Hokay, I haven't finished yet (about 300 pages to go, or less), but I was getting so annoyed I just decided to read through this thread. Hardly any surprises, tbh.
The shining points of this book so far for me are:
Theon, first and foremost
Lord Manderly (though his ruse with imprisoning Davos at the start wasn't surprising at all)
Maybe Jon being very active, though it will cost him.
All in all, I'm having trouble finding the motivation to finish this book. Daenerys and Tyrion, two of my favourite characters, are ABSOLUTELY BULLSHIT throughout the book. It's pretty much the chapters I enjoyed the least so far. And if I have the urge to skip chapters of my fav characters, something bad's going on. I can't believe Dany's still stuck around Slaver's Bay at this point, by my count she should be around Volantis by now at the very least. She should've just burned down all three slaver cities and continue on. She keeps claiming she's a dragon, but she shows very little dragonness in this book to me - would that she acted more like Jon. It's like she actually regressed since Astapor. Now she's flown off on her dragon. Mind you, it seems that Drogon takes care of everything on it's own, really - bears to think, just how intelligent and aware the dragons are?
Most happenings in the book are hardly surprising so far, I must admit. I am guessing now that the Harpy is the green priestess, but I may be wrong... I do wonder at one thing: the cave when Bran is, is that in the Lands of Always Winter? I recall them going through some lakes and the lakes in that map are very far north indeed. The only place where I was genuinely surprised was when Tyrion ran into Jorah in Volantis (and, of course, the revelation of Aegon and Jon Connington, even if it feels rather out of the blue).
Stannis is seriously infuriating in how stuck up and stubborn you can be, against all reason. Fuck him, really.
And last but not least... everyone on the Wall besides Jon seem to be so monumentally retarted that it seriously counters immersion. The extent they insist on the wildlings being the enemy, even after seeing the Others and Wights with their own eyes, is just unbelievable. It's a major turnoff for me, and I must say it poisons the WHOLE storyline at the wall. Seriously, can't those people understand that these would come south as wights anyway? What kind of retards are they and still have the brainpower required to process food into shit and stay upright? It's so far so badly done and forced that it's a major factor turning me away from the book.
Another grievance: where's the dying? Over 700 pages in and still nobody important dies? Really, GRRM? So, Stannis freezes to death, Jon is stabbed by his brothers, Quentyn (who's a rather minor character anwyay, and a huge disappointment after Doran's outro in AFFC) dies to dragonfire...
Bonus notes: Hosteen Frey... finally a member of that wretched family that's actually worth something. Surprising, that!
All in all: in Ramsay Bolton we finally meet someone worse than Cersei. Quite a feat.
PS. Almost forgot: POVs I want to see in the next book:
Coldhands (if he 'survived')
Melisandre
Connington
(not very probable, but!) Drogon!
This post has been edited by Gothos: 20 July 2011 - 01:35 PM
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; because there is not effort without error and shortcomings; but who does actually strive to do the deed; who knows the great enthusiasm, the great devotion, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement and who at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly. So that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.