Active Users:1201 Time:23/11/2024 03:47:30 AM
Re: Funny how people can like a book for completely opposite reasons. CatherineSedai Send a noteboard - 20/07/2011 06:11:10 AM

I love reading her chapters. She's so far gone and paranoid its like a psychological version of watching Ramsay Snow in action. Except its more plausible because her insanity is contained, whereas I can't see Ramsay getting away with his over-the-top villainy and insane antics forever. If Manderly can get his throat cut for a smart-ass remark, Ramsay is going to push someone too far someday and get put down. But Cersei puts up a facade and evades that sort of enmity.

When I read Cersei, I just want to slap her up and down the Kingsroad.

I don't get why character have to die for some readers. Why do people think it improves the story if the point of view characters (and thus our means of learning the story) are eliminated? And it's not like this is some sort of murder-fest with constant killing of PoV characters. Name me one character that has died for good after having a PoV in more than one book. IIRC, EVERY PoV character to die, does so in the book where his first PoV occurs! Martin is plainly only giving them PoV to make their deaths more shocking, which seems kind of like a cheap manipulative trick, IMO.


I didn't say i wanted him to die, I don't, but ol' George hasn't killed anyone off in awhile and it would be a return to form. Actually, Robb died after having PoV's in 2 books (or is it 3?) Martin kills PoV characters to make the suspense more palpable, to up the ante so you know that nobody is safe.

Where do you get that? How is she even all that badass at any point over the long term? When she was banging Genghis Khan and begging him to conquer her homeland for her? When she sat around reacting to things people told her? When dragons happened to be hatched for her? That was a stroke of good fortune, but it's hardly more badass than Frodo inheriting the One Ring, or Rand being the Dragon Reborn. It's just a characteristic that happened to her. She won the genetic lottery. Whee. Beyond that, she's done nothing aside from reacting to the plans other people made for her life, and been a bitch, but expressed in egotistical terms like Waking the Dragon. Maybe it looked cool when she stole the Unsullied from Astapor and wreaked havoc on the slave city, but it should be abundantly clear exactly what has come of that little bit of "badassery" from reading DwD! In this book, all she did was get upset that her dragon ate a kid, chain up the two innocent dragons and act like THAT was some major tragedy, and fuck her crush's brains out in anticipation of her wedding to someone else. Lovely human being, isn't she? And don't give me that usual fantasy-setting trope about the poor princess forced to marry a man she doesn't love for the good of her people. She married him solely to hang onto her stolen throne in Mereen, completely oblivious to the irony of her cursing the Usurper, who merely took the throne for petty little reasons like HER FATHER TRYING TO MURDER HIM. And then after her attempt to impoverish people by enforcing her morality on them falter, she flies off on her dragon to indulge herself YET AGAIN, and ignore the mess left behind in her wake. THAT'S what being born a princess really means to people like her - drop things wherever and whenever you want, someone else is always eagerly waiting to pick up after you! And by the way, how is it that when she's emotionally disturbed and summons peasant girl to go down on her at night it is portrayed in a way to evoke sympathy for her loneliness, when a male character doing the same thing (i.e. Theon in Winterfell) is portrayed negatively and as a character flaw?


See my reply thread further down labeled "Actually,"

The Heroine of the story, My ass. All I saw in her storyline were some very compelling reasons to be glad of Aegon's survival. Here's hoping the RIGHTFUL king of the Dragon line will spare us the reign of Cersei II: This Time She Has Dragons.


Haha! :) So instead we get Aegon VI: No Dragons This Time.

Yeah! Hooray for being born into the right family! Woot! Nothing demonstrates an awesome character like wielding a great and dangerous power over which you have no control!


Not sure that her family has anything to do with this, but I'm pretty sure when you were a kid you didn't say "Hooray, Spider-Man, WOOT that you got bit by just the right spider to wield a power outside your ability to rationalize, and win you that MJ poon."

Yes! Let's hear it for the time-honored method of wielding power by sleeping with a man who has earned the power!


Not even remotely expecting her to work this one out on her back, she's wearing bloody rags standing next to dragon. I don't think she's gonna have to bang anybody to get them to listen.

Marvelous demonstrating of rational faculties there! Yet, when Robert the Usurper lost track of time, people probably scorned him for being a drunk.


But unlike Robert, Daenerys has lost track of time due to her hectic schedule of trying to bring peace, prosperity, and freedom to a nation, instead of appointing someone better to do it for her.

What did Aegon do that was so wrong as to deserve that?


