanwhile, across the ocean, the exiled princess Daenerys Targaryen discovers her true purpose and otherworldly strength. When the King’s right-hand advisor turns up dead, the noble Eddard Stark and his entire family are embroiled in a Machiavellian battle for power between the wealthy Lannisters and the warmongering Baratheons. First published in 1996, A Game of Thrones is still the best starting point for a literary journey in Westeros thanks to its masterful worldbuilding and characterization, as we encounter many of the main settings, characters, and mysteries for the first time. In just a few pages, Martin introduces us to the Night’s Watch, the Wall, and “pale shapes gliding through the wood”-the mysterious inhuman race known only as the Others. ![]() It all starts here with one of the most riveting prologues ever written. (While you wait, check out our maps to The Lord of the Rings, Dune, and The Wheel of Time.) Here’s hoping we can add The Winds of Winter and A Dream of Spring to this list sometime before 2040. To help, we’ve put together a reading order designed to deliver the richest-and smoothest-possible reading experience, whether you’re new to the franchise or you’ve already watched every episode of Game of Thrones. With five (of seven) books in the main series, plus one (of two) prequels, as well as three novellas and a slew of companion books, navigating the Seven Kingdoms can be challenging for beginners and experts alike. If the timeline sounds confusing, that’s because it is. This fall, HBO is taking another crack at Martin’s masterpiece with House of the Dragon, a new series based on Martin’s prequel book, Fire & Blood, which narrates the history of House Targaryen-the royal, dragon-riding, sometimes incestuous, often insane ancestors of Daenerys Targaryen, played by Emilia Clarke in Game of Thrones. And after publishing the first five books in the span of 15 years, Martin has spent the last decade-and-some-change suffering from “ the most public case of writer’s block in human history” while trying to finish the sixth book, The Winds of Winter, leaving some fans wondering if we’ll ever get a chance to read the seventh and final book, A Dream of Spring. ![]() After seven highly acclaimed seasons, the TV series ended with the most disappointing final stretch since ABC’s Lost (unless you ask Esquire's Justin Kirkland). And with good reason-the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros might be the most fully realized and compelling fictional world since Tolkien’s Middle-earth.īut today, three years since the final episode of Game of Thrones and a whopping 11 years since the most recent book in the main series, the franchise’s cultural legacy is in an awkward place. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire owned the 2010s? While HBO's Game of Thrones racked up more Emmy awards than any drama series in history, Martin’s five-volume (so far) book series earned a massive display table at nearly every bookstore in America, spawning an Iron Fleet of podcasts and websites dedicated to unpacking Martin’s narrative labyrinth. Has anything ever dominated pop culture the way George R.
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