Welcome to Week 4 of our Game
of Thrones book club! With only one week to go, stakes have gotten higher,
and the tension is at a boiling point. This week we’re reading Part Four: 489-651 mass market; 409-543 trade paperback
(starting with DAENERYS "The heart was steaming in the cool...")
Nikki: Whew, I
was on the edge of my seat for this section. Looking back, it was only about
150 pages in my book, but a lot happens in a short span of time. We begin with
Viserys demanding his golden crown, Ned finding out that Robert has been hurt
on a hunt, Jon going on his first ranger mission north of the Wall, Tyrion
meeting up with the clansmen in the woods, and Catelyn being reunited with
Robb. By the end of the section, Viserys is dead and Khal Drogo has agreed to cross
the water to join the game of thrones; Robert is dead; Ned’s been captured by
the Lannisters; Sansa is under their thumb and being told what to do; Arya has
escaped and is on the run; banners in the north are deciding which team to play
for; we meet Tywin for the first time; and Catelyn’s made a deal with the Freys
involving the futures of two of her children. Wow.
What I’m particularly enjoying in the book is the different
subtleties that have been introduced that I don’t remember being there in season
1. Jon Arryn is dead, and Ned’s trying to discover who would have poisoned him
to keep the secret of Joffrey’s real father quiet. But now there’s a suggestion
that Lysa was terribly unhappy with her husband because he was going to take
her beloved son away and let him be raised by Stannis Baratheon. Suddenly she
becomes a suspect, even if that never goes anywhere. Meanwhile, Cersei steps up
and takes command, getting rid of her enemies quickly, and using Sansa in a
brilliant way to try to pull the Starks onside (or just pull them within
shooting distance). Now I can see why you’ve been saying all along that she
should have been played by Polly Walker, Chris. As of this scene, I say absolutely. Cersei’s far more cunning
and harsher than she’s currently played on the show; Lena Headey does a great
job, but she plays her a little more demure and contrite, as if there’s more
scheming than actual doing. I don’t particularly remember Sansa writing all
those letters, but I do remember Cersei manipulating Sansa right out of the
gate. If I hadn’t seen Jack Gleeson’s portrayal of Joffrey at this point, I
would actually think that he was going to help Sansa. When she begs for mercy
for her father, Joffrey is the only one who comes across as sympathetic, who
calms her nerves and doesn’t talk down to her like she’s a child. Of course, we
all know what awaits Ned anyway… perhaps making Joffrey even worse than he is
on the show. I’m looking forward to the little shit having a bigger role soon.
What are your initial thoughts on this section, Chris?
Christopher: I
love this part of the novel, and remember feeling entirely taken aback with how
quickly everything goes wrong for Ned. Still no idea of what awaits him, of
course, and I seem to think I wondered “what else could possibly go wrong?” Ah,
but then I was reading in a pre-GRRM paradigm—five novels later and we know,
things can always get worse in
Westeros.
The part where Daenerys eats the heart is harrowing, not
just for the stomach-churning description but the account of how she trained for it by eating bowls of
gristle and clotted blood. Urk. If the whole queen gig didn’t work out, she’d
have had a good secondary career as a contestant on Fear Factor-like shows.
And Viserys … poor, sociopathic, abusive, megalomaniacal
Viserys. It’s a measure of GRRM’s deft touch with character that, even after
everything he’s done we feel a certain sympathy for him in his last few
moments. Or … I have a certain sympathy for him. Do you? It doesn’t obviate the
rather visceral satisfaction of seeing the monster finally get his comeuppance,
but at the very end he has gone from being a terror to a pathetic shell,
humiliated and inept and completely aware of his failure. Not that he can own
that failure, of course—he blames everyone but
himself, and his ignorant, drunken blasphemy in the Dothraki holy space serves
to epitomize his irredeemably self-obsessed character.
And the scene illustrates just how far Daenerys has come as
well—sold cynically by her brother, she has risen to the occasion and become
the leader he could never be. There aren’t many bullhorn-symbolism moments in
Ice & Fire, but Daenerys eating a stallion’s heart is certainly one of
them. Viserys woke the dragon—he just couldn’t have known that the dragon
wasn’t him. She is sad but resolute as she sees what Drogo is about to do; the
old Daenerys would have begged for her brother’s life, but the khaleesi sees it as justice and
necessity.
