Girls Gone Canon Cast - ASOIAF Episode 151 — ASOS Samwell I featuring Yolkboy
Episode Date: January 21, 2022Sobbing, we started another POV. As the supernatural threat rises, so does Sam's courage, whether he knows it or not. Yolkboy of Radio Westeros joins us to explore Sam's psyche as his childhood tra...uma gets a dose of even more trauma, thanks to the wights and the Others chasing the Night's Watch (or what's left of it). P.S. Be sure to keep your eyes peeled for the upcoming Radio Westeros episode all about Samwell Tarly on their channels! Where to find Yolkboy: Website: https://radiowesteros.com/ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/radiowesteros Radio Westeros Twitter: https://twitter.com/RadioWesteros Yolkboy's Twitter: https://twitter.com/theyolkboy --- Eliana's twitter: https://twitter.com/arhythmetric Eliana's reddit account: https://www.reddit.com/user/glass_table_girl Eliana's blog: https://themanyfacedblog.wordpress.com/ Chloe's twitter: https://twitter.com/liesandarbor Chloe's blog: www.liesandarborgold.com Intro by Anton Langhage
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to Girls Gone Canon Reads A Song Of Ice And Fire, episode 151, Samwell Tarly, Sam 1, In a Storm of Swords,
and An Introduction to Sam, featuring our friend from Radio Westeros, Yolkboy. I am one of your
hosts, Chloe. And I am another one of your hosts, Eliana. And yes, yes, we are joined today by our
good friend, Yolkboy. Hello, welcome.
Thank you so much for joining us and helping us kick this off.
Hello.
Thank you so much for having me on.
It's truly a great honor to be on Girls on Canon with you two, who I rate so highly.
When you invited me, I'd been writing about Sam for an episode of Radio Westeros.
I really connect hard with this character.
He's one of my favorites.
So I jumped at the opportunity. Thanks so much for having me on.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so excited to have you. And like, as you said, right, like you've been
digging into Sam's life a little already. So where can people hear about that?
Well, we do have this Samwell episode on Radio Estrus that is coming out very shortly. It goes on a
Patreon rollout which will start in the
next couple of days and then
after a week of Patreon
it goes to
public release so wherever you
find your podcasts you can come and
hear our take on Samwell but of course
that's, we do Sam in one episode
so it's not like putting the magnifying glass
that we're going to do today. Yeah yeah we're getting the sneak peek of the Radio Westeros Ultimate Sam episode the sneak
peek today we're very very grateful for that and very excited to hear kind of some of your
deeper sneak peek look at Sam and some of your feelings on him since he is one of your favorite POVs. I know Eliana,
Eliana also very much so connects with this chapter. This is like, I think my favorite
chapter in the entire series. Like in all of the books, this is like, I think one of the best
written chapters. It's just, it's just so good. So I'm excited that you're joining us for this.
And we'll obviously talk about, you know, part of what makes it such a good chapter as we go through it.
Yeah, I think for me, Samwell is the character I identify with the most.
I really realized that only recently, you know, after years of sort of reading through these books, I really connected hard recently.
So I'm really primed to talk about Sam today. Isn't it so exciting to have a series so beloved that you can read over and over again without
mending for years at a time?
Oh, we're so blessed.
We're so blessed.
My face is just like not moving as you say that.
I'm like, I don't know how to feel.
I'm trying not to remember, just like Sam in this chapter.
Trying to forget. one step at a time
eliana that's so true though oh my god each shaking sobbing crying i do feel that way sometimes
uh well we are gonna jump into all things samwell tarly before we get into the first chapter right
so we will jump into Sam and just a little
background on him in just a moment. But first, of course, housekeeping up top, our Patreon episode
coming out this month for patrons in the stranger tier and above the $5 and above tier is going to
be a trip back to the free cities, we're gonna be talking about Norvos. And as excited as I am for January,
I didn't think much could top a trip to Norvos. I'm also really excited for February's episode,
bonus episode for patrons that we're going to announce early because it requires a little
homework, right? A little reading ahead of time. We're going to be covering the other book by
Madeline Miller. We read Song of Achilles last month with patrons and we're going to be covering the other book by madeline miller we read song of
achilles last month with patrons and we're going to be covering cersei not that one so sorry so
sorry to those of you god we gotta quit doing this eliana cersei pov but not that cersei
the cersei pov but not that cersei the episode title's already done. That's great. That's going to be February.
We're going to be reading that,
and it's amazing.
Come check out Helios' daughter.
My favorite of his daughters, truly.
Yeah, I'm excited to do that.
I really liked the Song of Achilles.
Sorry, I was like, a Song of...
Again, I keep getting confused with my articles.
The Song of Ice and Fire. The Song of Achilles. Again, I keep getting confused with my articles.
The Song of Ice and Fire.
The Song of Achilles.
But yeah, so excited to do Circe in February.
And I mean, just to get to experience this book,
even really talking about how good it is.
And it sounds like it's one of those wonderful moments where again, the second book tends to be better than the first.
A magical moment, indeed.
And if you're a patron, there are some other perks you can kind of take part in.
Like Discord, we do have our private Discord server for patrons in the Thunder tier and above.
And every month over at Discord, we do a brunch slash happy hour where we do games giveaways get to know yous this month's version of that is going to be on the 30th of january throw it on your calendar
1 to 3 p.m eliana standard time oh my god i believe is when we're starting that right
yes uh i guess i guess so st e s phone home oh my gosh yes we are doing that
on January 3rd no theme yet
we haven't settled on a theme
I thought you came up with one but yeah maybe
maybe not we'll see we'll figure it out
new year new us
same us new year same us
probably the theme something like that
we'll work it out
we're workshopping it
other things that are
happening towards the end of this month because last month we did not have a his dark materials
episode we are having two this january we kicked off the year with his dark materials and we're
gonna end january with another his dark materials episode we are covering book three right now the
amber spyglass so go subscribe to keep up with whenever that comes out
i can't believe we're getting to the end it's it's a good ride though it's a it's a sad ride
it's all getting very sad and about death and stuff so if you want to read a book that's sad
about death and stuff come read his dark materials the the ot3 the first three books they're good they're good well now we have this episode where
it's about sad stuff uh let's talk about sam tarley let's get back into it talk about samwell
tarley a little background on him before a song of ice and fire is kind of where we can start with Sam. He's Randall Tarly's firstborn.
He was kind of born similar time frame around the second half of the Rebellion, right?
So like so many of his book peers around the same time as Rob, Mira, John, it seems war gives men that last call bell, you know, so you say.
But unlike Rob and Mira's childhoods, Sam's father sucked.
Really fucking sucked.
Like, badly.
Which you'll remember from every other interaction you've seen with the guy in this entire book series.
Like, John IV in A Game of Thrones, you might even remember Sam tells John his dad went to a bajillion lengths to make him a man.
Master at arms trying to toughen him.
Randall having him dress in his mother's clothes
forcing him to sleep in chain mail
making him bathe in Oryx blood
while Carthene warlocks try to magic
him brave. Do you think that could
have been Pyatt Pri? Maybe
I don't see why not. Probably because how
many Carthene warlocks
are there? Yeah
Well, probably won't be as many.
It's an all-expenses-paid business trip.
Company reimburses, man.
Yeah, right?
Well, Lady Melissa gives Randall only girls for three years after Sam,
but finally, at long last, she births a boy,
and Randall turns all of his attention to this new chance he ignores sam
for once which sam actually loves and then only pays attention to dickon i mean if he loved his
kid that much first of all he wouldn't have named his child dickon but anyways that said randall
forbids sam from joining the citadel because he's just truly absolutely mean like the most heinous man ever as we also discussed during the Brienne
chapters at age 15 Randall basically tells Sam that he's kicked the fuck out has to go get a job
but not get a job he's like I found a job for you and you have to take it or renounce all claims to
Hart's home like all everything and you're gonna go move to the night's watch and you're gonna go
suffer in the cold now or you can suffer an accident or attack on the road the next day
and so sam quote unquote chooses the watch it's really kind of like a no chance no choice
moment but like in the worst way possible and so that's where we find Sam shortly after Jon Snow
arrives at the wall so let me begin some analysis by telling you all how much I hate Randall Tarly
this guy wanted to toughen up Sam as we heard with this catalogue of abuse this brand of toxic
masculinity is just plain awful you know how you really toughen up a child?
Guess what?
It's through showing love, encouragement and support.
You know who I think is the real coward?
It's Randall Tarly for being a child abuser.
It's no wonder that Sam is a walking pile of anxiety after this one.
But of course, brave Randall blames his wife.
this one. But of course, brave Randall blames his wife and he's just too ignorant to understand that Sam is in fact a very talented young man with huge potential, as we're going to see in this episode
and further on in your reread too. I don't care that Randall is a storied military general and
apparently the finest soldier in Westeros, according to Kevin Lannister.
If you can't be kind to your own child, then it's you who's not the real man, in my opinion.
He might be my most hated character in this saga, perhaps because there really are people
out there just like him. He represents every hard-ass, overbearing, anti-intellectual parent
who just won't accept their nerdy child for who they are.
Yes.
Go off, Yokoi.
I will.
Thank you.
Yes, go the fuck off.
I love this rant because it was something we were discussing in the last chapter.
I was like, is George trying to make us think like,
oh, maybe Randall's kind of cool because he's good at military stuff?
And we're like, no, that's stupid maybe Randall's kinda cool because he's good at military stuff, and we're
like, no that's stupid, Randall fucking sucks.
And there's also, it makes me think of this week, in the episode of Euphoria, the hit
HBO television show, maybe also award winning, and Chloe has been also sharing thoughts on
Euphoria recently over on our friend Ara's channel and she can talk about that but there's this line of like and i'm paraphrasing because i don't remember it exactly and didn't
feel like trying to search through the episode of like you know if you hate your parents like
that's kind of like acceptable and fine because you don't really get to choose your parents
right but if you hate your kids like that's your own fault and that's like your fault randall
charlie because i mean you sucked right like you said, he's the real coward.
Like, he was so afraid that, like, his masculinity was so fragile that he was like, it cannot bear having, like, a child like this, right?
Or, like, he can't bear Brienne being able to be a warrior.
Yeah.
He really can't abide women or anything feminine coded uh and like there's
this really weird thing that he immediately assumes that it's melessa's fault that sam
turned out like this that she softened him and it's weird because also her womb is regarded as
this gold mine to him to keep like blasting children into over and over until he gets a perfect son.
So it's just really weird.
He's like, you horribly ruined her.
And it's kind of like there's that line that like when Joanna died, you know, Tywin, that was the last good in him.
Blah, blah, blah.
Paraphrasing.
And it's weird because Tywin's still a dick.
Obviously, like we see him be a total asshole through this entire series until his death and even after his death his ghost is like haha bitches but randall
tarley has a woman who obviously is a loving wife devoted wife does her duty by westerosi societal
standards and terms and he is like wow everything about you is awful you're the worst woman in the
world you ruined our children. Goodbye.
It's interesting.
Like, he's that much of an asshole.
There isn't even the Joanna Lannister defense for Randall Tarly.
Like, he's just truly heinous. Yeah, cowardly.
Cool.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like you said, Yokoi.
Like, if you want a child to, you know, know become confident you give them encouragement and support
and yet the worldview that randall has taught sam that the world is very cruel who wouldn't be
afraid of a world like that where you can't trust anyone and especially you cannot even find comfort
in your family like that is a terrifying world yeah but instead of arming sam he sort of places this curse on him
by you know all this abuse in effect is like a curse on his emotional landscape yeah yeah and
what's really great about this chapter right we kind of see that in a game of thrones and we'll
talk about that in a second but you really get insight into how that has permeated every moment of Sam's life and his interiority once you get his POV. But as you all know, in a Game of Thrones, Sam's intro,
he comes to the Night's Watch and he's slow to make friends except for his buddy,
Jon Snow. Jon gets the mysterious firebolt broomstick, though, and everything changes.
Jon persuades Maester Aemon to put Sam in the stewards
and Aemon kind of takes him on as a mini
apprentice. He ends up taking
his vows with Jon beneath a heart tree
despite being raised in the light of the
Seven and then he shows great bravery
in getting his friends together to stop
Jon Snow from losing them the Gryffindor
house.
God damn it.
He's never long thought him with a dagger.
Which takes us into Clash of Kings.
I'm quitting.
Right.
That's a Game of Thrones.
You're not quitting.
You literally cannot quit.
You need this.
You need this as much as I do.
So Sam in a Clash of Kings, he has a kind of a limited plot as well.