Well, he asked for it, for one :-P

Yay! The way is being cleared for the spoiled emotional teenager to come claw her way to power and loose her uncontrolled carnivorous pyromanical lizards on the Seven Kingdoms! All those people who will have to die just because one puppet king has a better grounding in moral duties than the other are a mere detail!


You can never save everyone, and freedom and justice have it's price. This is what would have happened if American's had wanted to go back to England to free themselves from dynastic tyrrany.

And may I say you like some weird people. The silent, devoid-of-free-will partner of one of the scheming, plotting archvillain and architect of betrayal in the Seven Kingdoms; the devious, cowardly eunuch who manipulates events to induce a civil war and inflict further sufferings on the land because of his arbitrary favoritism of one family; and the aforementioned vapid twit of a self-entitled princess. I find it deliciously ironic that as Barristan Selmy recounts his experience in escaping Joffrey he says how the truth was not welcome at that court, only to have his story finish with Daenerys refusing to listen to the truths he has to tell about a man her spoiled, sadistic & arrogant brother told her was a villain. Because he would have been under 10 if he HAD ever met Ned Stark which makes him a much better judge of character than the knight who has served four or five kings and fought against the man and served alongside him on a council.

Nobody ever said Daenerys was perfect, but her not wanting to hear the truth that the wingman who helped her entire family slide into near extinction is not quite the same as Joffrey not wanting to see what his people wanted or what was best for the Realm. Daenerys is biased and idealistic, but Joffrey was sadistic and deranged. And have I mentioned that nobody seems to have bothered to teach Daenerys anything about political intrigue, yet she has been very successful making executive decisions that render auspicious outcomes. She may have lost her tentative hold on Meereen the minute they thought she was dead, but she held Meereen with words and wits and self-sacrifice. (and a few swords, aye.)

Seriously? She obviously agreed to the terms offered her to escape said noose in the first place! Namely, to kill Jaime. She was obviously released to lure him into a trap. Given what a bitch Catelyn was in real life, and seriously doubting her resurrection has strengthened her moral fiber, I am almost certain that she would prefer to have Jaime brought to her to be hanged or beheaded or something else in her power, rather than simply send Brienne to whack him on sight. The only question now is to what extent she is willingly complying, or if (almost certainly) she's trying to find a way to go along with Catelyn's demands until she can free Ser Hyle & Pod from captivity. Brienne being nearly as stupid as Jaime's insults made her out to be, she would probably accept Hyle's death as a fair trade to preserve Jaime's life. After all, he gave her a shiny sword and vouched for her honor, so what is an admitted lifetime of treason, incest, oath-breaking and attempted child-murder!


Brienne has a code of ethics that rivals Ned Stark's. She swore to find Ned Stark's daughter and even frightened, alone, and lost she swears never to quit looking. I don't know that she would lure Jaime to anything. She regards Jaime with a mixture of admiration and disapproval anyway, but, unlike many people in our story who refuse to believe that people change, Brienne accepts that Jaime is not the same man he was 20 years ago, and that he may possibly deserve the chance to prove himself.

As I noted above, just a little over the top. Martin's villains are not nearly as complex as people like to think. It's more than his heroes suck too.


Yeah, Ramsay Snow is no Mirri Maz Duur, but I think George topped the charts on brutality here. (not really a good thing)

He's certainly paid for enough of them. As for his unhappy life so far, that's the price he willingly paid to ride the Lannister gravy-train. This, of all books, makes that clear. I like Tyrion too, but let's not pretend that his own choices haven't caused almost as much of his suffering as his shit-bag of a father imposed. When you get right down to it, he resents not getting what normal men get, but how then is his lot any different than a woman? They are seldom given the power, prestige or freedom Tyrion yearns for and is denied, in the society of Westeros (or most of the rest of the world). Tyrion as a son is even less use than a daughter, because he has no reproductive value. He wants the wealth and power, but this is a world in which those things are based on ability to fight for, take and keep them, and he is singularly ill-equipped to do so. He might want a marriage, but when offered one, is forced to admit that him as a groom is a "cruel" thing to do to a woman. People don't want to marry their daughters to him, because they don't want their grandchildren to suffer what Tyrion has lived with. Yes, he drew a shitty hand, but he's also had to "suffer" it in a relatively independent lifestyle supported by the gold of Casterly Rock. How many other dwarfs have their fathers pay for servants to do those tasks for which they are ill-equipped to handle for themselves, or design custom saddles? Tyrion whines when he can't partake of a hooker for a few days, but many men are forced to go their whole lives without even that comfort, because they can't shower a woman with gold to pretend she likes him. The most affecting part of that last phrase of his father ringing through his head should be that he has no idea where whores go, because for all his delusions of treating people nicely, the recurring theme of his sexual relationships to this point has been exploitation & degradation, and his ignorance of the answer to the riddle of "where do whores go" only highlights that for all his politeness to his pretty young hookers, he has really been no more than another john who used them and forgot about them once he pulled out. The idea that Martin seems to be trying to convey is "Poor freak, having to depend on whores for sex," but that's like feeling bad for the criminal who is stuck ripping off the poor to survive, because the beleaguered fellow never gets a chance at the bigger scores. How much thought or pity IS given to the women he is using thus, and who are effectively slaves, despite the official laws against slavery in Westeros.