Also developed in this penultimate section is the growing
threat in the North, and Jon’s chilling (ha!) encounter with the wights. We’re
some six hundred pages on from the prologue now, with plenty of narrative
action to blur the memory of that opening scene north of the Wall—but of course
we’re brought sharply back by the appearance of Jon’s dead brothers, both of
whom have startlingly blue eyes. When they lurch back to life and attack the
Lord Commander, the story itself lurches from straightforward fantasy to that
genre we’re all so familiar with, the attack of the living dead (Carl, get back
south of the Wall!). That scene is just as terrifying now as it was the first
time I read it; when I first read it, however, the zombie craze had not yet
begun. I hope readers only coming to the series now don’t think to themselves
“sheesh, more zombies … how unoriginal.” GRRM has a knack for genre mixology,
and his introduction of the wights is at once an interesting turn on a figure
that first appears in Tolkien (the barrow-wights), and a prescient variation on
the Romero-esque zombie.
Nikki: The wight
scene is truly terrifying. I remember when you and I first started writing
about the show and you flipped back and forth between “white” and “wight” and I
couldn’t figure out which was the correct spelling, and now I realize they both
are! The white walkers are the same as the wights, is that correct? The scene
is really frightening, especially when Jon finds the door wide open and the
dead guard on the other side; if I’d been reading it without knowing the
outcome, I would have thought the direwolf was going to get it. But then again,
I started to worry that maybe Ghost WOULD die in the book, and they just kept
him on for the show; it was that scary.
I couldn’t agree with you more about Viserys. Last week my
husband and I were driving to Toronto, so he was trapped in a car with me for
two hours as I talked about the book and how amazing it is, and I told him he
really has to read these himself. (Though, like me, he knows he won’t be able
to stop and then he’ll be ahead of the TV show; but then again, I kind of like
the idea that the TV series spoiled me for the books, and now the books are
going to spoil me for the TV show…) And it was Viserys I was talking about
specifically. Like you, I felt a pang of sympathy as he drunkenly loped into
the party, with thousands of dothraki laughing at him as he roared about being
their rightful ruler. As I said a couple of weeks ago, and can’t stress enough,
he was a child when his entire family was ripped from him, and he raised
Daenerys himself from her infancy. What kind of a child is able to do that? And
considering the strong-willed warrior woman she became, perhaps Viserys wasn’t
all bad. Not having parents, and spending his childhood and adolescence on the
run with a baby on his back, he’s never been allowed to truly mature and grow
up, instead just resting on the laurels of the great dragons from whom he’s
descended. After being treated like a leper or a wanted man for most of his
life, one can’t really fault him for raging against the perceived wrongdoing against
him, for insisting that he finally
get his due just for bloody surviving all these years in the face of all of
Westeros keeping an eye out for him. I really did feel sorry for him as the
golden crown was poured over him, and I think GRRM meant for us to.
Speaking of the Targaryen family, I only just realized this
week that there are entire family trees of all of the major families at the
back of the book. Duh. Let’s just say it’s made reading this book a hell of a
lot easier and has cleared up a lot of things with regards to both the book and
the series. Something I keep forgetting to ask you, but were the Tyrells
introduced prominently back in season 1 of the show? I don’t remember Margaery
really coming into anything until the second season with Joffrey, and the
grandmother showing up in the third, but they’re already talking about her, and
we’ve seen her brother Loras on the jousting field. I DO remember Loras being
in the jousting tournament back in season 1, but then he was shown to be
Renly’s lover, and that’s not even insinuated in this book (yet). Is that
something introduced on the show only, or does it come later in the books?
Christopher: The white walkers—the “Others”—are distinct
from the wights. The former are malevolent magical beings, and the wights are
the dead humans they resurrect to act as their undead army. Back in the
prologue, Ser Waymar Royce fights an Other and is killed, and then comes back
as a wight a few lines later. (Speaking as an English prof, I think someone
really needs to write a tongue-in-cheek paper on the white walkers under the
title of “Discourse on the Others”).
I have to confess, as regards Renly and Loras, that it never
occurred to me that they might be lovers until the series made it explicit.
Going back now and rereading, the hints are all over the place, but I was
merrily oblivious. Part of the reason for that, to be sure, is that neither
Renly or Loras benefit from a POV or that of another character intimate enough
with them to reveal their relationship.
The Tyrells as a group are introduced in the novels in dribs
and drabs—first with Loras, then with the mention of Margaery. They enter the
story in significant fashion in book two and become an increasingly significant
presence as the series proceeds (much, as you will have gleaned from the
series, to Cersei’s annoyance and unease). For the time being, they fill a role
not unlike that of Tywin Lannister for most of this first book—a name and a
vague sense of wealth and power. They are, after all, one of the Big Seven, the
families that had ruled Westeros when it was still literally the Seven
Kingdoms, before the Targaryen conquest. The Tyrell demesne is a large region
to the south called The Reach, and the castle of Highgarden their seat of
power.