In Clash, he spends his time studying
the many books and papers in the library before the great ranging under eamon's tutelage and then
he goes to craster's keep meeting craster's daughter wife gilly and makes an extreme effort
to save her child from its fate or impending doom at the hands of the others when no one else gives a fuck and that is everything we
don't know from before sam's pov is born because today sam tarley's pov is born right in a storm
of sorts a star is born when he stops john running off uh near the end of game that he really stands in front of his horse and it you
know this is a guy who is just absolutely convinced that he's the biggest craven in the
seven kingdoms which he keeps thinking to himself as we're going to see today but you know he stood
in front of a horse to stop his friend you know running off and putting himself in danger of execution he's giving something back
to john john has helped him so much but sam's ready to return the favor and you know that
doesn't sound like a craven to me that's a great point especially especially considering like
this chapter is the direct answer to everything his dad stood for against sam right like every
time that his father's
called him a coward or said like, you could never do this, this could never be yours,
like everything the light touches, not your Sam. That's been the entire existence for him. And this
is the answer to all that, right? Like this chapter showing like when a man can be brave.
And it's not the first time Sam's been brave. He's totally downplaying himself. That takes courage, especially to stand up to Lord fucking Snow, right?
Yeah, it's hard to stand up.
God damn it.
It is hard to stand up against your friends.
I'm pretty mad now about comparisons in a Game of Thrones,
because it is like that.
And he's risking not only his life by standing in front of the horse,
but he's risking his friendship.
That's scary. And he'd put john before himself you know he cares that much about his friend it's great yeah and you know you were saying chloe how it's like everything
the light touches it's not yours well good thing it's nighttime in this chapter because the light is almost nowhere the belly of the beast i am reminded like
when we chose to do sam after brienne we we chose him for a handful of reasons and we did pre-choose
this order 2017 2018 we have not changed it like this was when we started putting it all together
this was our definitive. This is
the order we're doing the POVs in. So the guesswork to what's next, it has a lot of reasons,
right, that it could be the next POV. And we chose him after Brienne for a lot of the gender analysis,
right, some of these societal standards placed on Brienne versus what's been placed on Sam,
a lot of body dysmorphia. Randall Tarly, of course,
and contrasting Randall and Selwyn as fathers is something really to keep in mind, I think,
through some of this. And we focused a lot in the last POV on how it affected Brienne to constantly
be pigeonholed, sometimes, oftentimes for Brienne accompanied by violence from expressing
themselves in a way that stunts
them emotionally and causes trauma and Sam is a direct answer to that I feel like he has suffered
a lot of those same kind of relationships in being a child of a lord and rejecting his path
that's been laid for him because it literally pains him to take that path whereas I guess
Brienne you know there's sort of an assumption that because they're
like assigned female at birth, right, that they are going to have to constantly be subjected
to violence.
Whereas for Sam, it's almost an expectation that well, manhood means that you will inflict
violence like that's the assumption within Westeros and what they expect of men.
And so, as you said, Sam's a direct answer to that,
but also feeling very much like these outcasts,
these misfits in society and how they come into their own.
And Sam is one of those fun POVs
that we don't get his POV right away, just like Brienne.
We get his introduction in another point of view through Jon.
So another fun, fun little catch. And I'm
sure we're going to have a bunch of different things that remind us of Sofrien's chapter
throughout the chapter as we talk about it. So we'll come back to some of that.
Yeah, and we finally get the other side of the exchange that Sam and John have after many,
many years.
I'm excited for that, actually, to flip those chapters and kind of look at what we talked
about when we did the John chapter and come back to it.
That'll be kind of fun.
Well, before then, we've got our lightning round.
Yes, and because it is a storm of swords, which is just a storm of POV characters, we are trimming down our lightning round to keep it to a nice, a nice drizzle.
A nice drizzle, if you will.
So we did remove for the time being Jaime, Tyrion, Sansa, and Catelyn chapters.
And we will go from there as we move forward in Sam.
Starting with the prologue in A Storm of Swords.
Chet and some of the other suffering men in the Night's Watch have had it with upper
management.
They want change in the form of a mutiny.
Their mutiny is interrupted, however, by an impending attack by the others.
Arya won.
By day, Arya and her brat pack seek the trident.
By night, she battles mummers through her wolf.
Davos won.
Davos washes up in Blackwater Bay after battle.
He is saved from dehydration, hunger, and hardcore sunburn by Salador San.
Damn right, don't fucking forget it.
He did, apparently.
Jon won.
Jon is brought before the the cake beyond the wall, and he
must convince him he's turned his
cloak. Bran won.
Bran and company hide in the
Tumbledown Tower, where Jojen says
they must keep seeking the three-eyed
crow north of the wall.
Davos too.
After learning his son Davon lives,
Davos plans to kill the true murderer behind all of this war, Melisandre of Asshai.
Before he can do so, he is taken into custody by Axel Florent.
Her power. She's so powerful.
Arya too.
The gang arrives at the inn where the Brotherhood Without Banners borrows or steals their horses.
A little steal from the poor, give to the poor. That kind of action.
They're just shuffling things around.
Jon 2. Jon is asked some personal details about the Watch's plans.
Later he gets more personal details
from Ygritte
in her bag.
Ayah 3. Ayah is captured
and brought before the Brotherhood
without banners.
Sam 1. Sam moves
between memory and reality as he
and his remaining brothers
of the Night's Watch are pursued by
ice zombies.
And so we open Sam 1.
Sobbing, Sam took another step.
This is the last one, the very last. I can't go on. I can't.
But his feet moved again, one and then the other.
They took a step and then another and he thought,
They're not my feet, they're someone else's. Someone else is walking. It can't be me.
Yes, I like this. Opening with Sam sobbing yet taking another step really sets up this whole
chapter, I think. And I don't want to get ahead of myself, but George does use these same words
six times to begin paragraphs in this chapter.
Clearly, the theme is that Sam is suffering tremendously, but he's doing what needs to be done just one step at a time.
And as he does so, notice that he feels as if his feet shuffling forward are someone else's.
On the one hand, he's cold and he's numb.
On the one hand, he's cold and he's numb step throughout the chapter is actually one of the
reasons why this is my favorite chapter i just think that the way it's woven in like it's so
well executed and really goes to show like how the drudgery of doing this and just like how
difficult and repetitive and horrible it is and as you said right the idea that it's someone else
that dissociation not just that he can't believe that he's someone also who's able to do this. So clearly someone else must be able to do this, not him.
Get in the eve of Shinjuku.
Oh my god, that is...
Someone else's piloting, Eliana.
It's you. I think this is, oh my god, this is such an expertly constructed chapter for so many reasons. A lot of what you're talking about with the repetition is so effective, the very end and then another. As much as this is a horror chapter, right? Like this is kind of straight up chiller horror, chiller horror we zigzag between memory and reality
and horror the entire time and it's so traumatic
that he can't bear to tell it all in one
go right like you have to keep switching realities
to understand what has happened to Sam what has happened to these
men where the men went it's very great
how George plays the cards keeps you on the edge of the
seat doesn't drop those cards until it's very great how george plays the cards keeps you on the edge of the seat doesn't drop those
cards until it's time to he loves that as we know as we know i'm waiting on some cards from that man
right now if you know what i mean to the tune of some pages oh my god next wild cards the anthology
that's what it sounds like to me chloe now i'm quitting holy shit uh but there's also like that that
effective part of horror is that like there's still hope so sam is the main character of this
horror story that we're reading in this chapter in this very contained chapter under a microscope
he's the main character and he isn't gonna die right we see people die around him in this chapter and so very much so
like the last hero very you know everything has broken and died and all he has is this flinty
little dagger that he's gonna hope is best for and sobbing he takes another step and it's hopeful
it's horror but there's still hope laced in those footsteps. Absolutely. Well, the snow is rising.
His sword belt won't stay on.
And he has also lost his main sword back on the fist.
Big bummer.
And I don't want to take credit for this thought,
but I've seen folks suggested over the years on the subreddit
how Sam constantly needing to pull his belt up
and it doesn't even fit on the tightest setting.
Sam constantly uses his
fatness like as a bludgeon against himself and to insult himself and sees it as part of him being
craven and because he was told it was bad because randall charlie told him it was bad but the
description of the sword belt falling off actually implies that i I mean, he's probably, I guess, like, losing weight because, I mean, it's been a couple of days and he's doing a lot of moving.
He's carrying the weight of all of this armor.
He's got the weight of all of the clothing to keep him warm.
He's been walking through snow, which is very difficult.
And that's why I don't do it.
And he hasn't rested in several days and also likely hasn't eaten very much
because when are they going to eat?
Because they are being chased, as Chloe pointed out.
It's a horror story.
When do people eat during horror stories?
I don't watch horror movies.
Anyway, there are many things
working against Sam's nutrition right now.
And I mean, Sam is, I think,
a really great example of what
is meant when we talk about an unreliable narrator, because I think especially
Sam is unreliable in regards to how he sees himself. He struggles to see himself clearly.
He constantly sees himself refracted through the lens of his own father.
And what I really love also about Sam's story is i think a lot of it is about learning to
see and acknowledge your own self and your own strengths and it's one of the most difficult
parts for sam's internal story like even in the chapters that we have so far in a feast for crows
he still hasn't even accomplished that yet and again it's one of the most powerful parts of
his story to learn to love yourself despite everything that the world tells you that you are.
Yeah.
Sam's so powerful.
He doesn't even know.
I know his power.
Yeah.
I wish he would know.
I hope he learns.
Yeah, I do too.
That's like my big hope.
I don't really care about Rhaegar and Lyanna and all that and Jon Snow.
I just hope that Sam Tarly learns to love himself.
Did you mean bragger?
Bragger?
So, we get
a little exposition, a little
sword play here from Sam on
what he has, what he's packing
in his pockets, which is the dragonglass
dagger that Jon gave him
and a steel one for cutting meat.
Gren had laughed at the sight of his sword slipping down him many times and
Ed too.
Ed said,
I knew a man once who wore his sword on a chain around his neck like that.
One day he stumbled and the hilt went up his nose.
Oh,
Ed,
this chapter has some golden,
golden Ed lines in it.
Really good. Do you think the worse the golden Ed lines in it. Really good.
Do you think the worse the suffering, the better his jokes?
Yes.
Yes.
It's kind of like a dark humor.
It's like the guy that's
worked at the company for several decades,
you know, and he's seen the revolving
turnover come and go
and he's just always there you know in
the break room like oh yeah man this guy's not gonna last he's gonna be gone within the next
couple years the last guy they brought in here like that's ed he's just cracking the most dark
humor in the back he's seen where all the bodies are buried dude well it's out here and they're not buried yeah i have bad news about those bodies but
uh sam is stumbling things are not going great for our protagonist over rocks beneath snow
roots and sometimes deep holes that he wishes he could just fall into forever it feels like
falling instead of walking but never hitting the ground. He wants to stop, but plot twist.
If he stops, he dies.
They all knew that.
Well, by all, he means the few who are left.
They had been 50.
Some wandered off, some bled to death.
And sometimes Sam hears awful shouts and screams.
And when he hears that, he runs as fast as he can as far as he can
they are behind us they're still behind us they're taking us one by one
chills yes even under three pairs of hose two layers of small clothes a double lambswool
tunic a quilted coat a loose surcoat and a triple
thick cloak what he needs is one of those puffer jackets i hear those are great oh it is fucking
cold out here he's got heavy fur mitts and a scarf but yet cold cold cold he can't feel his feet
but he knows that they are hurt and all the days are blending into one another.
We have this quote of,
If only I was stronger.
He wasn't, though, and it was no good wishing.
Sam was weak and fat, so very fat he could hardly bear his own weight.
The mail was too much for him.
It felt as though it was rubbing his shoulders raw,
despite the layers
of cloth and quilt beneath, between the steel and skin. The only thing he could do was cry.
And when he cried, the tears froze on his cheeks. Sobbing, he took another step.
Yep, another step. And George is putting real emphasis on just how much Sam is struggling and suffering, which immediately helps put us in his shoes.
We can really feel the cold.
I can when I read it.
My wife once wore chain mail at a museum and she assures me that it was extremely heavy and restricting, even more so than you might think.
extremely heavy and restricting, even more so than you might think. And he's wearing a huge backpack and he's got all these layers of clothing, which Eliana mentioned. So he's loaded
up like a mule. There's this biting cold and the others are behind him who are, of course,
responsible for the extremity of the cold because we know that they bring this supernatural cold with them george is really making life incredibly difficult for sam but it's often in such conditions where
we learn the most about our characters and by overcoming obstacles well it's a great way to
initiate some character growth isn't it yeah. It's been really great to actually revisit and isolate these chapters
and Sam's psyche. Because everything we know about Sam, like before his POV chapters does not
come from him. So actually getting to see those layers of how his childhood affected him as well
as like how it's etching out his thoughts throughout the rest of his chapters.
