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How to read the Game of Thrones books & short stories in order

Everything you need to know to read the stories that inspired Game of Thrones and its spinoffs, whether chronologically or in release order.

If you ask me, it's never too late to hop on the Game of Thrones bandwagon. Especially since, very near to this writing, an all-new Westeros adventure begins in HBO's A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. That makes a total of three shows to watch for all you high fantasy hardcores, but what if you want to get even deeper into the world created by George R.R. Martin? What if you want to go to the source?

Well, Popverse's Game of Thrones reading guide is here to help.

A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIAF), the fantasy story by author George R. R. Martin that inspired the television series Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon, began with the publication of A Game of Thrones in 1996. Since then, Martin has published a variety of additional novels, novellas, and an in-universe historical text chronicling the (still-unfinished) saga of the denizens of the fictional land of Westeros, where dragons can roam the skies and winters can last for years, as they fight one another for political control of the realm amidst a looming mystical force which threatens all existence.

There are two ways you can approach reading the saga: chronological order (that is, reading the stories in the order of the events depicted therein) or release order (that is, reading the stories based on the dates the books containing them were published). This guide presents both options, along with a look at some of the ancillary publications that exist within the ASOIAF world but which don't constitute official narrative additions to the story, as well as the forthcoming novels that will (hopefully) conclude the story.

We did the same for the growing Game of Thrones universe, including House of the Dragon.


How to read the Game of Thrones books in chronological order

Game of Thrones Illustrated Hardcover
Image credit: Bantam Spectra

If you want to read A Song of Ice and Fire in chronological order, based on the order of events in the story, the first thing you can do is put all the main novels at the very end; they chronicle the most current events unfolding in the saga. But putting the material set before the start of A Game of Thrones in order can be a little trickier.

Fire & Blood, the immediate inspiration for the spinoff TV series House of the Dragon, is an in-universe history of the ruling Targaryen dynasty comprising three different characters' perspectives on historical events. It covers roughly 150 years of time, and overlaps with the novellas The Sons of the Dragon, The Rogue Prince, and The Princess and the Queen, each of which presents a similar historical overview of events in the style of Fire & Blood, albeit for a narrower slice of time. We have listed the book covering the wider survey of history first, but you may slot it after the subsequent three novellas if you'd prefer.

After those three Targaryen history novellas and before the beginning of ASOIAF-proper comes A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, a collection of three novellas known as the Dunk and Egg stories. Unlike Fire & Blood and the preceding novellas, these are narrative stories, written from the perspective of a hedge knight named Dunk, who takes on a young squire named Egg. The three stories chronicle their adventures as they move about Westeros, offering Dunk's services as a knight to various parties.

After that, the Song of Ice and Fire novels begin. The final two, A Feast for Crows and A Dance with Dragons, cover roughly the same period of time from the perspective of different characters, but since A Dance with Dragons moves further into the timeline than A Feast for Crows, it is listed last.

Also note: in Westeros, characters track years relative to the conquest of the continent by the first Targaryen king, Aegon the Conqueror, with the number and the abbreviation 'AC' (for 'after the conquest') indicating the number of years that have passed since Aegon united the Seven Kingdoms into one.

Here is the A Song of Ice and Fire chronological reading order:


How to read the Game of Thrones books in release order

A Dance with Dragons Cover
Image credit: Bantam Spectra

Just as with the chronological order, dealing with the main ASOIAF novels in the order of publication is pretty easy: put them at the top half of the list. After that comes the various novellas (for which we have included the anthology collection in which they were originally published), followed by the historical survey book Fire & Blood which is, to date, the last bit of ASOIAF material published by George R. R. Martin.

  1. A Game of Thrones (1996)
  2. A Clash of Kings (1999)
  3. A Storm of Swords (2000)
  4. A Feast for Crows (2005)
  5. A Dance with Dragons (2011)
  6. The Princess and the Queen, or, the Blacks and the Greens (2013, in the anthology Dangerous Women)
  7. The Rogue Prince, or, a King's Brother (2014, in the anthology Rogues)
  8. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms (2015)
  9. The Sons of the Dragon (2017 in the anthology The Book of Swords)
  10. Fire & Blood (2018)

Game of Thrones guidebooks & books yet to come!

The World of Ice and Fire Guidebook
Image credit: Bantam Spectra

There are a few additional books in the ASOIAF world worth mentioning, both published and forthcoming.

2014 and 2022 saw the publication of two nonfiction guidebooks to the world of Westeros: The World of Ice and Fire in 2014 and The Rise of the Dragon in 2022. Though Martin gets a credit on both books, they are chiefly written by the owners/admins of Westeros.org, Elio M. García Jr. and Linda Antonsson. They are almost like a published collection of Wikipedia articles about the world of ASOIAF.

Additionally, Martin has spoken of a handful of future projects through the years, including more Dunk and Egg stories and the concluding volume of Fire & Blood, which would theoretically cover the second half of the Targaryen dynasty, from the end of the Dance with Dragons to the events which ultimately toppled them from the Iron Throne.

When is the next Game of Thrones book?

And, of course, Martin is also somewhat famously working towards the conclusion of the central ASOIAF narrative, with fans perpetually engaged in a kind of 'Winds of Winter watch' for any news on the release of the next book in the series (to say nothing of its theoretical concluding volume, A Dream of Spring).


A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms has brought Westeros back to HBO Max, and Popverse has got more Game of Thrones articles than could fit on a spiky chair. We've got everything you need to dive into the series, including:

Plus much more coming as it gets announced!

Austin Gorton

Austin Gorton: Austin is a pop culture writer whose work has also appeared in Polygon, Comics XF, Shelfdust, and Comic Book Herald.

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