On another front, as you point out, Ned’s Great Unraveling
continues (and yes, isn’t Cersei totally Atia-worthy in this part of the
novel?). What did you think of that moment of betrayal, when Littlefinger pulls
his knife on Ned? I would argue that that is really the pivotal moment of this
particular story, and the harshest lesson Ned learns—though too late, far too
late. It is a moment that unfolds in the series almost exactly as it is
described in the novel … but on rereading, there is a substantive difference in
sense and tone, something almost intangible, which I attribute to our slightly
different understandings of Littlefinger in the novel versus the adaptation. Or
perhaps I’m projecting: it’s in seasons two and three that we really come to
understand Baelish’s ruthlessness, epitomized in Varys’ dark observation that
“he would see the realm burn if he could be king over the ashes”; but in the
novel he’s a far more ambiguous character, and his actions more inscrutable, as
it is made obvious just how deep his love for Catelyn was and is. What do you
think? I was not shocked by his betrayal of Ned when watching the series,
obviously, but when it happened in the novel I was gutted … first, because I
had come to like his character in spite of myself and (foolishly) trust him,
and second, because it seemed to obvious in retrospect. But what made it seem
obvious on that first go-around was the sense that the betrayal proceeded from
a singular motive: to have Ned out of the way. Of course, we soon realize that
his motives are more tangled than that.
But in the series, his motives again seem
straightforward—and far more cynical and mercenary. Thoughts? Did you see much
difference in this scene as opposed to the series?
Nikki: There is a
huge difference in the two scenes. Like Viserys, Baelish is a far more
sympathetic character in the novel, as we’ve discussed. Played on the series,
he always has a mischievous, almost sinister gleam in his eye, and the nasally
tone of his voice makes you constantly suspicious of him, waiting for him to
show his true, nasty colours. But in the book he waffles, moving back and
forth, seeming to be trustworthy one moment and deceitful the next. And yet his
love for Catelyn, shown through both the flashbacks and in the moments where
he’s seen with her and seemingly helping Ned, he appears to be working against
the Lannisters, hiding Catelyn away and arranging clandestine meetings with Ned
in the brothel. Now we see it was all a trick, making it look like Ned spends
his time in brothels while dear, pure Littlefinger was innocently off doing his
own thing and had no idea Ned was
there. By the time he pulls out the knife, I gasped. I’d COMPLETELY forgotten
that he did that, just because this Baelish had drawn me in so much more than
the TV one had, and I was just as shocked here as I was on the show when he
pulled his knife; more so, in fact. Game
of Thrones is one of the best shows on television, but when you are that
caught off-guard by something you’ve already seen on the HBO series, it certainly
points to the book’s superiority over the series. (Yay, once again… books win!)
And what of the Starks? When Sansa was working with Cersei
in the TV series, I rolled my eyes along with everyone else who hadn’t actually
read the books and thought she was such an annoying character. Now, from her
perspective, you can see how she was drawn in hook, line, and sinker by Cersei
and Joffrey, and I don’t hate her at all; I feel sorry for her. There are times
when you are right there with her, believing that if she just does these
things, the Lannisters will spare her father, right? RIGHT?!
And then there’s Arya. Already established as a scamp and
the most fun of the Stark youngsters, she’s in the middle of her dancing lesson
when the Kingsguard comes for her. I want to say here that I love how GRRM
unfolded the betrayal. Littlefinger pulls the knife on Ned and that pretty much
endeth the section. You don’t have Ned being dragged off kicking and screaming,
you just have this moment, and GRRM leaves it up to the reader to figure out
the obvious conclusion of what happened next. Instead he moves to the children,
a far more sympathetic move, because if Ned is captured and locked away for his
failing to guess the temperature of the situation, that’s one thing, but watching
the far-reaching consequences of his actions puts a much finer point on it.
Just as on the show, Syrio steps up and tells Arya to run, and she does, and he
stands before the Guard. I remember at the time writing that I really hoped
we’d see the teacher again, because I never believe that someone is dead unless
I saw them die. But… now I realize that he’s dead. (Unless there’s a REALLY big
surprise in a future season or book, but I really doubt it at this point.) With
the whole Guard before him, his job has ended, and now we see if Arya can
actually take care of herself without him.
Ned is desperate and realizing the scope of his errors as he
sits in the dungeon, and Catelyn and Robb are travelling to the Freys to see if
they can find a way to cross the Twins. You begin to realize in this section
just how scattered the Starks are, with Sansa being kept close to Cersei’s
bosom; Arya on the run; Bran and Rickon up at Winterfell and both unable to do
anything; and Jon at the Wall, working as a steward and fighting snow zombies.
