Hi, I’ve been reading your Dany and Jon asks and I am really curious why you think the political!jon/ucl theory goes against the themes of the books? Thanks!

turtle-paced:

“It was the cold,” Gared said with iron certainty. “I saw men freeze last winter, and the one before, when I was half a boy. Everyone talks about snows forty foot deep, and how the ice wind comes howling out of the north, but the real enemy is the cold.”

– Prologue, AGoT

The prologue’s there to frame the conflict of the entire series, and it’s outright stated that the cold is the enemy. (And at the end of the book, Dany proclaims that the fire is hers. Bookends.) The ultimate antagonist in this series is an inhuman, anti-human force against which all humanity should unite. 

The idea that people should work together to face threats greater than themselves recurs across the series. Whether it’s Ned telling Arya that she and Sansa will need each other, Catelyn imploring the Baratheon brothers to work together, or Jon and Stannis making common cause at the Wall itself, the idea’s there. The White Walkers are a problem bigger than anyone, and people should work together. The idea that at the business end of the series one of the protagonists will callously manipulate another protagonist into helping sort out the final showdown is just bizarre to me. Especially when the other option is one protagonist convincing another protagonist to lend a hand and a few dragons, nothing but good faith between them. Even the show has started to bear in this direction from time to time.

I think this theory is also pretty OOC for even the show versions of Jon and Dany. The show’s got its issues with showing us one thing and telling us another, but that theory pretty well denies that Dany could ever want to save the world because the world’s worth saving, and ignores Jon’s distress over deceiving Ygritte.

Given the options between “offscreen, Jon decided to give up on a good faith alliance with Daenerys and instead seduce her into offering her assistance,” and “the Jon/Dany romance writing did not come off altogether as convincing as intended,” I know which I find more plausible.

alisongeorge:

At last! Here’s the full piece I made for the upcoming Game of Thrones Art Book. It’s called Draw Em With The Pointy End. There are over 100 artists involved, and let me tell you all the pieces are fantastic.

There is very little I want more in this earth than for Arya and Jon to be reunited, but I’m so afraid it’ll only happen in my dreams. So for my piece I decided it should at least happen in their dreams.

If you’d like to contribute to the kickstarter HERE is the link. This project is super exciting and I can’t wait to see all this art in a book. Below are the other social media links if you want to follow our progress

twitter | facebook | tumblr

Why do you think Ned called Lyanna’s son Jon? Was he hoping for his support against Robert if the truth came out?

asbraveasrobb:

racefortheironthrone:

Because Jon Arryn was a beloved father-figure (especially with Rickard dead) and Ned wanted to honor him. I don’t think it was a political motivation at all. 

Promise me, Ned, Lyanna pleaded, and Jon’s name is that promise. Jon Arryn was a beloved father-figure who took Ned under his protection, and went to war when the king called for his head. In a single name Ned promises to be a father to Jon Snow the same way Jon Arryn was a father to him, to raise him, protect him, and defy the crown for him if need be. If Robert ever found out, Ned was choosing Jon.

asoiafuniversity:

The character I’m probably most like in real life is Samwell Tarly. Good old Sam. And the character I’d want to be? Well who wouldn’t want to be Jon Snow — the brooding, Byronic, romantic hero whom all the girls love. Theon [Greyjoy] is the one I’d fear becoming. Theon wants to be Jon Snow, but he can’t do it. He keeps making the wrong decisions. He keeps giving into to his own selfish, worst impulses.

In some senses, Theon is struggling all the way through to be a hero. They both come out of the same situation: they’re both raised in Winterfell by Eddard Stark, but they’re not part of the real, core family. Theon is a ward, and Jon Snow is a bastard son. So they’re both a little outside, but Jon handles this successfully, and Theon fails to handle this. He is poisoned by his own envy and his sense of not belonging.

George R.R. Martin, “Fantasy Needs Magic” Interview, August 2017

aryajon:

Jon Snow Week – Day One – Favourite Season / Book

A Dance with Dragons

“The Night’s Watch will make for Hardhome. I ride to Winterfell alone, unless …” Jon paused. “… is there any man here who will come stand with me?”

The roar was all he could have hoped for, the tumult so loud that the two old shields tumbled from the walls. Soren Shieldbreaker was on his feet, the Wanderer as well. Toregg the Tall, Brogg, Harle the Huntsman and Harle the Handsome both, Ygon Oldfather, Blind Doss, even the Great Walrus. I have my swords, thought Jon Snow, and we are coming for you, Bastard.

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