A Feast for Crows
US Hardcover Edition |
|
| Author | |
|---|---|
| Country | United States |
| Language | |
| Series | A Song of Ice and Fire |
| Genre(s) | Fantasy novel |
| Publication date | 17 October 2005 (UK) & 8 November 2005 (US) |
| Media type | Print (Hardback & |
| Pages | 753 (US Hardback), 704 (UK Hardback), 1104 (US Paperback) |
| ISBN | ISBN 0-553-80150-3 (US Hardback), ISBN 0-00-224743-7 (UK Hardback), ISBN 0-553-58202-X (US Paperback) |
| Preceded by | A Storm of Swords |
| Followed by | |
A Feast for Crows is the fourth of seven planned novels in A Song of
Ice and Fire, an
Like its predecessor A Storm of Swords, A Feast for Crows was
nominated for the
Due to complexities that arose during the writing process, A Feast for Crows only includes some of the POV characters from the past novels, as well as some new characters who appear only briefly. The remaining characters will return in A Dance with Dragons, the fifth book.
Plot introduction
A Feast for Crows is set in a fictitious world reminiscent of Medieval Europe (primarily on a continent called Westeros), except for the fact that in this world, seasons can last for years, occasionally decades.
Plot summary
A Feast for Crows picks up the tale where A Storm of Swords left off and runs simultaneously with events in the
following novel, A Dance with Dragons. The War of the Five Kings
seems to be winding down. Robb Stark,
The novel spans several months in the first half of the year 300 After the Landing, possibly longer.
In the Seven Kingdoms
In the city of Oldtown, a young novice of the Citadel named Pate steals a master key from one of the maesters and sells it to a mysterious man calling himself the Alchemist. Shortly after receiving his payment, Pate collapses in the street.
In the city of King's Landing, the funeral of Tywin Lannister
is held. To Cersei's distaste, Lord
At the
In the Free City of Braavos, Arya Stark finds her way to the House of Black and White, a temple to the Many-Faced God. There
Arya is inducted into the ranks of novices of the Faceless Men.
Arya learns that the Faceless Men are not simply a band of skilled
Brienne of Tarth continues her quest to find Sansa. She is
found by Podrick Payne, Tyrion's former squire, and she agrees to let him accompany her. They pass north through the town of
Duskendale, encountering the Tyrell army under Lord Randyll Tarly (Sam's father) along the way, where they are joined by an old
acquaintance of Brienne, Ser Hyle Hunt. Brienne's explorations take her along Crackclaw Point, where she kills several of the
now-scattered
Paxter Redwyne's fleet of the Arbor arrives at Dragonstone and the castle is put
under siege, whilst Mace Tyrell leads his army south to invest Storm's End and end the pretensions of Stannis's loyalists in the south once and
for all. Cersei has the High Septon murdered so that he can be replaced by someone loyal to
her, but the newcomer turns out to be a zealous martinet who has the support of the
war-refugees that now throng in the city. He offers to speed up Tommen's coronation and forgive the crown its debts to the church
if Cersei will restore the
In the Eyrie, Littlefinger is confronted by several of the lords of the Vale, who are unhappy with him becoming their de facto ruler after the death of Lady Lysa Arryn. One of the lords, whom Littlefinger bribed ahead of time, breaks custom by baring steel during the meeting. Littlefinger uses the insult to turn the tables on the lords, who eventually allow him to remain Lord Protector of little Lord Robert Arryn for the next year. Afterwards, Littlefinger discusses the deception with Sansa (who is posing as his bastard daughter, Alayne Stone) and is impressed at how quickly she picks up on the subtleties of his scheme. He reveals to her that if something should happen to little Robert, the Eyrie and the name Arryn will pass to Harry Hardyng, a distant nephew of the house, and if Harry and Sansa were to wed, that would give her an army with which to reclaim Winterfell. Whilst Sansa thinks on this, the weather is worsening, a sure sign that winter is almost upon the Seven Kingdoms, and the household of the Eyrie move to the Gates of the Moon at the base of the mountain the Eyrie rests on. During the move Sansa befriends Mya Stone, one of the late King Robert Baratheon's bastard daughters. Sansa also becomes a new mother figure for sickly Robert Arryn.