But back to Catelyn; when Walder Frey is brought out on his litter, I couldn’t
help but shudder. I know what’s coming with this foul, decrepit old man, and
he’s even more disgusting in the book than he was on the show. I barely remember
him in this scene in season 1, and instead the extent of his rudeness is shown
when Robb and Catelyn return to the castle before the Red Wedding in season 3.
But GRRM lays it all out right here. He’s 90, he’s got a 16-year-old wife, he’s
got countless children and grandchildren, he’s rude and obnoxious and horrible
to everyone around him; the only person I can think of who turns my stomach
more in the book just for the way he treats his own family would be Craster,
the man north of the Wall who rapes his own daughters to beget more daughters
that he can rape. Knowing what’s to come with Frey, I felt a cold chill
throughout this entire scene, muttering under my breath, “Don’t agree to this,
Catelyn… don’t agree to this.” While
I’m the first person to talk about how much I hate spoilers, I must say the
tension of the book is increased tenfold when you know what Ned’s fate will
ultimately be, and when you know what’s going to happen later at the Freys.
And, speaking of which, we now ready ourselves for the big
finish. I can already feel my palms beginning to perspire, knowing what’s
coming next.
Christopher: I can honestly say I’d forgotten how revolting
Walder Frey is. Not that he’s at all sympathetic in the series, but David
Bradley’s portrayal makes him a truculent asshole rather than a repulsive old
man (and this is the actor who played Argus Filch, too!). GRRM’s depiction of
Frey makes my skin crawl, between the verbal tics he gives him and the way he
describes his toothless mouth working, and of course the prospect of him
forcing himself on whatever young bride he’s recently wed. As you say, knowing
what is coming way down the road does in fact make this part of the novel more
harrowing … and it is also retrospectively fascinating to see all the foundation
blocks being laid, especially in terms of Frey’s paper-thin ego and obsession
with family honour.
The scene with Syrio handing the guardsmen their asses is
one of my bittersweet favourites from this novel. I loved that character from
start to finish; and you’re right, there really isn’t any chance that he
survived it. Yet another moment where GRRM dashes expectations with a painful
dose of realism. Inigo Montoya would have survived, but that’s because he
inhabits another fantasy realm. Ditto for D’Artagnan, Zorro, Jack Sparrow, or
even the Dread Pirate Roberts himself … not if they stood and fought, anyway.
Even with a sword in hand, Syrio could not best a knight in full plate.
But he sacrifices himself for his student, and Arya is able
to escape—and in the process kills for the first time. It is a moment that will
haunt her in later books, even after she grows accustomed to killing.
I think it’s worth mentioning the slaughter in the Red Keep,
in part because I remember being somewhat shocked by it my first go-around. Ned
has been taken prisoner, as has Sansa, and if all had gone according to plan,
the Lannisters would also have Arya in hand—certainly, enough hostages to bring
the Stark people to heel? But no—Arya literally trips over the bodies of her
family’s entourage, and even Septa Mordane is murdered as part of what could
only be called a purge. This is really our first glimpse of the zero-sum game
of thrones, a grisly realization of Cersei’s dictum that “you win or you die.”
And on that cheery note, readers, Nikki and I leave you for
another week. Tune in next Monday for our final installment of the Game of
Thrones Book Club!
4 comments:
Great post! Totally agree re: Sansa. The series has her so much more whiny and petulant, but you see in the books that she really is an innocent, just trying to do what she was literally raised to do.
Another great recap! After reading this section I couldn't stop myself and I raced through to the end of the book.
I totally agree regarding Sansa, in the TV show I had no sympathy for her, but in the books I can see more clearly how she was manipulated, especially since she's younger than the actress in the show.
I always enjoy reading these. One small correction is that the Tyrells did not rule the Reach before the Targaryens invaded. The Reach's royal family, the Gardeners, were killed fighting the Targaryens. The Gardeners' stewards at Highgarden, the Tyrells, replaced them as lords (but not kings) over the Reach.
Gulp! I'm behind for the next installment. Pesky holidays getting in the way of my reading time... I definitely agree about Sansa. I feel so sad for her in the book, and I didn't really in the show at all. But I disagree about Viserys. I think he raised Dany for the sole purpose of being a pawn in his quest to gain the throne. He knew he'd be able to use her one day to bargain with some lord or other somewhere who would join forces with him in his cause. His physical and emotional abuse of Dany is unforgivable. I cheered just as much in the book when he got his golden crown as I did during that great scene on the show. Have to run away to read now...
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