The second season of Game of Thrones begins bleakly for Sansa Stark. The Northern princess is held hostage by the Lannisters in King's Landing and subjected to Joffrey's torment. Despite her situation, Sansa saves the life of Ser Dontos by convincing the cruel king to spare him. This scene is a faithful adaptation from the book. Arya and Sandor Clegane continue their trek toward the Eyrie. Arya lists the men and women she plans to kill as the two lay by the fire, much to the Hound's annoyance. The last name she lists is RELATED: Game Of Thrones: 5 Times Jaime Lannister Was A Hero (& 5 Times He Was The Villain) He starts out universally hated by viewers and readers alike after pushing a child out of a window and from there, his story begins to spiral. But some parts of it diverge from the books when it comes to the show, with many fans criticizing the changes made. 1. Sansa doesn't go to Winterfell. In the books Sansa didn't actually get raped by Ramsay Bolton after all. Phew! After that nasty incident in the Vale involving Lysa Arryn and the Moon Door
This page contains a log of TV/book differences and discrepancies in Season 5's episode Mother's Mercy to A Feast for Crows (fourth novel) and A
Everything seems to be happening so fast. Partly this is due to the fact that so many subplots from the books have been cut entirely, or condensed enormously. Giant swaths of book are simply gone