Written by Jon Williams
I can hear the shrieks of frustration over this headline, as News and Views readers look at their calendars. “Wasn’t yesterday the equinox?” I hear you asking. “Isn’t winter finally over?”
In one
sense, yes, that’s absolutely true. In another sense, however, the harshest
days of winter are still on the horizon. “Winter is coming” are the words of
the Starks of Winterfell, one of seven families locked in a war that has swept
through the kingdom of Westeros in HBO’s hit series Game of Thrones. The show’s
fourth season premieres on Sunday, April 6, at 9:00 p.m.
The first
season of Game of Thrones made
its HBO debut on April 17, 2011. It quickly won acclaim from viewers and
critics alike. The first episode (itself titled “Winter Is Coming”) scored 2.2
million viewers, and that number grew to over three million before the season
was over. It was nominated for thirteen Emmy Awards, winning two of them,
including Best Supporting Actor for Peter Dinklage, who plays Tyrion Lannister,
better known as “The Imp.”
Upon seeing
the numbers for the first season’s premiere episode, HBO executives immediately
renewed Game of Thrones for a second
season, which began on April 1, 2012. That season built upon the critical
and commercial success of the first, growing to over four million viewers for
the season finale and garnering another eleven Emmy nominations and six wins.
The third
season grew to even more notable heights, averaging more than five million
viewers for its ten episodes, plus sixteen Emmy nominations and two wins. The
ninth episode, titled “The Rains of Castamere,” featured the Red Wedding, one
of the most shocking scenes ever shown on television. I won’t give away any
spoilers, but those of you who watch—you know what I mean.
The series,
of course, is based on bestselling author George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire series of fantasy
novels. The first season covers the first book, A
Game of Thrones (originally published in 1996), from which the series
took its name. Likewise, the second season follows the second novel, A
Clash of Kings. The third season, however, only covers roughly half of A
Storm of Swords; the fourth season, reputed to be the darkest yet, will
take on the rest. Two other books in the series have been published: A
Feast for Crows and A
Dance with Dragons. The sixth book will be titled The Winds of Winter; no release date has been announced, but it’s
close enough to completion for Martin to have released excerpts onto the
Internet. The series will conclude with the seventh book, A Dream of Spring.
The Game of Thrones series and Song of Ice and Fire books are extremely
popular right now. Make sure you have them all on your shelves so patrons can
catch up on what’s happening in Westeros in advance of the Season 4 premiere.
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