Yeah, it's really sad.
This chapter is incredible because Sam gets the chance finally to defeat some of the odds that he has always perceived to be against him.
And he doesn't recognize it yet, right?
And as you said, Yokeboy,
overcoming obstacles is a great way to initiate character growth.
And my god, Sam is going to face a lot of obstacles throughout his povs
he's got a lot of growth to do then that's true that is so true
oh to be 15 no not really i don't know i do not want to be 15 again that's a lie
couldn't pay me to go back sounds good on? Yeah, all this is bad enough to live it through another lens.
Makes me think of that Sky High villain.
She's like, I went through puberty twice for this.
For this?
So Sam thinks of wanting only fire,
and someone, Gren, Ed, who knows, reminds him,
well, you know what, you had a torch,
and you dropped it in the snow. I also want to call out, Ed, who knows, reminds him, well, you know what, you had a torch, and you dropped it in the snow.
I also want to call out, like, when they talk about the torches, right, it's called the Old Bear's Ring of Fire.
And I just wanted to acknowledge that detail because I love it.
It just feels so heroic.
That ring in general is so symbolic during this chapter as you get to, like, the flashback.
I like J.R. Mormont.
It's like the beacon of light yeah
i like you know 80 80 to 90 of more months
there's like one one one that i could do without yeah sam feels fat and weak and useless but yet
he keeps going mother have mercy he repeats to, thinking of his own mother in Horn Hill and his little brother Dickon.
So this idea of mother have mercy gets repeated throughout the chapter as well, not just here.
And I find that really interesting because Sam's returning to his childhood faith in this moment of hardship.
Despite, as we all know, it was like a big where he converted and pledged to the Old Gods, but I don't think the Old Gods really care about who you worship that much.
But this moment of hopelessness and just hoping to survive and also wondering why you, of all the people who were there, survived this horrible thing, and then praying to the mother for mercy it just really reminds
me of Davos
who survived the Battle of the Blackwater
and who we learn at around like a similar
time in this book and by that I mean
a few chapters ago we had a lightning round
right but at a similar time
is alive and
though his
traumatic moment of
big loss was you know one from fire sam's is of ice but they both
really turn to the same line yes it struck me this read through how similar just after we did
davos not too long ago there before cat these chapters are so tonally similar there's kind of this thought that like davos has the island burning death pit of awfulness
after black fire but the fire and sam just has the snowy version right it also makes me think
about how davos is heading north he's going to have maybe his own sam one in a storm of swords
happen to him soon as soon as the winds of winter comes out next week next week look under
your chair uh there's this line it's here look under your chair there's something interesting
about the stone wall ring right and how davos scrambles up the rock as the tide is rushing in
on him to keep from being swept into the bay and Sam has to kind of keep an eye on the stone wall throughout this entire exchange
back in the struggle.
The stone wall was the place where everyone's gathering.
It's where the enemy was coming over.
So even just the language of the tide rushing in, but instead of the tide, it's whites.
The sea washing them away is the whites washing them away.
And even that, like like davos wants to die
and davos won if you recall he very much so is like please my god just murder me the passage
is so funny because it reminds me not it's not dissimilar to sam at all thirst hunger exposure
they were his companions with him every hour of day, and in time he had come to think
of them as his friends. Soon enough, one or the other of those friends would take pity on him,
and free him from this endless misery. Or, perhaps he'd simply walk into the water one day,
and strike out for the shore that he knew lay somewhere to the north beyond his sight.
It was too far to swim, as weak as as he was but that did not matter davos
had always been a sailor he meant to die at sea the gods beneath the waters have been waiting for
me he told himself it's past time i went to them sam is calling for his own snowy death hoping he
gets buried beneath the downfall the flurry snow, and just stays there and dies.
Not unlike each other.
Yeah, finding hope in hopelessness.
It can be done, guys.
Yeah, and then someone comes along and is like,
no, we're not letting you die, sorry.
Yeah.
The mother was merciful, all the septons agreed, but the seven had no power beyond the wall
this was where the old gods ruled the nameless gods of the trees and the wolves and the snows
he whispers mercy me remembering that maslin had whispered mercy as the white had killed him
just whispering mercy and then his his mind shoots to this other moment of mercy. It's a
great example of how Sam's mind naturally conjures up sort of intrusive thoughts and negative
associations almost automatically. To me, this is typical of how a traumatized mind can operate.
And we know that even before the events at the fist that Sam was extremely anxious due to his prior
abuse at Randall's hands I mentioned that Sam has a habit of dissociating when under strain well the
problem is that there are so few safe places in his head his memories are almost always associated
with pain and now he has this added layer of ptsd that witnessing this carnival of horrors that the
fist has brought him soon he's caught between the terror of the real world and the terror of his
memories and he attempts to block out unwanted thoughts it says the dead have no mercy left in
them and the others no i mustn't think of that don't think don't remember just walk just walk
just walk i love that observation of sam and these intrusive thoughts i i never really thought about
it that way but that is very much how it's written right like the the as you said traumatized mind
conjuring those moments and he's got trauma upon trauma now yeah it, it's just layered up. Yeah, like the snow.
Just layered.
Lots of trauma.
At least Sam hasn't made up a memory of kissing another yet, you know?
The un-kiss.
That could be sexy.
The other un-kiss.
My erotic friend fiction.
Yeah, the other.
Yeah, I mean, like, apparently that was enough for one of those kings.
The knight's king.
Not the knight king. The boyfriendsfriends him and his four boyfriends the riders of the apocalypse
him and all his knight's king boyfriends that's kind of it but anyway so i i do also think that
this line that you've called up here at the end is interesting right the the one of the dead have
no mercy left in them because i mean it's fresh in our minds right we're coming off this chap we're coming to
this chapter like on the heels of finishing brian eight and of course she encounters mother
merciless who is also dead and again has no mercy yeah there's definite commentary on you know
george is dealing with mercy and i take it his message is to find mercy in your heart.
You know, if someone wrongs you, then being merciless is a poor reflection of your character.
So right. It's just like the season one finale of The Righteous Gemstones.
That's an interesting thought of like people people the living finding mercy in their hearts i wonder how we talk a lot about how mercy will manifest in the stark kids
storylines i wonder if it'll be something that happens with like salmon is dead but anyway
for now salmon's fallen to his knees thinking that this is the end of voice growling back on
your feet piggy but he lays there, thinking, you know, it may
not be so bad to die, that the snow would
cover him like a blanket.
He hadn't wanted to go, anyway, but
Maester Aemon was too old, so
then he had to tend to the ravens, ordered
by the Lord Commander. And Jera told
him, you know what, write out a letter if we are
attacked, one to Castle Black, one to the
Shadow Tower, and stay out of the way,
saying that Sam would be sorry if he didn't. We have this passage. to die too but better men had died on the fist good men and true not squeaking fat boys like him
at least he would not have the old bear hunting him through hell though i got the birds off i did
that right at least it's just so heartbreaking to finally get inside sam's mind in this pov
and witness what we could have all guessed firsthand that he blames himself for his
abusive upbringing he totally thinks that he's to blame which yeah that's very predictable really
Randall expected Sam to be a certain way which of course is you know associated with gender roles
but when he grew to be something different Randall effectively denied him a sense of self and identity.
It's a shame that Sam believes these so-called shortcomings are his fault, as if a child can choose their aptitudes and personality at will.
I think we can compare Randall to Tywin, who is obviously disappointed with Tyrion and perhaps contrast him with Ned Stark who I
thought was thinking about this he realized Arya didn't fit his expectations of her but he decided
to adjust expectations rather than forcing her to fit into this mold even with the the very little
that we know of Selwyn Tarth obviously selwyn isn't sitting around at
fucking bridges like a troll like randall is being like oh you want to take a different path for your
life my daughter did that and look what happened to me because that's all randall's doing right
like he's just sitting around being very negative all the time with obvious issues going on that's why he hasn't gotten promoted in so long you know
what i mean like this is his newest opportunity but tywin tywin didn't play those games he was
like i'll just burn your life down at least tywin did stuff uh yeah sam is actually really bright
in this chapter though right because he when he's writing these letters for the birds
he writes them ahead of time in all different scenarios and outcomes uh short messages
describing the attack and different outcomes and he gets prepared just in case because you never
know what bird you need to send sam is great at using his brain randall didn't see it, but it's true. And his anticipation
here proves it. Although it seems that Sam is useless, you know, trudging through the snow,
hoping to die. Don't fall into the same trap as Randall in thinking that therefore Sam is a
fatally flawed character. George has made him a fish out of water here placing him in the worst possible environment
for his skill set and abilities but how for example do we think Gren would fare if he was
left in a library to research I think getting the messages together in advance shows Sam has a very
capable mind that it's always working and don't forget that on this trip he's done other useful things
for the night's watch such as draw intricate maps beyond the wall so john snow was right when he
told maester amen that it takes all sorts to run the night's watch. There's a tool for every task and a task for every tool, you know.
As a horrible man
once said, it's Tywin Lannister.
What is with you and the, like, Tywin
praise this episode? I don't know what's going
on with him this episode. Who are you?
I don't know.
When you bring Randall into the
frame, everyone else
looks a bit better.
Yeah, it's true.
That's how bad he is.
Yeah, he's just so awful.
That's more what I'm saying.
He's making Tywin look D-.
That's still like a D is almost passing, right?
I don't know what grades are here anymore.
I haven't gone to school in so many years.
If you were 15 again.
Well, there you go see if I was 15
again like Samuel Tarly in the
US of A
god bless him I would have
at least a D here
when the horns
blew Sam had been asleep
he opened his eyes to snow
and the brothers start grabbing
weapons and running to the ring wall.
Chet, Eamon's old steward, is nearby, full of fear, asking for help to get the birds out.
Sam dug out his own message, attaching them to ravens with shaky hands, and then struggled to catch one, losing a couple of them.
But finally, he gets them to stay still so he can get a message out.
Sam doesn't realize that chet was going to
kill him of course we know about chet's plan because he had that single pov prologue chet
has always believed that it was sam's fault that he was on the ranging in the first place due to
him taking his place as amen steward despite Sam actually being on the ranging and going through this suffering too.
The leech's son was angry because he perceived that the class system
was working against him, with John and Sam being highborn.
And Chet really believes that he's somehow superior to Sam.
He sort of, in his own way, looks down on him.
But we're learning that
fear is a great equalizer in the crucial moment it's Sam who manages to get his shit together
and Chet begins to go into a blind panic I think Sam showed more backbone than Chet yet he's so
steeped in doubts and self-loathing that he never thinks of it in those terms he never looks outside himself
and thinks well pat myself on the back what i did was pretty cool just then yeah and there's
something great that like in the face of death chat who in the prologue talked his big game
calling sam a coward and saying you know oh one touch of the knife that craven would piss his pants and start
blubbering for his life chat in this moment of call to action he's like i don't want to die dude
i don't want to die and he like runs and he doesn't do the duties sam stays to get the birds
off which is i mean his work ethic you have to give Sam that that like the things that he is good at doing and
his responsibilities he does do them and he does them well and so him actually staying despite the
fact that the dead are crawling over the walls they are here they're in the backyards that's
really indicative of his character yeah and it wasn't easy because in the description it says
that the birds were sort of pecking and clawing him drawing blood
they're going really crazy in their cage and you can imagine how difficult it was to sort of focus
his mind on what is ostensibly a simple task but it really wasn't a simple task in that moment
and it's like meaningful task like this is like do or die like this is like you may never know
what happened to those 50 men that went north.
They may have never come back.
That's a good amount of the Watcher's power went out on this ranging.
And a good amount did not come back.
And, I mean, they could have been worse off had he not made sure communication was sent and backup was kind of called for.
Yeah, absolutely.
And, I mean, it's, first of all,
grabbing birds is hard, okay?
And in this scenario, probably much harder,
difficulty level turned up.
But also like what you're saying,
comparing like Chet's reaction and Sam's,
I think it's kind of funny
because Chet, not only is he full of self-loathing, he's got this very intense sense of entitlement, right?
We see that in his prologue. He feels entitled to this girl's affections, and when he doesn't get it, he kills her, right?
And he feels entitled to better in The Night's Watch.
And I don't think he's wrong. He's not wrong that the class system does work against people in the Night's Watch.
