bookshelves: autumn-2014, film-only, series, published-2005 Read from November 22 to 23, 2014 Series Four: adapted primarily from the second half of A Storm of Swords, along with elements of A Feast for Crows and A Dance with Dragons.Description: After centuries of bitter strife, the seven pow...
This book literally took me forever to read because it started off really, really weak. I put it down and then didn't pick up very many books for a good while. But then I finished another book I had been trying to finish for a long while and suddenly became determined to finish this one as well.The ...
I loved this series the first time I read them. Upon reread I'm realizing that it is one of my favorite series. I'm hoping to finish a dance of dragons this year to finish up my reread of all the books that are available.
It took me two years to finish this book from start to finish. Two. Years.In contrast, it took me about two weeks to finish (all of) Books 1-3 in George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series.That alone should sum up my feelings for A Feast for Crows, but, lest I one day forget why I dislike t...
I was really happy with this installment in the A Song of Ice and Fire series. I loved some story lines, was disappointed at others, and found myself liking characters I never thought I would. First, I'll mention the story lines I liked. I loved Cersei's story line, specifically what ultimately ha...
It’s easy to see why A Feast for Crows is a bit polarizing; it was published five years after A Storm of Swords, and is not nearly as long as the prior volume. This is actually half of one book, the other half being A Dance with Dragons, split for convenience. The story is split primarily by locatio...
I'm aware that a lot of people hated this one, or not hated, but rather they considered this as their least favorite. You might be wondering why I rated it 5 stars, and why I placed it on my favorites shelf, well this review will probably answer those questions. Spoilers ahead! Only slight though, n...
Excellent installment in the series, although I did miss hearing from Dany, Tyrion, Jon and Bran. You did get to hear Cersi's "voice" in this installment which was both illuminating and disturbing on so many levels, along with Sam, Briennne, Sansa, Arya and Jaime.
With A Feast for Crows, Martin delivers the long-awaited fourth volume of the landmark series that has redefined imaginative fiction and stands as a modern masterpiece in the making. After centuries of bitter strife, the seven powers dividing the land have beaten one another into an uneasy truce. B...
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