A Game of Thrones
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Censored version of this book?
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Toviel
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Jan 16, 2015 10:05AM

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A "fan"made cencored pdf version would also violate copyright.
Lila wrote: "Not that I know of, but I could be wrong. Most of the violence and sex is integral to the plot, so I doubt it'd be any good censored anyway." Thanks for your reply, that helps me with regards to whether a censored edition would still deliver the same story...

To give you an idea about what I mean, literally the entire plot kicks off with an incestuous couple trying to murder a child. I'm not sure how that could rewritten or censored to be anything other than what it is and still deliver a quality story.

Violence has a huge impact on the story, I don't see how that's arguable, unless you hadn't read all the books. As for sex, I think it mostly shows character development. Unless you analyze characters on a Freudian level, it may seem to be useless, but often times it's more obvious; showing the drastic relationships of the Lannisters, for example.


P.S. It's a gritty story. A good story, but gritty.


There's a lot of violence, but I don't remember it being particularly graphic, at least relative to other books. I mean, it might give nightmares to a six-year-old, but any teenager will have seen far, far worse things on TV than are written in the books.

A "fan"made cencored pdf version would also violate cop..."
I cannot agree to this more. If a book is objectionable to you in any way, you are free to stay away from it, but I cringe at the thought of amateurs butchering a book to fit their moral standards. There are other fantasy novels you can read with less questionable content. Cutting the violence, sex and other possibly disturbing material would leave you with half a book that doesn't make sense. Just to name some examples that probably wouldn't make the cut, but are essential to one story or another:
(view spoiler)
And that's just off the top of my head, it's been too long to remember everything.
I'm not saying it's too much - I probably would have enjoyed the books just as much if I had read them as a teenager as I did reading them after that - but if you're already asking for a censored version withouth having read part of the original, I can only say it's probably a bad idea to start reading them altogether. These are not books you should read without an open mind.

I beleive the worry of the original poster is not one of open-mindedness or moral conflict, but that it may be too "strong" or "raw" for a young teenager. It of course depends on your upbringing and the culture you're exposed to. Regarding what I assume are the biggest worries (violence, incest and other questionable behavior)
If you're a (more or less average) western kid you've probably seen movies that have much more violence in them (can't really think of any recent examples, but most of Hollywood's action movies fall in this category). And while reading can make strong images in your head, you should be able to skim through those scenes if they are too much. Also, the violence you'll find is simmilar to that found in historical books, movies or documentaries, except maybe more "cynnically" written, if that makes any sense.
The sex scenes themselves are barely graphical (if I remember correctly), nothing your sex-ed class didn't cover (if you had one). Mostly harmless, and thankfully no rape (mentioned, but no detailed descriptions).
Of course, the morally ambiguous or simply deplorable behaviour might offend you, but again, the kind of thing you'd read in a history book.
As said before, the books would be quite different if censored. I'd recommend either reading them as they are, wait a couple of years 'till it might not be as shocking, or start to read them, if at some point something is too much, chances are something as shocking will happen again, so stop reading, set them aside and pick them up in a couple of years.
TL;DR: Try them out, if you can't handle it, get to them in a couple of years or maybe never, but don't ruin a possibly great read by reading a cropped version.

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