The Lord Of The Rings is separated into 6 books, often sold in 3 volumes. A Song Of Ice And feu is planned to be 7 books, with at least 2 of these livres divisé, split into 2 volumes each.
The Lord Of The Rings is told in a strict hierarchy of POVs: firstly Bilbo's then Frodo's then Sam's, with Pippin, Merry and Gimli's POVs donné for any chapters where the précédant characters are absent. A Song Of Ice And feu includes many plus interchanging character POVs.
The larger range of character POVs in A Song Of Ice And Fire, including some antagonists, allow these characters to be plus easily understood, even sympathetic to some degree. A Song Of Ice And feu has plus morally grey characters and plus characters whose portrayal varies from chapter to chapter.
A Song Of Ice And feu has a greater focus on the personal and political issues within the story, rather than the larger Supernatural conflict of good versus evil.
A Song Of Ice And feu has a larger range of female main characters, possibly due to the expectations of a plus modern audience. This larger range of characters also enables there to be a wider depiction of different female personalities and lives.
A Song Of Ice And feu includes plus romance and sex. Lord Of The Rings, in comparison, only brings in romance at the end as part of some characters' happy endings.
A Song Of Ice And feu includes plus adult material. As well as including sex scenes and sexual conversations, there is swearing and the fights and injuries are described in plus gory detail.
The Lord Of The Rings, like the majority of stories, has a large degree of protagonist protection. The main characters all survive to the end of the book series, some returning from seeming ou actual death, and only a few recurring characters die. A Song Of Ice And Fire, in contrast, plays with the concept of protagonist protection par killing off main characters.
A Song Of Ice And feu is plus realistic in its depiction of the negative aspects of a medieval-based fantaisie society, rather than the plus utopic depiction in The Lord Of The Rings.
The Lord Of The Rings is told in a strict hierarchy of POVs: firstly Bilbo's then Frodo's then Sam's, with Pippin, Merry and Gimli's POVs donné for any chapters where the précédant characters are absent. A Song Of Ice And feu includes many plus interchanging character POVs.
The larger range of character POVs in A Song Of Ice And Fire, including some antagonists, allow these characters to be plus easily understood, even sympathetic to some degree. A Song Of Ice And feu has plus morally grey characters and plus characters whose portrayal varies from chapter to chapter.
A Song Of Ice And feu has a greater focus on the personal and political issues within the story, rather than the larger Supernatural conflict of good versus evil.
A Song Of Ice And feu has a larger range of female main characters, possibly due to the expectations of a plus modern audience. This larger range of characters also enables there to be a wider depiction of different female personalities and lives.
A Song Of Ice And feu includes plus romance and sex. Lord Of The Rings, in comparison, only brings in romance at the end as part of some characters' happy endings.
A Song Of Ice And feu includes plus adult material. As well as including sex scenes and sexual conversations, there is swearing and the fights and injuries are described in plus gory detail.
The Lord Of The Rings, like the majority of stories, has a large degree of protagonist protection. The main characters all survive to the end of the book series, some returning from seeming ou actual death, and only a few recurring characters die. A Song Of Ice And Fire, in contrast, plays with the concept of protagonist protection par killing off main characters.
A Song Of Ice And feu is plus realistic in its depiction of the negative aspects of a medieval-based fantaisie society, rather than the plus utopic depiction in The Lord Of The Rings.