Finished it last night and overall enjoyed it - a frustration before is that the books seemed to be exploring wider and losing focus, but finally with ADWD it finally feels like it's all starting to come together.
Highlights:
Janos Slynt - ha!
Tyrion and Jon as always
Bran finally does something
Peripheral character POV's were limited, allowing main character POV's to carry the story - great!
- Manderley's pie!! (I'd already compared ASoIaF with Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus when describing it to friends - now it is!!)
Quentyn's visit to the dragons - the imagery of him noticing the whip burned, his hand on fire, and then the rest of himself. "Oh, he thought. Then he began screaming".
- Aegon!
- Victarion's complete ruthlessness at sea
- Cersei's inner defiance, not defeated
- the dragons as barely tame monsters
Complaints aren't really complaints - but I did feel Jon's actions became increasingly out of character, not least with trying to throw resources at saving thousands of Wildlings when he's already lost 12 ships to that and has no food to feed them anyway. And if it takes Obsidian and fire to kill the Others, what use will the Wildings be there? Surely a great way to help spread the Others behind the wall? Roose Bolton's letter shouldn't have been the prompt it was - he's had worse with his father beheaded, Robb murdered, and Winterfell burned. Still, he's stabbed, but doesn't seem likely he'd die so feels a bit pointless to a degree.
Also, throwing Aegon into the mix seemed more an attempt to distract from the R+L=J theory - helluva wild card to throw in - but otherwise enjoyed it.
Not sure why Mereen is taking up so much storytime, but it's clear we're going to need another volume to finish that, catch up with Samwell, Jaime, Brienne, etc, before we're even ready to see a volume with Daenerys in Westeros and all that will follow from that.
And Dany meeting with Khal Jhago - almost feels like GRRM admitting he shouldn't have killed Drogo, which left Dany totally out of the story arc afterwards - but that's a grumble.
Overall, though, very much enjoyed the book, the pace, the characters, the story - and most of all, that it all feels like it's going somewhere instead of focusing too much on peripheral events and characters.