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304 pages, Paperback
First published November 30, 2015
The cultures of the Known World, mostly but not exclusively framed by the norms of Westeros, share a good number of deep-seated cultural beliefs: about rank and gender, about honour and face, hospitality, justice, weapons and the habits of dragons. (p.9)
Bloodline is everything for the members of the Great Houses, and their relative standing is determined by the length of their history. p.15)
Membership of a lineage endows nobles with what is perhaps the most important constituent of individual characters: their sense of personal honour. Honour — particularly for a man — revolves around keeping his word, not allowing others to insult him and remembering the history of his House. If he is a bastard, he begins at a disadvantage; if he has no surname, for example, his chances of acquiring honour are very limited indeed. Theon is excluded from some of the responsibilities which go with membership of House Stark, by reason of his ambiguous status — one that's revealed only gradually in the early episodes of Season One. His position as a hostage compromises his sense of honour, particularly in the face of his father's unyielding view of what constitutes Greyjoy honour, with terrible political and personal consequences. (p.19)