18 May 2026
18 May 2026
Winter is coming for everyone
A Game of Thrones
by George R.R. Martin
I put off reading this for years because I assumed it would just be dragons and swordfights, and what actually got me was how ruthlessly it treats its characters like real, fallible people instead of chess pieces built to survive the plot. The Stark family gets pulled into the political machinery of a kingdom on the edge of collapse, and George R.R. Martin's genius is refusing to protect anyone just because they're likeable or important, which makes every chapter feel genuinely uncertain in a way most fantasy doesn't dare to be. This is one of the best fantasy series to sink into if what you actually want is politics, betrayal, and family loyalty tested past its breaking point, with the supernatural elements simmering at the edges rather than dominating every page. I remember finishing certain chapters and having to sit the book down for a minute just to process what had happened, and I don't think I'm alone in that. Read it when you have the appetite for something morally complicated, where you'll root for people who do questionable things and question people you thought you could trust completely. It's dense with names and houses at first, keep a light mental map for the first hundred pages and it settles into place. Pick this up during a long stretch of downtime, a rainy week, a holiday break, because once the Starks' story gets its hooks in you, you will not want to put it down for something as trivial as sleep.