And I think Corrin Halfhand does a great job of explaining that to Jon, right? What that privilege
looks like when it comes to class. But Chet's almost like this dark mirror to Will in the
Game of Thrones prologue, right? Where Will hides in the tree and doesn't do anything in that like do or die moment when the others come
and and chet does a similar thing right he flees and sam on the other hand doesn't really feel like
he deserves anything and i also just like love how charitable he is to like his perception of
chet he's like oh chet must have run off because he has to go care for the dogs not because he's
like oh chet ran off because he's acting craven also, because I mean, anyone would be scared
in that moment. And I just love that Sam extends that grace to Chet and thinking that, you know,
Chet's role is also important, right? You're talking about every tool having its use. But I
mean, it's one that Sam never really thinks about in regards to himself and the
importance of his own duty he thinks highly of others but low of himself yeah yeah big sad he's
judging them on a different rubric yeah exactly yeah well the warhorn had stopped the clash of
steel has not after that sam packed as quickly as he could spare clothes dry socks dragonheads, the old horn, and a sausage that he'd been saving since the wall.
Honestly, he does a great job of packing.
And I also appreciate that George gives us the detail specifically that it is a garlic sausage.
Like, I don't know that it was important, but it is to me.
It is to me.
Yeah, maybe that helps, you know, with the cold.
Does that, you know, a bit of garlic in your blood
a little spice a little warm well garlic is uh it's an antibiotic it's a natural antibiotic
when you chew into garlic it releases allicin which is kind of like that's you know you got
a toothache chew a garlic clove put that puppy right there get through a few more days you know
the old medicine.
So well, and that is something that I noticed in this book, like they talk about, you know,
if you don't have enough meat in the winter, those teeth are gonna get loose.
Whenever I'm sick, Chloe convinces me to eat a raw clove of garlic. I don't know how much it helps. But I've done this on more than one occasion because chloe's like you gotta eat a raw clove of garlic eliana i'm like okay
it at least clears up the chest and the nose a little at least at least
it burns a lot though so it does you know be warned if you're gonna try this one at home
sam realizes that he doesn't actually know what he's supposed to do next after doing the birds.
He can't see anything beyond three yards in either direction, and the horn had been ringing three times.
Three long blasts means others.
The white walkers of the wood, the cold shadows, the monsters of the tales that made him squeak and tremble as a boy,
riding their giant ice spiders, hungry for blood. Awkwardly, he drew his sword and plodded heavily
through the snow holding it. So later in this chapter, Sam refuses to sing any songs like
internally or externally, especially the Bear and the maiden fair which was suggested
by gran and also this song pops up a lot throughout this book uh it it kind of acts like that sobbing
sam took another step in holding this book together and it makes sense because now sam is traumatized
by the undead bear but there's also an aspect of it in which i kind of feel like maybe sam refuses
to sing the songs
because we are seeing here something that is recurring throughout A Song of Ice and Fire of
like, so the legends, they are fun to hear and to think about, but turns out living through the
legends and the songs yourself, like really fucking sucks. I mean, obviously, yeah, he's
just too tired and scared to sing. But I think there's an aspect of like that sort of deconstruction
going on as Sam is now living through this legend that tired and scared to sing. But I think there's an aspect of like that sort of deconstruction going on
as Sam is now living through this legend that is not supposed to happen.
The songs aren't as fun to live in.
And, you know, there's also something, I don't know exactly what it is,
but there's something there about the Tarly Sigil being a huntsman
and like the bear being kind of a very focal villain in this chapter for Sam.
I don't know what it is.
I'm playing with it.
We're workshopping it.
But something interesting there with the huntsman sigil.
And I do think that there's also something to singing
that reminds me of a couple things.
Later in Sam's plot, we get the memory of the last time he sang to his mother.
And he had been lulling baby dick
into sleep and his father heard their voices and cubs barging in and says like he won't have any
of that he says to his wife you ruined one child with your soft septon songs do you mean to do the
same to this babe and he told sam to stop singing near dickon it kind of is a memory that reminds me of Brienne and Catelyn.
Looking back to some of our
Brienne episodes and chapters on
reread when Catelyn asked Brienne,
did you sing for your father?
And will you sing for me?
Brienne's like, no, fuck no. I will never
sing ever again. I do not sing. That is not
for me. I'm not going to be performing at your
fire fest, Catelyn.
Your fire white fest.
So, I don't know, there's
something in those two characters with their
singing, right, and their fire white fest
and their singing here that Sam does not
want to sing that.
And, of course, we're opening
Sam's plot with the bear and the maiden
fair, and Brienne's plot in Storm
ends with the bear and the maiden
fair, this book, right?
Good book caps going on there.
It does.
Mm-hmm.
Well, Sam follows some very large bearded men with eight-foot spears, feeling safer,
and when he sees the torches still lit on the ring of stones, he is relieved as hell.
He stands behind the others, he's looking for Gren and Ed, and thinks,
if I have to die, let me die beside my friends, he remembers thinking.
Yeah, it's so, so good to see Sam thinking of his friends, even in this hopeless context and situation that he's surrounded in.
Given that Randall actively chased him away from his natural family, Sam really needed to fill that void with kind strangers.
And I think this is something that happens in the real world, right?
Nerdy people seem to find family in strangers if they don't have it at home.
With John's help, Sam did that at Castle Black.
And those friendships have really endured. It is both sad and heartwarming
to see him crave their company and give some meaning to his potential death because he's
probably thinking, God, you know, Randall doesn't give a shit about me. Who's going to care about
me? So he's thinking, just let me die beside my friends. Afterlife at Horn Hill, he's just glad anyone cares about him at all.
However much he continues to view himself as a misfit, I think it's very plain that he's found
some sort of belonging with the Night's Watch. Yeah, it's been so great, especially having this
POV open, you get to also see those friendships a little more closely in ways you don't see those
characters relate to john because john is just such a different level of character and he he's
you know he's brooding a little more than than sam does sam gets some really great little scenes
throughout this book i really love that i love them getting to explore their friendship and sam
having these friendships like in a non-toxic way
you know an environment that strips a lot of those titles away that the Tarlys would care about so
much and all of those it's like when I was a kid my mom wanted to send me to private school because
of the uniforms because she's like then kids don't fight because they all have the same clothes and I
think about that when I think about the Night's Watch. They still fight.
Kids will always fight.
I don't know what she thought that would do.
Hey, listen, I didn't get that part of her brain, apparently.
But I think about that with the Night's Watch because I'm like,
they still fight.
But, you know, now you've stripped out the finery of it all.
You know, what if we played kings and queens,
except took out all the queens and all the kings, and it was just people wearing the same outfit at a cold wall?
I don't know how I feel about that.
Yeah, it sounds pretty, it sounds miserable, sounds really goth.
But what if they made friends with one another?
That's beautiful.
That part's beautiful that part's beautiful and and like in regards to that you know i love it reminds us right like in terms of him finding his people elsewhere i mean like in their very
first chapter together in that introduction john is like no we're brothers now yeah and
and and like i love that the bonding that they have right the friendship is
one of the first moments is he's just like talks to sam for a
little and he just lets sam cry he sam just cries a lot he's crying a lot in this chapter too
and sam and john just like sits quietly and lets it happen and like that's
that's just so beautiful of course sam would want to be with those people like that's love
yeah they really listen to each other from the outset because
john talks to sam about his weird dreams of the crypts and you know sam's intently listening so
it is a two-way thing two-way street yeah that's a great point and something and that's a good
lesson too now that i think about it i know this is a tangent but sometimes a way to get people to feel comfortable
opening up to you right like to to make a space for those kinds of conversations as john
demonstrated that by being vulnerable and that gave space for sam to also yeah exactly that's it
because um john's talk of the winter frail crypts comes before Sam sort of confesses all the horrors of his past.
It's directly before.
And it's like John made him feel, you know, comfortable by confessing some of his own sort of personal demons.
And then, you know, Sam just comes out with it all.
I think that's a really beautiful scene between those two early on.
Yeah.
I think that's a really beautiful scene between those two early on.
Yeah.
Well, and we see it in this series as a metaphor as well for like forging a knife or a sword or, you know, etc.
But that's how the way to forge metal and steel, right?
Like you have to beat it.
You have to put it down to its most vulnerable.
And that's the way the strongest bonds are forged.
And I think we have them.
They're vulnerable, right?
They're teenagers. They're so fucking vulnerable they have not a very steady parental thing going on for either of them
and any of them and they all find a way to bond in the middle of a fucking ice blizzard that they
have to live in forever and ever and ever until they die yeah and then they come back hopefully
when they die yeah yeah except yeah never mind that was big sad
eventually he'll come back in the winter eventually oh my god but well and these are
beautiful relationships but we actually get some very fun little minor characters in this chapter, right, that come back.
Like we have Thorin Smallwood later, Rip, and we have Blaine, who's a ranger from the Shadow Tower right now, who's directing brothers to notch, draw, and hold their arrows.
Sam can't see what they're aiming at, and he does not want to.
Sam can't see what they're aiming at, and he does not want to.
Hundreds are beyond, coming out of the wood, crawling to them.
And it had been colder that night than he was now in the present day, buried in the ground, the snow growing on him.
Sam sees someone pass him in real time on a horse, and he finds himself jealous, thinking,
If we had a horse, I'd make it, but they're running low on horses, and the horses are reserved for the wounded and their supplies.
Which Sam thinks he's not wounded, just fat and weak.
Soon after that, there's like this line and moment when Sam is just like lying down in the snow, and he thinks that he's the greatest Kraven in Seven Kingdoms. And I just want to say that that is just false.
That is just untruerue because they are not in
the seven kingdoms that's all i have i like it but but even if they we get this line even if
they had been in the seven kingdoms you're still wrong right yeah absolutely absolutely i could think of at least 10 characters motherfuckers
we have this passage sam was his heir but he had never been worthy so his father sent him away to
the wall his little brother dickon would inherit the tarly lands and castle and the great sword
heartsbane that the lords of hornhill had borne so proudly for centuries he wondered whether Dickon would shed a tear for his brother who died in the snow,
somewhere off beyond the edge of the world.
Why should he? A coward's not worth weeping over.
Yeah, that word again. Sam is fixated with the notion that he's a coward.
We see it time and time again in this chapter and elsewhere.
And yeah, it's obvious who planted those seeds what i think sam
doesn't do is sort of balance things out by giving himself any drop of credit for dealing with the
extreme fear he feels you know he goes through this but he never pats himself on the back
and says you know you got through it we know from from Ned that the only time a man can be brave
is when he's afraid. But Sam defines himself by the amount of fear that he feels rather than his
success in coming through that fear. And in spite of his precarious position, he is succeeding
because the immediate danger is around him and his character goal is
simply to survive at this point he's just got to get through it somehow and we're learning through
all these flashbacks woven into the narrative that surviving was no mean feat after that attack by the
others we are in a horror story the monsters are close behind they're chasing
and yet here sam is thinking himself the greatest craven ever you know because he's frightened and
afraid there's a self-help book called feel the fear and do it anyway and i always thought that
was a great title and it really reminds me of sam in this moment in this chapter i love that i like that
title absolutely yeah he's taught that fear is something to be ashamed of feeling as opposed to
as you said right like embrace the way that ned acknowledges like people feel things
and that's important because it helps you understand like
i mean like he's in danger
right if you weren't feeling fear i'd be like you're broken yeah like he's not a daredevil
daredevils do that shit and he's not so he you know what sam you're actually
you're extraordinary but you're closer to normal than you think you know he probably doesn't
acknowledge that everybody else is feeling the same kind of shit that he is he's just absolutely
fixated on the idea that you know he is feeling this great fear and probably promotes everyone
else around him in his mind that they're doing much better than he is but of course we don't
have their povs the one pov we have is chet and he was terrified so what's the big deal sam
hearkening to what you were saying with their their bond right john and sam's bond when they
craft that bond in such a vulnerable time it's so interesting that both of their plots directly
involve the others so much when you have so much emotion that being vulnerable
affords you with that other person human connection in the light of these ice zombies right with zero
human connection left it's really such a stark contrast and it feels significant like intentional even thematic it does and in
regards to like again those those interactions with john and in that first chapter i mean
part of it is like because people in westeros and especially the men right they're conditioned to not
talk about their feelings everyone's fucking scared in this moment, clearly. I mean, you can see
like, Blaine's kind of scared too, because everyone's like, we did it, we hit everyone,
we hit all the whites, and then they're like, oh my god. They're not stopping. There's like,
no break. And, you know, like, I remember in that first chapter, Gren and Pip are just
so astounded about Sam. They're like, I can't believe he is willingly calling himself a coward.
And I'm like, a lot of people are afraid of things.
They feel cowardice and it's just that Jon and Sam are willing to talk about it.
And that's kind of brave in and of itself.
Yeah.
