Editors Reads
FantasyEpic Fantasy

George R.R. Martin

American · b. 1948

3 books reviewed Avg rating 4.5 / 5Top rating 4.7 / 5

George R.R. Martin is an American author whose A Song of Ice and Fire series — including A Game of Thrones and A Storm of Swords — reimagined epic fantasy with political realism and moral complexity.

George R.R. Martin began his A Song of Ice and Fire series in 1996 with A Game of Thrones, a novel that immediately distinguished itself from conventional epic fantasy by applying the moral complexity and political specificity of serious historical fiction to a world of dragons and prophecy. The series follows multiple storylines across the continent of Westeros — the scheming for the Iron Throne, the supernatural threat gathering beyond the Wall, the exile and return of the Targaryen heir — and Martin populates it with a cast of hundreds, each pursuing their own interests in ways that generate conflict, alliance, and treachery in equal measure.

A Storm of Swords, the third volume, is widely considered the series’ peak — dense, shocking, and operatic in scale, containing several of the most talked-about plot reversals in modern fantasy. A Clash of Kings and A Dance with Dragons extend the world with the same commitment to consequence: characters die, plans fail, and the gap between honour and survival is explored without sentiment. Martin’s greatest contribution to the genre is his insistence that the costs of violence and power should be real, not tidily narrativised away.

The most significant criticism of Martin — and it is a substantial one — is the indefinite delay of the series’ conclusion: The Winds of Winter remains unfinished decades after its predecessor. For readers who have invested in the earlier volumes, this is a genuine grievance. The series also expands in ways that some find unwieldy, with plotlines multiplying faster than they resolve. But the first three volumes in particular represent epic fantasy at its most ambitious and accomplished.


Reading Guides

3 Books Reviewed

A Storm of Swords book cover
Bestseller

A Storm of Swords

by George R.R. Martin

4.7

The War of the Five Kings reaches its shattering climax as the Red Wedding, Joffrey's poisoning, and Jon Snow's transformation at the Wall change everything in Westeros.

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A Clash of Kings book cover
Bestseller

A Clash of Kings

by George R.R. Martin

4.5

Five kings war over the Iron Throne as supernatural threats gather beyond the Wall, and Tyrion Lannister arrives in King's Landing to impose order on a kingdom descending into chaos.

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Reading Guides & Lists

Frequently Asked Questions

What order should I read George R.R. Martin books?

Start with A Game of Thrones (1996), the first volume of A Song of Ice and Fire. The series runs: A Game of Thrones, A Clash of Kings, A Storm of Swords, A Feast for Crows, A Dance with Dragons. The companion Fire & Blood and The World of Ice and Fire can be read after the main series.

Has George R.R. Martin finished A Song of Ice and Fire?

As of 2026, The Winds of Winter (book 6) has not been published. Martin has been writing it for over a decade. The series currently stands at five novels. Martin has confirmed the series will end with A Dream of Spring (book 7).

Is Game of Thrones (the show) a good substitute for the books?

The first four seasons of the HBO show closely follow the first three books, but diverge significantly from book 4 onward and invent an ending. The books contain far more detail, subplots, and character development. They are not interchangeable experiences.

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