Jaime departs King's Landing to help end the siege of Riverrun,
where the
The ironborn strike hard along the coast of the Reach, conquering the Shield Islands and
virtually blockading the mouth of the Honeywine and the route into Oldtown. Furious,
Sam's ship reaches Oldtown, barely evading the ironborn reavers. They learn that the ironborn have raided and seized territories on the Arbor and failed an attempt to burn the city harbor of Oldtown. Sam goes to the Citadel, but is intercepted by Archmaester Marwyn. Marwyn reveals that the other archmaesters will not be impressed or moved by Sam's revelations about Daenerys. When Sam asks how Marwyn knows that he was coming, Marwyn reveals that the Citadel has some of the ancient Valyrian obsidian candles, through which they could see things from afar. Marwyn states that nearly two centuries ago the maesters helped kill the last of the dragons to rid the world of magic forever, but now it is returning. Marwyn departs immediately for Slaver's Bay, telling Sam to study hard and fast, for the Wall will need his services. Sam is left in the company of two students, Alleras the Sphinx and a boy who claims to be Pate, the POV character of the prologue.
On the Iron Islands
Following the death of King Balon Greyjoy, a kingsmoot is summoned by Aeron Damphair, Balon's youngest brother and the most respected priest of the Drowned God, to decide who will be king. With Theon Greyjoy a prisoner
of the
Euron launches an ambitious campaign against the Reach, sending ships under his brother
Victarion to conquer the Shield Islands and raid the coast. Initial appetites for plunder are sated by the raids in
Westeros, however, and support for Euron's plan for a trip
In Dorne
In Sunspear, the capital of Dorne, news is received of the death of Oberyn Martell at the hands of
Gregor Clegane, although Gregor was mortally wounded in the same
battle. Oberyn's bastard daughters, the Sand Snakes, demand various plans for vengeance,
including attacking Oldtown and raiding the Reach. Prince Doran Martell has them locked up to prevent them from doing anything
too precipitous, and sends word to King's Landing confirming his loyalty. His eldest daughter and heir (due to Dorne's
equal primogeniture), Arianne is disgusted with her
father's weakness and suspicious that her father would prefer to supplant her with her brother Quentyn, who she learns has vanished eastwards on unknown business. Princess
Prince Doran finally lets his daughter visit him and learns of her grievances. He explains that whilst he had intended Quentyn to follow him as Prince of Dorne, he had a greater role in mind for Arianne: she was to have become Queen of all Westeros. Arianne is confused, but learns that Doran planned to wed her to Viserys Targaryen, but that plan was thwarted when Khal Drogo killed Viserys. Now the plan has changed. Quentyn is on his way to Slaver's Bay to find and win the Martells' heart's desire: "Fire and Blood."
Characters
The tale is told through the point of view of 12 POV characters and, as with previous volumes, a one-off prologue POV.
- Prologue: Pate, a novice of the maesters in Oldtown.