And then Sam remembers the Night on the F fist when Jormormont commanded they fire
arrows and give them flame. He had told Sam to get out of the battle, that his place was with
the ravens. When Sam said he'd sent them, the commander had said, good, telling him he's in
the way and to go man the ravens. You know's his duty go and do it Sam. So Sam went
back to his birds writing his messages with frozen ink and frozen fingers he writes attacked in snow
and cold we've thrown them back with arrows still safe and the next letter he writes is less certain still fighting heavy snow result uncertain
he hears diwin singing brothers cheering cursing he writes his next whites on the fist but we drove
them off with fire and then whites all around us spears and sword don't stop them only fire oh I love this because he's like
he's writing out
exactly what he's going to like combat
at the end like he's doing
it in practical theory here
on paper you know first and he's
gonna go practical the hell out
of it in real life soon and he has
no clue go Sam
I love how the whites are displayed
in this chapter because they're almost like not really dangerous.
Like they are dangerous, but like if you have three of them, you can light them on fire, keep them back.
You're good.
It almost makes sense to that whole good old season seven plot where they took the white to the capital.
Anyone remember that one?
That show was fucking
off the rails. Like Sam, I am trying to forget.
Trying to forget. But
you can see where like with the couple
with the right flame
on hand, you could probably keep them back.
But they're
very soulless, very clumsy
and when there's a lot of them swarming
over the wall, it's not as easy and you cannot keep them back.
And they're kind of just clumsily portrayed, right?
They're these little icy skeleton boyos.
But they really compared later when we get the beauty and the elegance of the others compared to the whites.
The others are like Slick's icy skin and hair and hair back hello i'm here with my blue spear uh it's such a different moment like
it's very chilling very slow the whites are just like a nightmare these are just a nightmare but
the others are a trip a whole entire trip and sam doesn't know he's meeting that other yet or what the others
will look like because they're just in legend like they are not a normal thing white's normal
when the others come that's real time baby we're in trouble they are they are big trouble it's true
i i'd be like oh my god i'm intimidated. They're just beyond me.
And I'm pretty sure that's how everyone felt in that moment, too.
There's these moments that really show us, again, everyone's fear of voices shrieking.
There's a giant and a bear, a bear.
Literally, it says a bear, a bear.
I'm like, oh yes, of course.
The horses are also shrieking.
They're shouting.
Sam writes even faster, note after note, surrounded by this soundtrack of steel.
So some of those potential notes that could have been sent out were,
We've won! We're winning! We're holding our own!
We're cutting our way free and retreating for the wall.
We're trapped on the fist, hard-pressed.
One of the Shadow Tower men came staggering out of the darkness to fall at
Sam's feet. He crawled within a foot of the fire before he died. Lost, Sam wrote. The battle's lost.
We're all lost. So Sam wishes he could think of something else in the present. He's lying on the
ground, and he'd rather think about his sister tallah his mother or
gilly from craster's keep i think it's interesting that sam thinks of the women and girls in his life
when he's seeking like these happy memories right to block out the fight at the fist
or also even like you know as you pointed out earlier yoke boy like that he thinks of his
friends slash brothers as a sort of way to keep going to not give up and just die yeah now he's thinking about gilly that's interesting yeah already a good woman will
do that to you sam a good woman will do that to you i uh i i will say it does especially after
you mentioned the unreliable narrator aspect earlier eliana i will say it makes me think of sanza a lot here of her at the black
water just at the end of clash praying for everybody right and thinking of everyone in
that moment that like hard-pressed moment of like oh shit is real shit is going down
here he thinks of that too of like the things that really truly matter to him there's another
i don't know if it's here i think it's around here line where he's thinking of like how he doesn't want to remember the battle
now and he kind of questions like why must he remember right and we see as he's writing down
all these letters i i kind of feel maybe this is something that i don't want it to be like the way
that it was in the show though but like obviously like, obviously, it's important for Sam to remember. Someone has to remember these people and what happened.
Yeah, he's the historian of Ice and Fire.
Yeah, he's writing a book.
Makes Sam a very valuable character as a witness to all of this, doesn't it?
Yeah.
First-hand accounts are important.
Yeah.
Well, Gren shakes him to reality, telling Sam that he has to keep moving and that he'll die if he does not
and he tries to convince Gren otherwise
he's like, I'm just gonna rest
then I'll be fine, and Gren's like, no you won't
and Gren with his frozen beard
and gruff voice is not having it
Sam remembers the night before they left the wall
Gren was stocky and strong
and he was being teased by Pip
who said that Gren would be great on the ranging
because he's too stupid to be terrified
and then Gren like countering
that realizes what happens face turns red
and it's just great because
Pip and Gren are in love and
no one can tell me otherwise
it's very cute
it's cute to have them as the echo to Jon
and Sam you know
yeah but Sam and
Jon as far as I can tell,
they're not in love the way Pip and Gret are.
That's my, one of my
really big ships.
Not sleeping in the same bed
role. No, Eliana, I'm sorry.
No, but they do.
Oh my god.
Pip and Gret.
Log off, AO3, Eliana.
God, get it, keep your head out of the gutter here.
It's legitimately the first,
and I don't know if this is embarrassing to admit that Log off, AO3, Eliana. God. Get it. It's legitimately the first, the first, like,
and I don't know if, like,
this is, like,
embarrassing to admit
that I haven't read that much
of Song of Ice and Fire fanfic,
only a little bit,
but the first ones
that I ever saw it
were Pip and Gren.
Very formative experiences.
Yeah.
Wow.
Nope, I agree.
They are in love, Eliana.
I agree. that's all
alicer thorne is less in love with pip and gren he calls he calls gren orax a slightly nicer name
than sir piggy and lord snow right slightly nicer on a scale of one to ten i'd say it's like a three the bar is low niceness yeah he just rolled over it
just rolled over that bar gren had always been nice to sam but sam thinks that's because of john
he literally thinks if it weren't for john none of them would have liked me it's so hard because
like he goes and flips between it throughout the entire chapter of his status of friendship. And you can see that he equates others love to being currency because of the way Randall Tarly
brought him up in that, right? Like, because John told them to, it's not a true exchange of
friendship. You know, he doesn't see that as an authentic friendship because it's just because Lord John said they should be nice to me.
And some of the things John experienced while being, you know, a Lord's bastard does not suit one at the wall.
Being kin to what Sam would have seen his father exact against people, right?
Because like Randall doesn't really have friends in his rulership life, it seems.
Not real friends.
have friends in his rulership life it seems not real friends and i don't know it's interesting to see the way that randall would have brought or not brought friendship into sam's life and
how sam would treat it because like randall sees people as currency yeah so sam has this suspicion
of friendship doesn't he and he he can't concede that people might actually like him and see value in him
his self-esteem is just so goddamn low he's always seeing life through you know quite a depressing
lens he's choosing to believe here that gren doesn't like him really you know it's this sort
of paranoid social thought he has this is an aspect of himself that he can improve, I believe, somewhere down the line. I think one of his main sort he will allow himself to accept love from other people.
Back to Randall, I think fathers are just such important figures to the self-concept of young men.
And so we reach an age that we can come to question our own fathers.
We just sometimes straight up believe what they tell us.
believe what they tell us this becomes very difficult when your dad is in british terms a knobhead like randall charlie yes randall charlie is as you said a knobhead he is not
to use another british term that i've learned from love island he's not a lad no he's not one of the lads like
sam and his his friends and yeah this this lad's trip is fucking terrible right now um but
yeah i that's that's such an interesting contrast of like you know how sam has gotten to this
self-conception because of randall charlie that's i think that's interesting what you said chloe that randall has no friends
because we see other lords have friends right like ned had friends robert had friends they
were each other's friends right even even ty tywin is what kevin right yeah that's true yeah tywin
has friends and i mean pisel clearly felt like he was friends with tywin but who wants to be
friends with randall ew yeah not even randall he doesn't seem to value friendship for any other
reason right like the friends in the reach might be him but it's not really friends people call
him when they want to kill people you know yeah he's really good at killing people dead call
randall he's an asshole he can clean up
some crime for us
I have never seen him kill someone
I think he might have made that up also
to be honest
he's
I know we'll probably see it eventually
yeah it sounds like a reach
but in regards to like
Sam learning to value himself
and like friends like and how he doesn't believe that
Gren could really like him, I mean, obviously he does.
And it's not just Gren, right?
A lot of people have told Sam to just get up already.
And I feel like if you didn't care about someone staying alive, you wouldn't have been like,
dude, you need to get up.
Gren is literally risking his life
and safety to try and get you to stand up right now without john around so clearly it's not just
completely hinging on john and there is the fact as we go forward like they think john's dead
because they haven't heard from him in ages but they're yeah soon soon but like they pretty much are like don't know
john's probably dead haven't heard from that fucker in a while so john really doesn't matter
in this sam this is all you got they're your friends now they're your brothers now yeah
yep john was lost with corey in half hand probably dead Sam would cry, but his tears would only freeze like him. A tall
brother with a torch stops besides them and says, you need to leave Sam. If he can't walk, he's done.
Gren needs to save his strength. Gren says he just needs a hand, and he begins to pull Sam to his
feet the best he can. The moment Gren lets go, Sam falls right backward into the snow. He kicks Sam up, telling him he has to get up, and Sam curls up, protecting himself from the kicks.
And then he thinks the most relatable line in the entire song of any ice nor fire.
I thought Gren was my friend.
You shouldn't kick your friends.
Why don't they let me be?
I just need to rest, that's all, and sleep some, and maybe die a little.
So relatable.
So relatable.
It is, like, I've never related to a sentence more in my life.
This is coming from the woman with six alarms set in the morning, you know?
Yeah.
No, I legitimately believe this is, like, one of the most relatable ones.
Yeah. No, I legitimately believe this is like one of the most relatable ones. I was like out here yesterday talking about how I relate to Gollum, just giving up at the smallest hardship. And that's how I relate to this. And I honestly, I continue to be surprised that there are people who dislike Sam, who dislike his POV. And I think maybe it's just like this, it's too real, in my opinion, and like controversial take.
I just low-key think that the people who dislike Sam, it's because they're dishonest with themselves about who they are.
And like, this is just relatable content.
It is relatable. I use the phrase every nerd with Sam sometimes.
Yeah.
So the other voice told Grant to leave him.
That voice comes back in and helps to carry Sam.
It's small Paul, who once carried a calf that was heavier than Sam.
Sam is just muttering in Paul's hand, telling him to put him down, just let him die.
Yeah, Sam is almost ready to give up on himself.
It's like a suicidal wish. just let me rest here and you know
forget about me I'll die I'll be on this blanket of snow nice and warm and he's tempted by that
but fortunately his friends don't let him his brothers and it brings to mind this quote from
Tyrion in game that I really like he says death is so terribly
final while life is full of possibilities so sam just needs to get through it little does he know
that if he overcomes these gigantic obstacles the author might just throw a few rewards his way well
one of them being a girlfriend sam so i see real life in much the same way.
If you're in really tough times, everything is really difficult. Sometimes you just have to
buckle in and hang on because no matter how damaged you feel you are, wonderful things can
happen to anyone in this world, believe it or not. I love that. I love that. Thank you.
And something else I see in this too you you
kind of touched on it his friends don't let him just succumb because i think something else that
this chapter shows is like it's okay to get help sometimes when you're in your really dark moments
and you know sam is just so down on himself and struggles to go on.
But thanks to his friends, Small Paul and Gren, he is eventually able to keep going.
Because I think getting help, it's not a weakness.
But because Sam has just been told all of his life that he's a burden, he's afraid to ask for help from his friends.
I'm relating hard to this.
So many aspects.
The closer I look at this, the sound the more things i'm
like whoa yeah that is a bit like me sometimes well and it's so hard because like when you've
been told your whole life that you were nothing but a burden on others right like of course you
want to just curl up in a ball and die in the snow and tell them to please just go on because you
feel like you're that much of a burden and sometimes
everybody just needs a hand a help like mirror reed says in the show the books were based on
whatever that line i like that she says that i say all the time on this podcast you guys know
you heard it a couple weeks ago you hear it like once a pov she says it yeah just because whatever
someone need help doesn't mean they're not worth helping.
I don't know, whatever.
Pile, good or bad.
You know.
Yeah.
And it's again, like every single time Sam is like, my friends hate me.
They're not my real friends.
George disproves that in the text, right?
Because Gren then tells him, save your strength, Sam.
Think about your sisters, your brother, Maester Aemon, your favorite foods, songs, but do that in your head.
Please, he asks.
I like that one. That made me
smile. Very grand.
It's so sweet because
they know him.
These are the things that Sam actually
cares about. If they didn't like you, Sam,
they wouldn't be out here saying,
well, think about your sisters. They don't give a
fuck about how many sisters someone they don't like has out on the wall.
Very true.
Nobody has that kind of capacity for someone they don't like.
Yeah.
And if they do, it's thinning every day.
So not saying this to anyone in particular.
Eliana.
No, I'm just kidding.