Yes, what happened to Tysha was sad, but he exposed her to that by marrying her. He knew their marriage was forbidden and would have been disapproved of, or else he would never have taken the precautions he did. While it in no way excuses Tywin's behavior (and the discovery of Shae's last patron should destroy any last vestiges of acceptance of Tywin's remonstrances at face value), Tyrion's own actions provided the openings for that treatment. Tyrion's life sucked, but that was equal parts fate, his father's issues (and Tyrion is hardly the person most wronged by Tywin by a longshot) and his own self-destructive behavior. There is no reason to suppose he is "entitled" to a happy ending, unless you mean the ones he has so generously paid Shae & her ilk to provide. Maybe if he straightens out and does something to be worthy of a happy ending, then we can say so.


WOAH.

Tyrion certainly is a spurned and spoiled second son who still lives better than most whole men.

He does treat women shamefully. Everybody does. But not until after Shae. He always treated whores with a lot more respect and dignity than any other men. He wants a lady love, not a whore, but believes he will never have one, so he settles for the arms and embraces of the paid. However, he still treats them like ladies. (Men are often much more rude to Ladies than Tyrion is to whores) In the beginning he tried to treat Shae like he was a Lannister and she was a whore, but she treated him as an equal, and he came to see her as such. He loved her, protected her, and provided for her no differently than Ned Stark did for Lady Catelyn, and she did not love him in the early years of their marriage. Tyrion did the same for Tysha, until his beloved brother, who never lied to him, told him she was a whore. And Tyrion, with low self-esteem, believed that no normal woman would want to wed and bed him. Heartbroken, he learned the wrong lesson. Tywin Lannister wanted to keep his son from the lowborn and whores alike, but Tyrion learned that the only love he would ever had would cost him gold. With Shae, she accepted it all and wanted more. He denied her what he couldn't give her and what he had to to keep her safe, and she testified against him and then wound up in his father's bed, the rival of a lifetime, literally. Now Tyrion, twice deeply wounded and emotionally baggaged, is finally treating whores the way everyone else in Westeros always did. And he is seeking for his star-crossed lady love, just like all the other foolish men did, just like Robert Baratheon, Petyr Baelish, and Prince Rhaegar.

The fact that he doesn't know where whores go is NOT an indication that he is out of touch with the whores themselves. There is obviously no answer to the "Where do whores go" riddle, the point Tywin made was; "I care little and less about this girl, and you will never find her anyway." Tyrion asks the question frequently in self-aware irony, because there is no answer, and if there were it wouldn't find him Tysha anywhere. In this age, finding one person is nearly impossible, as about 50% of our surviving cast can attest to.

Westerosi whores are not bedslaves any more than a Westerosi tourney knight is a Meereneese Pit Fighter. Haven't you learned from George? We are all slaves. Only some are paid in food, shelter, and clothes, while others are paid in coin that they use to buy food, shelter, and clothes. A slave may be bred to another slave of their master's choosing, but in Westeros a daughter will be bred to a son, and the Father's will make the choosing. A slaver may sell one of his slaves children, or a man may sell his child into slavery. In Westeros a Lord may take a man's child as a ward or hostage, or a man can make his boy an apprentice, or a maester, or a squire. The Black Brothers are even closer to being slaves, as almost none of them are there by choice, they are there for life, and they make their wages in food tithes. Even the Kings and Queens must sell themselves in marriage for the good of their peoples and the benefit of the realm.

I hope Tyrion finds Tysha because it's so far fetched and dreamy it just might happen. His is one of the few happinesses that will not doom a realm
I always say, if you must mount the gallows, give a jest to the crowd, a coin to the hangman, and make the drop with a smile on your lips. ~Birgitte
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Actually, - 20/07/2011 04:57:17 AM 996 Views
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Re: Funny how people can like a book for completely opposite reasons. - 20/07/2011 06:11:10 AM 1136 Views
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