- The Prophet, The Drowned Man: Aeron "Damphair" Greyjoy
- The Captain of the Guards: Areo Hotah, Captain of Guards to Prince Doran Martell of Dorne
The Queen Regent Cersei Lannister - Lady Brienne, the Maid of Tarth
- Samwell Tarly, a sworn brother of the
Night's Watch - Arya Stark, later referred to as "Cat of the Canals"
Ser Jaime Lannister , Lord Commander of the Kingsguard- Sansa Stark, pretending to be Lord Petyr Baelish's bastard daughter "Alayne Stone" (by which name some of her chapters are known)
- The Kraken's Daughter: Asha Greyjoy, King Balon's daughter
- The Soiled Knight: Ser Arys Oakheart of the Kingsguard
- The Iron Captain, The Reaver: Victarion Greyjoy, King Balon's brother
- The Queenmaker, The Princess in the Tower: Arianne Martell, a Dornish princess
Delay in publication
The novel was published five years and two months after the previous volume in the series, A Storm of Swords. This was
due to a series of problems that arose during the writing of the novel. George R. R. Martin originally planned for the fourth
book to be called A Dance with Dragons with the story picking up five years after the events of A Storm of Swords
(primarily to advance the ages of the younger characters). However, during the writing process it was discovered that this was
leading to an overreliance on flashbacks to fill in the gap. After twelve months or so of working on the book, Martin decided to
abandon much of what had previously been written and start again, this time picking up immediately after the end of A Storm of
Swords. He announced this decision, along with the new title A Feast for Crows, at the World Science Fiction
Convention in
The reason for the subsequent delays were that the novel grew too long and the format changed from the previous book, with the
introduction of short-lived POV characters who only had one or two chapters apiece. Martin also wrote a 250-page prologue to the
novel which he then scrapped and scattered throughout the novel. Finally, when the novel was nearing completion his publishers
realised it was significantly longer than A Storm of Swords and requested it be split in half for publication. After
initially considering publishing it as 'Part 1' and 'Part 2', Martin's friend and fellow author
Martin supplied a note at the end of A Feast for Crows explaining the reason for the split and promising that A Dance with Dragons would follow with the missing POV characters 'next year'. However, subsequently Martin embarked on a four-month signing tour in the US, Canada and Europe at the request of his publishers and lost that time in writing the novel, which no longer has an expected publication date.
Allusions/references to other works
Bakkalon, the Pale Child, is one of the Gods worshipped mostly by soldiers at the House of Black and White. This god appeared already in Martin's 1975 story And Seven Times Never Kill Man (where he is worshipped by a religious sect called Steel Angels), as well as in some other stories of the same era.
In one chapter, Qyburn mentions a maester named Rigney and his (Rigney's) belief that time is a wheel. This seems to be an
allusion to fantasy author
In the Chapter "Cat of the Canals" a reference is made to a story about the "Lord of the Woeful Countance," which is believed
to be a reference to
Release details
- 2005, UK, Voyager ISBN 0-00-224743-7, Pub date 17 October 2005, hardback
- 2005, UK, Voyager ISBN 0-00-722463-X, Pub date ? ? 2005, hardback (presentation edition)
- 2005, USA, Spectra Books ISBN 0-553-80150-3, Pub date 8 November 2005, hardback
- 2006, UK, Voyager ISBN 0-00-224742-9, Pub date 25 April 2006, paperback
Translations
- Bulgarian: Bard (2006): "Пир за Врани".
- Croatian: Algoritam (2006): "Gozba vrana".
Dutch : Luitingh (2006): "Een feestmaal voor kraaien".French : Hardcover: Pygmalion (2006-...): "Le chaos", "Les sables de Dorne" (to be released), possibly additional unnamed books.German : Single volume, Fantasy Productions (2006): "Krähenfest" (to be released). Two volumes, Blanvalet (2006): "Zeit der Krähen", "Die dunkle Königin".Italian : "Il Dominio della Regina" (Volume 1, 2006), more to come.- Polish: "Uczta dla wron".
- Russian: "Пир стервятников".
Serbian : Laguna (2006): "Gozba za vrane".
Awards and nominations
Hugo Award – Best Novel (nominated) – (2006)- British Fantasy Award – Best Novel (nominated) – (2006)
- Quill Award – Best Novel (Science Fiction & Fantasy) (nominated) – (2006)
References
- Zimmerman, W. Frederick (15). Unauthorized A Feast for Crows Analysis (Paperback), Nimble Books.
External links
- GeorgeRRMartin.com - official website of the author.
- A Wiki Of Ice And Fire Wiki dedicated to A Song of Ice and Fire
|
A Song of Ice and Fire by |
|
|---|---|
| Novels | A Game of
Thrones (1996) · A Clash of
Kings (1998) · A Storm of
Swords (2000) · A Feast for Crows
(2005) · |
| Novellas | The Hedge Knight · The Sworn Sword |
| Major Houses | |
| Other characters | Minor Houses · Independent characters ·
Complete character list · |
| Organizations | |
| Places | Westeros · Cities · Strongholds · |
| Wars and tourneys | Historic
wars · |
| Games | A Game of Thrones: |
|
|
|---|
|
Novels: Dying
of the Light • Windhaven •
Fevre Dream • |
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