And here I was thinking, damn, everyone needs themselves a friend like Chloe to eat raw garlic.
Shit, guess not.
Fuck.
I'm a burden.
I'm just kidding. I'd pick you out of the snow any day, babe.
I'd probably drop your ass, though. You know I'm a weak bitch. I'm a weak motherfucker.
Is she able to do that?
Like, ten minutes ago I was just telling Yokeboy I pulled a muscle.
So I don't know.
I don't know.
I pulled a muscle podcasting.
Gren just wants that garlic sausage.
He's just sort of playing Sam for the sausage.
There truly is a great theme of brotherhood in this chapter going on.
great theme of brotherhood in this chapter going on.
And I love that coming off of the chapter located right before this,
Arya chapter,
that insight from Sam into family for the first time from him and Arya with the brotherhood in the last chapter.
We know that Sam's assimilation into the watch wasn't easy at first.
And this whole brotherhood theme becomes so
significant between that chosen family versus the family that rejected you and society that rejected
you as well as this idea of men coming together from different religious backgrounds and choosing
to follow one thing together so with the brotherhood they're all following relore but
not just relore they follow it because they believe it, because they've seen it work, right, and bring back the dead.
And you even have between Arya and Harwin, where he's telling her, these are my brothers now, you know, Lord Eddard's dead.
These are my brothers. I belong to the Lightning Lord.
We mean your brother no ill, but it's not him we fight for.
He has his own army. The small folk only have us.
Do you understand what that means, Arya?
And that's what Sam is learning, right?
Like, out here in the Ice Zombies, when you're north of the Wall,
your religion becomes the undead out here right like you believe in what's real
the heart trees aren't going to do anything but soak up your blood beyond the wall right maybe
brand can send like some vision ravens to come save your ass or something or cold hands can show
you a secret passage but uh you know out here you have the cold and each other and that's it.
Yeah. Sam has got the sort of social equivalent to imposter syndrome.
He just doesn't doesn't think he's can possibly be good enough for other people.
He thinks that, you know, it's some sort of mistake that people are making when they judge him.
But nothing could be further from the truth.
Because as you say, you know, in this environment, who's going to stop to pander to Sam if they really didn't like him?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love that he finds his place there eventually.
Thankfully, Chet's plan did not.
I don't know, because I'm like, I'm glad Chet's plan did not go through.
But then a lot of more people died, guess because of what actually did happen and i think it's interesting
when you're saying that there are no gods beyond the wall just the whites and the others and that
becomes the religion because that's what the power and the magic that's there because this does
intersect with sam's storyline later on and we'll obviously talk about it more later on, the stuff at Craster's Keep,
and they talk about how Craster kind of serves these cruel, cold gods.
They talk about the others as, like, those gods as, you know, he sacrifices.
Speaking of, like, dysfunctional families with no brothers at all,
Craster's family.
What a nightmare.
Family reunions suck.
Well, Sam says he doesn't know songs anymore, but Gren reminds him of the bear in the maiden fair.
And Sam is then instead reminded of the bear that came up the face with hairless, rotted flesh and bags for no songs at all.
Ever again.
hairless rotted flesh and bags for no socks at all ever again yeah this i think is the same bear that chet was trying to hunt down in the opening section of his prologue because he's
with his dogs and he's trying to track this bear and we have his pov obviously but the dogs
won't take the scent so he can't find the bear so you know to butcher and eat
so it's this this sort of minor mystery but you don't even really realize that it is a mystery
on your first read through because it's quite subtle but i think that the answer to the mystery
is that chet's hounds can't take the scent because the bear has been whited in the haunted forest and it's poised to attack.
So I do love how George threads these things through the story like this.
And yeah, a normal bear would be terrifying, but an undead bear?
Yeah, we talked earlier about the layers of trauma in Sam's head and this is a whole new layer
yeah and I love how it's from the past I mean I always love how George folds in different times
of events happening into one POV chapter and takes you back and says let me tell you what
happened three days ago while Sansa was stuck in her tower. But it's expertly done in this, especially with all the horror vibes we've been talking about.
And there's something interesting in that both his bear, Sam's bear, is from the past, right?
We're getting Sam recollecting this bear in the present day and when he saw this undead bear.
And it's not unlike Bririanne's bear right because we
don't get brianne's bear through her pov originally we only get recollections from her and we see it
through jamie's pov so i'm loving all the storm bears it's uh almost unbearable this song you're nice don't encourage her behavior
thank you you're welcome anytime here
friends look after each other exactly exactly leave me here to die in the snow Snow. Snow, Ned. Snow.
Yeah, I mean, there's such an interesting tie-in between Brienne's bear and Sam and the timing of when those show up in this book.
I mean, Brienne's bear is covered in hair, like in the song.
Sam's is like a lewd naked bear.
But as you said, it is a layer of trauma for Sam.
The bear ends up also being a layer of trauma for sam the bear ends up also
being a layer of trauma for brianne at some point too because why wouldn't it be i also kind of
wonder like is the bear i first of all i love that you've pointed out like i didn't realize
that or catch that that the bear that they were tracking is the same bear um it's a good thing i
guess they didn't track it it tracked them that's actually less good but is the undead bear or the dead bear in general foreshadowing for the death of jay or i don't know
random yes thought i had absolutely absolutely i think so i think that's a great call out
bears okay i also am wondering because like if they're trying to find the bear to eat the meat something i wonder is can you eat undead no eliana you can't eat your undead meat i guess
you're putting first yeah it's also rotten is what we find out it is rotten flesh no one wants
to eat that all right so i'm glad i've what do you think sam sausage is made out of um but that's
fresh maybe if you get to the undead maybe if the undead is brought back soon enough before it rots you can eat them yeah it's it's a gray area
chloe's face is just like why is this happening to me i'm just the virgo rising in me is like
this is so improper that you're speaking of this right now while we have guests over.
Gren tells Sam to think about the birds.
Think about your bravens, Sam.
And Sam's like, they're not mine.
They're the Lord Commander's.
They're Castle Black's.
The Night's Watch's.
Oh, Sam.
He has no ownership over anything or like feeling of wanting it because his dad probably
told him that everything he had in life was not his and never was to be his and that he's worthless
and had nothing and would never have anything of his own because of that so um just so funny
to think about like that's why sam is like they're not not mine! They're basically yours, Sam. Yeah, kinda. I also think it's kind of funny that Grendt suggests this as a happy
thought because he's just kind of assuming Sam has this really close kinship with the Ravens,
and I don't know that Sam feels that close to the birds or the Ravens. Apparently that's small Paul.
Sam's just kind of like i don't know yeah the
ravens are there um and now they signify failure to him things are going great
yeah small paul suddenly is like frowning and he's like well
chat said that i could have more months talking raven but he forgot he asked sam if he could have
one of his ravens but sam's like no dude they
already left they're flying they're gone yeah just as we convince you guys that sam's friends
really do love him for who he is small paul starts carrying him probably because he wants that bird
yeah and small paul has like some flavors of lenny you know put down the rabbit small paul
obviously just because of his size and the way he speaks and this is again another one of those
little hints of the mutiny right cropping up that sam and them they're obviously running for their
lives and they don't think about it but they're like what do you mean chat promised you a rent
what why would he promise you what and for us if you think about it you're like oh shit right because shit was
supposed to go down until these zombies attacked um i feel really bad for small paul because i do
think he's like being a little pushed and taken advantage of by the boys who want to start the
big bad mutiny right
and he's like i'm just in it for the bird man i'll do whatever you want if i can have a bird
because i'm lonely someone should just give him a bird and he shouldn't have to mutiny you know
i mean there are worse reasons to join a mutiny i think a bird is one of the more admirable ones
and interesting if they had made it back to the wall i don't see why sam couldn't give him
one of the birds because the they would just meet the birds there eliana and where do you draw the
line is my question for mutiny um i i feel like chet had a bad idea like chet's ideas he's like
yeah i'm gonna mutiny and then i think i'm gonna try to live like craster that's not a
good reason to mutiny a bird a bird is a good i'm i'm with the bird i like the bird chaotic neutral
i respect this more one's got a raven so you know there's precedent yeah yeah there is precedent
it is pretty cool well yeah unfortunately again sam had released all the ravens when the battle
felt close to lost
the horn sounding with two short blasts
and a long one to mount up and go
and also unfortunately
um
in the hubbub
he did not attach any of the messages
that he had written
oops
big mood
this is me sending an email and being like attaches blah blah and not putting
the attachment yeah yeah in that moment he was like be free be free hurry get our messages there
and the birds are like okay bye and i'm like wait what never mind we'll ask you later we'll get you
later sam i just think anyone who's forgotten to attach
something to an email has like no right to judge sam none none this is like way more also the
anxiety of realizing that you've sent the wrong thing or the wrong email is highly relatable
yes also true also true so much harder i do that at work sometimes i send the wrong attachment to the wrong person
and they're like oh you're getting this from so and so interesting you know giving out the
personal info it's not good hopefully i give them nothing yes queen give them nothing i hope you
know i hope that these messages don't just blow into the wrong hands. You know, you get a really smart other walking down the
road, picks him up. Interesting.
Night's watch nearby.
That's how the other gets to the end of the chapter.
He found the messages.
Sam is stumbling
through the snow and remembers the dead
coming over the stones, arrows
through them. Some in
ring mail, some some naked many of these
whites were free folk some were also infated blacks he remembered one of the shadow tower men
shoving his spear through a white's pale soft belly and out his back and how the thing staggered
right up the shaft and reached out his black hands and twisted the brother's head around
until blood came out of his mouth.
That was when his bladder let go for the first time.
He was almost sure.
Yeah, that's interesting.
In Chet's prologue, Chet tells Sam that when the wildlings approach,
they'll come right at you, screaming in your face.
And I'll, I bet you'll piss those breaches so he's really sort
of poking fun at Sam saying he's going to wet himself but when the others attack the fist
it's Chet who first wets himself we know this because it's literally how his POV chapter ends
and later Sam does the same thing but clearly he held on a bit longer so he wins no really i think that george is showing that
anyone can be overcome by fear and chet is not quite the hard guy that he thinks he is
and sam is certainly not alone in his quite natural reaction to this unmitigated zombie terror
although no doubt he gives himself a really hard time for it. Like you said, right, anyone can be overcome by fear,
and I legitimately believe that every single person of the Night's Watch,
they're on the fist, wet themselves.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, it's pretty scary.
Especially, like, if you've never seen an other or a white,
which most of those men had not.
Absolutely.
And, again, we're back the the trauma of it all because sam is missing memories from some of this time right he doesn't remember running but he
remembers suddenly arriving to the next camp uh and this camp is struggling hard in the battle
everything's dark but flame is engulfing beings around him. Whites, bears.
Finally, Sam finds a horse. He mounts it and he heads toward the sound of the horn.
At the sound of the horn, he finds Ed, who sits atop a horse. Thorin Smallwood is ready to call
out the reserves, but Mormont's like, no, no, we have to cut our way out. He calls them into a
spearhead formation, but Smallwood shouts out the slope is
crawling with others. J.R. begins to shout a new command, but the horse throws him as the white
bear comes staggering back. Sam pisses himself again. The bear was dead, pale, rotting, its fur
and skin all sloughed off, and half its right arm burned to the bone, yet still
it came on. Only its
eyes lived, bright blue,
just as John said,
they shone like frozen stars.
I just
want to see the naked, rotten bear.
Smallwood charges,
almost taking the bear's head off off but then instead loses his own head
to the bear um literally his head was like probably ripped off the lord commander tells
them to ride and they galloped to the stone wall sam had never jumped a horse before but you know
first time for everything the horse takes over gets through. The rider to his right is not so lucky. Whites
swarm him and his horse.
They all plunge down the hills, men and horse,
swept into a tumble, axes and swords
hacking at flesh, and Sam
clutches his horse harder than ever,
sobbing. The whites
hold on for dear life, too, clutching
or not dear life, but you know, whatever this
is, clutching at swords and horse
legs as they pass
even clawing open the belly of a horse hurtful as it passes overhead sam feels relieved until
a man in black leaps from the brush and pulls him from his saddle and then gallops off on his horse
yeah the fuck yeah i would really like to know who that was.
I hope it was one of the mutineers who end up, you know, not with the best ending.
I've read, like, people speculate it could have been Chet, which he could have noticed, maybe.
But also, again, trauma and things were moving fast and it was pitch black besides the fire here and there.
And I guess it doesn't matter, but it would make sense if it was chet we should ask george that should go yes that's
the number one question who was it who pulled pulled sam off the horse throw it on the list
we need to i need to start writing all these down um i have some written down and i also want to
like call out that there's like this brief mention that there's this one dog that was doing a great job bounding in and out of the horse's legs and trying so hard to keep up with the fleeing brothers and their horses, but then eventually gets lost because it can't keep up.
And that just makes me real sad.
Yeah, we can blame Chet for that as well, because he's the dog guy.
Actually, though.
Yeah.
Goddammit, Chet. Getting sick of Chet's bullshit. Blame Chet. Not as well, because he's the dog guy. Actually, though. Yeah. Damn it, Chet.
Getting sick of Chet's bullshit.
Blame Chet.
Not for long.
Don't worry.
Sam tries to run after the horse, but he falls on a root and falls hard on his face, weeping
until Ed finds him.
That was his last coherent memory of the fist of the first men.
Later, miles from the fist, Sam and the other survivors shiver, some mounted, some foot.
Diowen had lost, I think, two out of five, three out of five of the pack horses that carry resources,
and they take time, they redistribute the loads, so losing revisions doesn't, like, ruin their lives.
Next time, next time they lose a horse.
So losing revisions doesn't like ruin their lives.
Next time, next time they lose a horse.
Healthy men are demoted to walking.
The wounded are promoted to horse and torches are set to guard the front and the back.
All I need to do is walk, Sam tells himself.
But within an hour, he begins to struggle.
And that is where we meet him in his chapter.
The present, the real present yeah i i really love how these apocalyptic scenes of the fist of the first men are intricately weaved into the chapter in these
flashbacks i don't know about you two but when i read this chapter sort of casually i struggle to
know where i am in the timeline sometimes and to knit together in my head
where I am about I am and I need to sort of keep my eye on it and study it to make proper sense of
it but you know perhaps that chapter format has had the desired effects perhaps that is what George
was going for to convey the spinning mind of Samwell in this disorienting blur of action i i absolutely agree
and i that's one of the reasons why like this is you know my favorite chapter as you said right
like it's it really thrusts readers into that same like state of temporal confusion because sam keeps
being like i don't know how many days ago that was three days four days he's like lost track of it and you know like even more confusing is to some extent it's written
sort of stream of conscious like not entirely but to an extent because you pointed out right
like the times that we go into some of those flashbacks are flashbacks are those like intrusive
moments as you said, that suddenly pop into
Sam's mind, and then he pops back there, he's put back in the middle of the chaos, and then comes
back to the present. And we have several different moments of temporality in this chapter. Not only
do we have the present, we also have that past in that singular moment of the attack on the fist,
and then we also jump every now and then even further into the past
into like this large amorphous like duration of time of sam's life before the watch and his
childhood and like bounding between all of that it really gives you again that same sense of
how sam feels like he doesn't know when it is it would feel overwhelming if it wasn't done right
and that's a testament to how it's written yeah agree absolutely
it's a lot of back and forth and the confusion isn't overly confusing it's enough to disorient
you the reader to put you in the exact same tone of the chapter which i think is
also really well crafted yeah the sobbing sam took another step like operates in that way also
being another tool to bring you back into the present and to give a rhythm and sense of time as the chapter moves forward because of the, I think, intended confusion.
Yeah, it's another, you know, the thrum of the crossbow and moon boy for all I know, the ringing of the bells for John Khan.
It's another one of those that grounds the chapter.
And every time it goes off, it brings you back to the start.
You're back to the ground.
I like that.
The snow is growing deeper, the ground more treacherous, and even Paul's strides start to grow shorter as he carries Sam.
He gets tired.
The men on horse pass them staring
after sam and some of the torchbearers pass too saying you're falling behind no one's gonna wait
for you paul you should leave that pig for the dead men but paul says sam promised him a bird
he didn't at all and the torch men call him a fool, leaving. They're not wrong.
A while after that, Gren stops suddenly.
They're alone.
That was the rear guard.
Paul's arms tremble and he puts Sam down.
He can't keep carrying him.
The torches are all gone.
Only Gren's torch remains and it's close to burning out.
I love the language there. It's actually phrased as close to burning out. And it reminds me of Jamie's fever dream when his torch goes out. I love the language there. It's actually phrased as close to burning out, and it reminds
me of Jamie's fever dream
when his torch goes out. I think
the language is very similar intentionally
to who knows if it's foreshadow or what,
but it's very fighting the
others, and when the others arrive
and you have no light left.
But there's no Jamie or
Brienne, unfortunately, here.
There's no one.'re alone they have no
food no fire no warmth but wait they're not alone someone's there an other on a very creepy horse
hoarfrost covered it like a sheen of frozen sweat and a nest of stiff black entrails dragged from
its open belly oh boy we were talking about it being a horror
story and we're heading towards the climax and yeah there's theories that the others are
you know going for the horn that we saw john give to sam so that is one theory it could just be sort of bad being in the wrong place at the wrong time
for sam or it could be that these others are sort of sniffing for this horn interesting
i i like that because it does happen more than once i guess and
the horn i that horn has to be significant like Like, I strongly believe that horn is important.
Yeah, and there is something action movie and horror movie-like
in that, like, the killer keeps finding you, you know,
and that you have to keep escaping and that you're on the run.
It does give kind of a sense of, like, Sam being on the run
and that horn being a magical tracking device
beeping away in your pocket a radar for them to discover i find that very interesting i could see
that being yeah that reminds me of no country for old men they've got a literal beeping tracker
device in there yeah that's quite i was just we just re-watched that this week so i think that's
actually like subliminally where I'm coming from right now.
That's really funny.
Yeah.
So back to the other Sam whimpers and the other slides toward them.
Paul asks the other,
why'd you kill that horse?
This is Eliana.
Why'd you kill that horse?
That's one of our brother's horses.
And Gren flashes fire toward the other.
The other moves towards gren
quick slashing and the ice blue
blade brushes the flame making an
awful terrible screech
i as
you said right i just love that small paul
he loves birds i feel like small paul
would get along with our friend cassidy
small paul is worried about the horse
you know he's just like
why did they have to be so mean to the horse?
And he even remembers whose horse it was.
He remembers exactly.
It's amazing.
I talked a little bit about
the Game of Thrones prologue
earlier.
And something that I think is interesting
that people have pointed out is that
the others do kind of seem to be playing
with Waymar Royce, right? He's just so below them that they're like this this doesn't mean anything and when they find him
and i kind of feel like that might be what the other is doing here too right like who fucking
cares about these humans and their stupid torch they don't bother to kill gren at this moment
because it again it's like that predator
playing like he just flexes on him and is like oh you think some fire is gonna scare me
and just cuts it off and is like who do you think i am yeah it's very much like freddy
coming towards you to end your fucking day you know it's totally villain stuff it's very much scary movie villain shit happening here i love that it's very like the danger not only are they beautiful but they're
dangerous and they have some sort of some sort of like ability to think where the whites are not
they are thoughtless they are just a mess honestly honey they are messy let's be real those whites yes yeah they are just
stumbling ass over apple cart over walls yeah the others are gorgeous they have entrance music when
that other got off his horse you know a song was playing i don't know what it is but there
was entrance music going on the song of achilles oh my god, the head of the torch tumbles sideways.
Now, Gren has a glorified stick, which he then promptly throws at the other, running off.
I respect that. I respect the last-ditch effort of, like, fuck this.
Small Paul charges in with his axe next.
We have this line.
The fear that filled Sam then was worse than any fear he
had ever felt before, and Samuel Tarly knew every kind of fear. Mother, have mercy, he wept,
forgetting the old gods in his terror. Father, protect me. Oh, oh! His fingers found his dagger, and he filled his hand with that.
Thank you, Yokeboy, we love you so much.
I'm gonna make you do all of them now.
I do love this entrance of the other, especially compared to the end of Sam 3 that we'll get to in a few weeks, right?
Because when he shows up on his elk, they expect it to be an other since they've been
running from whites and others this whole time but then it's cold hands question mark this is
classic horror and i love that george immediately as we get closer the story goes but that's not
what this is about anymore for sam he's on a bigger journey now yeah and they eat the elk speaking of eating oh that's true is that why you asked
the question earlier eliana about the okay the elk's not undead no but the other ripples its
body away from paul's axe and it twists its sword through paul's flesh Sam heard Paul say, oh, as he lost the axe. Impaled,
his blood smoking around the sword, the big man tried to reach his killer with his hands
and almost had before he fell.
So, may the mother have mercy on small Paul's soul. Because if I'm not mistaken, I believe Small Paul is among, like, the many people who are theorized to maybe be, like, a descendant of Duncan the Tall.
Gren is also included there.
Obviously, Brienne.
Though that one was confirmed.
The Cleganes.
But I just, I bring that up because I really admire Small Paul's character.
And maybe, like like he doesn't
think much about it right in the same way that he's like I'm doing this for a bird but regardless
like I I just think he must be afraid right yeah I mean all of them are he's afraid but he's
motivated by the killing of the horse he's so pissed that the horse is dead true wait you're
right you're right part of it might be vengeance for the horse part of. That's true. Wait, you're right. You're right. Part of it might be vengeance
for the horse. Part of it is also maybe protecting his brothers. And, you know, it's a little bit
like Sam's courage in a moment, but small Paul does die here, as we know, but this feels like
a no chance and no choice moment, right? Paul trying to protect his brothers and I think we see that in these sorts of no chance
no choice gambits
I mean, there is a cost
to that choice. Brienne obviously
paid a big cost
small Paul paid a very big one also
so I respect that. Life
he paid with his
life is what Eliana is trying
to say so delicately
so delicately
Well Chloe, you have to do this part Life is what Eliana is trying to say so delicately. So delicately.
Well, Chloe, you have to do this part because there's more I didn't hear for you.
It's very important for Eliana's happiness.
Sam tells himself to do it now, and then he hears voices in his head. First, he hears his father, Alistair, Dickon, Rast, saying,
Craven, Craven, Craven.
He laughs hysterically, thinking
about how he'll look as a big fat
white white, and
then suddenly he hears
John's voice in his head saying
Do it, Sam!
But wait, John was dead, that's impossible
You're welcome, Eliana
Hope you're happy
The return of the John voice
There will be more
Yeah, Sam's been mocked so much in his life Eliana, I hope you're happy. The return of the John voice. There will be more.
Yeah, Sam's been mocked so much in his life.
His head is just full of these negative voices that impede him and drive him down into the dirt.
However, hearing John shows the value of just one single positive, supportive voice encouraging him.
It's what he always needed another guy to slap him on the back and say go on you can do it john's kindness and empathy really
changed the direction of sam's life and taking nothing away from sam john's voice really helps
to save his life here and yeah it makes me love love john and Sam all the more. Yeah, that's such a great point. It does save.
Someone believing in you can save your life.
I love that.
And the sort of encouragement that John shows to Sam,
I think we see it start coming from others in the camp too, right?
As we see in Chet's chapter,
Sam is learning to use a bow and arrow,
and he's making progress with some positive reinforcement
from people who are not chet yeah he does well with people that don't do the negative reinforcement and the
asshole shit right like he doesn't do well with chet he doesn't do well with alicer and rast
there's a reason these people are coming to his mind saying on one side of his mind right now
you can't do it sam uh and then you have john on the now, you can't do it, Sam. And then you have John on the other side.
You can't do it, Sam.
He finds himself stumbling forward,
closing his eyes, shoving out the dagger,
and then he hears a crack, a screech,
so shrill, so sharp,
and he opens his eyes to see the other's armor
running down its legs,
pale blue blood hissing and steaming around
the dagger in its throat it tries to pull out the dagger but its fingers begin to smoke on touch
i just think some of the language here around these sharp objects is very interesting like
in a moment the dagger is going to be described as also smoking after all of the other body is gone and just a
few moments before as small paul died the other sword right is described also as smoking with
paul's blood as it's pulled out of him obviously this is probably steam which is a different
chemical phenomenon than smoke but i i just find this really interesting in regards to like the
obviously the azorahai and nisa nisa legends yeah that loops in with what you're saying of small
paul's sacrifice for them right and letting them kind of get away he dies for their sins here
yeah during this like long night ish thing there's gonna be a lot of horses up in heaven and a lot of birds.
Small Paul.
You can run and play with them.
I think so.
Yeah.
First, I mean, who knows what happens to his soul, right?
Doesn't he come back, like, dead, big sad?
Yep.
Yeah, it's a bummer.
Who knows?
Who knows?
A bummer for all.
That's a different series.
That's his dark materials we
don't got to worry about souls here sam watches the others shrink into a puddle and his bones of
milk glass whirl away in a fine white mist which coming back to that mist like you said that steam
arising off the the body of the other it's kind of interesting. It stood out on this read,
especially with the idea of like gray mist
showing Bloodraven usually in the text,
as we've kind of found and talked about.
Every time there's gray mist,
it seems like it could be Bloodraven and Bran
watching through a tree,
or they're involved at least.
And this white steamy condensate,
maybe it's another type of magic, you know, a similar force,
but a different brand of magic. Yeah, I mean, this is definitely magic. Something magical is
definitely happening. For sure. Gren touches the dagger saying that it's cold, which is interesting
because it's smoking and Sam struggles to his feet saying, obsidian, dragonglass, then subsequently giggling, crying, and puking in the snow. All of
these also are moods. Mood. Total mood. Gren pulled Sam to his feet, checked small Paul for a pulse,
and closed his eyes, then snatched up the dagger again. This time, he was able to hold it.
snatched up the dagger again. This time he was able to hold it. You keep it, Sam said. You're not Kraven like me. So Kraven you killed an other, Gren pointed with the knife. Look there,
through the trees, pink light. Dawn, Sam, dawn. That must be east. If we had that way,
we should catch Mormont.
We should catch Mormont.
Wow.
When was the last time a human killed another that we know of?
To my memory, I think the only one that we know of is the last hero that's said to have killed another, unless I'm forgetting something. But I don't think there's been one since the Age of Heroes, certainly.
So what a boss Sam is.
certainly so what a boss sam is although with the element of good fortune involved you just know that he's going to downplay and even undermine himself at every opportunity immediately call him
himself craven when he's puddled the shit out of another must be the most samwell tarly thing ever randall has truly
done a number on this kid sam has got to realize that you can be a coward and brave at the same
time like you said he's like downplaying himself and it's just sad because like grand's like you're
like this is the most incredible thing i've ever seen in my life it's probably how
greg feels right now and in regards to being both a coward and brave at the same time i feel like sam
should watch this show that aired a lot when i was younger it was also very scary very horror movie
ish so i think that he might find that interesting it was called courage the cowardly dog and it was
about a dog that that was veryly, but did very brave things
all the time.
That is Sam.
Sam, Courage the Cowardly Dog.
That's Sam Tarly. Sam Tarly is Courage.
That's amazing.
Pack it up, folks. We don't need to finish this episode.
Eliana did it. We don't even need to finish this
POV. Let's just not watch Courage
the Cowardly Dog. I think this is it.
I think that that's our peak.
We've peaked. We want to go out on a high note.
Thank you for being here for the last episode,
Yolkboy. Please let everyone know where they can
find... I'm just kidding.
I also have a real thought, and
I mean, I love the way that this
chapter ends, right? It feels kind of obvious,
but I do want to call out, of course, that dawn cresting at the end of the chapter.
Because, turns out, this chapter has very much been sort of like what we can expect from The Long Night, likely.
But in miniature.
You know, after Small Paul and Sam's acts of bravery also grin, being like, here's a torch, and then throwing the stick.
It shows that there's still hope.
That's very much what the dawn at the end is.
And if there's hope from people who do courageous things, even when they're afraid, perhaps eventually the dawn will come.
And I mean, there is still work to be done.
Like how they still know that they're going to need to head east if they're gonna catch up with
everyone else but if you keep taking that next step eventually morning's going to follow i love
that so much that that rings through especially with the following lines to end the chapter like
it's just all it ends in such a hopeful place where they've been chased by zombies for like
weeks it ends hopeful and sam is so quick to reject that he has slayed
an other, you know, that that means anything, where we're sitting here like, dude, you killed
an other. That's insane, Sam. But it is in his blood, right? Savage Sam Tarly is one of the
historical House Tarly figures. So Sam, you're a savage. You're a straight savage. He is.
And the end of the chapter is, of course, again, so hopeful.
It ends with Sam saying, If you say.
Sam kicked his left foot against a tree to knock off all the snow.
Then the right.
I'll try.
Grimacing, he took a step.
I'll try hardacing he took a step I'll try hard and then another so I love that the chapter ends with Sam continuing to take small steps I did mention that George uses this sobbing
Sam took another step six times in in this chapter well the author went even further and chose to bookend the chapter
with the same sentiment and for me it creates a nice sort of circular feeling to it like I
experience when I read some short stories it might seem to Sam like all those steps are tiny and insignificant, but there's defiance, determination and perseverance in every small step.
Whatever Sam thinks of himself, he is confronting adversity and achieving this simple goal of survival, which, of course, is not such a simple goal in this setting.
Yes, absolutely.
Yes to all of this that you said like as you as you stated
right it is so much like a short story and like a very clear emotional arc that comes around
and the language you know coming back around and tying it all together and it kind of makes me
think of the sentiment from stormlight Archive. That book was published
after Song of Ice and Fire, the specific book I'm talking about, which I'm not specifying in
case it's spoilery. But anyways, it kind of hits a similar note that this story is,
that this chapter is talking about, like, of course, and the idea is like, the most important
step a person can take is the next one. And that's especially true in hard times, like obviously what Sam is experiencing now.
And as you said, right, that goal of survival, which is very complicated in this moment.
And, you know, I think that's a really relatable concept in general.
And I just love that lesson, though.
Hopefully we are all never caught in like a wintry zombie apocalypse.
It's going to come for you first, Yolk Boy.
But it's a great example for how stories can be allegories for our own experiences.
And then also like this action that Sam does at the end where he like kicks the snow off his boots.
It feels like he's like shutting like the burden of how he's felt from himself and also like maybe kicking off that fear it's like
an end and a beginning you know he's he's freshening up yeah yeah and ready to take
those next steps again new year new sam tarly you know oh my god kinda yeah it is he's fresh
he's new he's peeled off that that chrysalis that he was trapped within and that chrysalis was snow
and now he has shaken the snow he's born anew a phoenix in the snowy ashes and i love that for him
yes and snow net uh i love that i like that sentiment from stormlight archive that's really
nice eliana i'll read it someday i promise promise. Someday. It's like really long.
But I do think it's going to be finished one day.
So there's that.
Don't tease me with a good time.
Jesus.
She knows how to talk dirty to me right there, that girl.
A finished series.
Finishing.
So love what you both have said about finishing. I love what you both have said about finishing i love what you both have said here uh just about
like the emotional arc for sam through all of this and that beginning and end and how this is
like an end but also a beginning if you look at this as a pocket story in the universe it does
tell a story like who sam is what he's doing where he's going why he's going there and how he gets there right it gives you all
the w's and it introduces characters that are tangential to him and kind of makes them you know
it gives you kind of the understanding of why they're important to his plot i i like that a lot
as a mini story and then george turns it on its head and keeps it going as a great pov that unravels
more about sam and shows sam living to learn and love right and grow and learn to love that he's
never been allowed to do as we'll go forward with gilly uh and loss right losing maester amon later
on and what an emotional time that is and there's something in that kind of coming of age for Sam
that I find really interesting in Brienne's plot
and in Jon's plot that comes back to the sword, right?
For Brienne, it's the magical sword.
We just went through this with Brienne that, you know,
I have to have my magical sword
and she doesn't unravel and use the magical sword
until the last moment,
until the more end of her
feast plot for john long claw is a big emotional piece of turmoil right it's everything that his
own dad never handed to him or never said to him the things that john wishes he could have known
about his life the things he doesn't know that he wishes he could have known. There's a lot in there.
So Longclaw and the emotions with Jaor having a failed son in his eyes,
those are really, really emotional beats.
Yeah, in my eyes as well.
Really emotional beats.
And then ice, of course, is so important for both Brienne and Jon
as well as just the connection to Ned and ice being split.
as well as just the connection to Ned and ice being split.
But Sam, Sam and Heartsbane kind of rings really interesting to me here.
Sam and Heartsbane and kind of the fact that Sam doesn't kill an other with a huge Valyrian steel sword.
Sam does not do that. Sam kills the other with a tiny little arrowhead dagger flint piece of obsidian right like a in your hand
bloop stabby stab it's not a huge two-handed great sword it's not a boastful piece of a family legacy
he kills him with this piece of obsidian and that's actually kind of braver right like from a
from a tactics i mean he's not just lopping off the other's head
from afar with this huge sword.
He's up close and personal.
He's a moment from death.
And he's stabby stabby with the obsidian.
And there's something that like Randall
would never let him have hearts vain.
He even says to him at one point,
we got a memory.
You have given me no cause to disown you, but neither will I allow you to inherit land entitled that should be Dickens.
Heartsbane must go to a man strong enough to wield her and you're not worthy to touch her hilt.
That's so dark because it's like you've already done.
He's already done more important things with a weapon.
Then Randall's done, done you know by killing that one
other i think that's a much more important purposeful use of a tool of a sword of a weapon
and it's not even a sword not even heartsbane it makes me think that he will have the opportunity
to get heartsbane back maybe pass it up maybe danny brings heartsbane to sam you know after being like hey sorry about
your daddy here's his sword have an emotional grappling problem fest with that one sam
enjoy that mental breakdown sam i'm not sure what happens with heartsbane because
but i i do like what you said, that contrast between what heartspain is and the dagger, right?
As you said, there's a lot of bravery that goes into using it.
And like Sam, right?
It seems at first people are like, oh, what is this for?
What is this glass, this obsidian dagger for?
Why do we have these?
And it seems like an unassuming weapon just like sam right unassuming
over underestimated yeah very important yes just like sam our underdog he is very important
overall it's been a really exciting start to sam i think this has been such a strong chapter
to Sam. I think this has been such a strong chapter
and I'm excited to
kind of watch Sam's isolated growth
and see how Sam grows
from the beginning of Storm
through to Feast and the Trials and Tribulations
he's going to go through out on
the road.
The lonely road.
And the seas.
Seizing the opportunities
in front of him.
It's a fantastic story and
your listeners have got a lot to look forward to because there's so many good chapters in his pov
today was a you know a really great chapter but it's not the only one it isn't the only one i
mean obviously again i'm biased it's like my favorite chapter so it's not like it's all
downhill from here it's not there's a lot of good no and it's not like it's all downhill from here. It's not.
There's a lot of good stuff. No, and it's all building.
It feels like it's building and Sam's progressing and you're seeing change before your eyes.
You're seeing growth.
And you and your listeners are going to pick up on that and follow in it.
I think it's very satisfying.
There's not many sort of growth stories.
There's a lot of tragedy and stuff.
But here we go. There's something nice and pure growth stories. You know, there's a lot of tragedy and stuff. But here we go.
There's something nice and pure.
He's definitely pure.
Sam is kind of a very great pure character with a lot of, like you mentioned,
Yokoi, just really realistic and really close to home hitting kind of insecurities
and flaws and feelings.
And I think that's a great character.
That's a well-written character.
Absolutely. and feelings and I think that's a great character that's a well-written character absolutely and and I'm sure you know same for you like people if you want to start looking at that growth and Sam's story right away check out Radio Westeros's episode also out this month
yeah absolutely and Yolk Boy please let us, where are people able to find Radio Westeros across the internet and yourself?
You can find Radio Westeros at any of the places that you find podcasts.
We've been going for quite a while.
You know, we're always welcoming to people coming to try us out, try out a new podcast if you haven't heard us already.
And yeah, look forward to, look forward to trying to entertain you.
Yeah, the next episode we're doing is Sam.
That was just pure coincidence, but it meant that I was very, you know, sort of primed to do this episode.
So good timing.
And, you know, I really enjoyed myself today.
If you want to follow me on Twitter, I'm at the yolk boy.
And it's yolk like egg yolk,
not yolk,
the other yolk.
So there.
Not like the burdens that we all must carry.
Oh my God.
And but more like delicious.
We'll have links below in the description.
So please make sure to check them out.
Thank you so much again for joining us today, Yolkboy.
We had such a blast with you.
And we look forward to hopefully seeing you at Ice and Fire Con this year as long as life works out.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
I've had a great time today.
And I've really enjoyed your two perspectives on Sam because I've studied him so closely it's
really nice to hear sort of new thoughts and yeah you give me plenty to sort of chew on so thank you
and same to you I think you know I haven't like considered some of like the perspectives you
brought here in terms of like how Sam has like those intrusive thoughts or the way that the
trauma has really like changed the way that his brain and thought processes work.
And I think, you know, I'm going to go into the next few chapters now carrying that.
Carrying that in mind.
Well, we will return with Sam 2 in a storm of swords at the start of next month, at the start of February 2022.
Next week, we will be out with His Dark Materials.
So if you're following along for the Amber Spyglass,
tune in for that episode.
And if you want to keep up with those episodes,
you can also find us on social media.
Stay subscribed for our news.
You can find us at Girls Gone Canon,
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slash girls gone canon as always I have been one of your hosts Chloe and I have been another one of your hosts Eliana
thank you again to our other
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oh thank you
sobbing we took
another breath
sobbing
I guess I'm not taking any other
steps I'm sitting on the ground
I'm Sam lying down
being like let me just rest and die
that's me uh goodbye everyone goodbye