House of the Dragon Season 2 Misses Crucial Book Connection to Game of Thrones

By Excluding Sara Snow, the Game of Thrones Prequel Misses a Direct Story Connection to the Original Series

house of the dragon

While House of the Dragon’s Season 2 premiere reintroduced viewers to the harsh Northern landscapes of Westeros, one pivotal book character was glaringly absent – Sara Snow, the bastard daughter of a former Lord of Winterfell. Her exclusion represents a missed opportunity to forge a stronger narrative link between the Game of Thrones prequel and the original iconic series.

As depicted in George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood source material, Sara Snow plays a small but thematically significant role during Prince Jacaerys Velaryon’s diplomatic visit to the North. The book sees Jacaerys not only meet Sara at Winterfell, but secretly marry and consummate his relationship with Cregan Stark’s half-sister.

This intimate bond sparks conflict with the honorbound Cregan, who initially takes offense at the insult to his family. However, upon learning of the marriage, Cregan strikes a pact with Jacaerys, vowing that their houses will one day unite through the marriage of their future children – a symbolic “Pact of Ice and Fire.”

While the truth of this union comes from the unreliable narrator Mushroom, Sara’s connection to Jacaerys showcases his impassioned side and willingness to defy duty for love, much like his eventual descendant Jon Snow would with Daenerys Targaryen in Game of Thrones.

By omitting Sara from House of the Dragon’s season premiere, the show misses out on reinforcing these core thematic parallels of love versus familial obligation that defined Jon’s internal conflicts throughout Game of Thrones.

Moreover, the marriage solidifies a direct blood lineage between the Targaryens and the Starks of the North before later characters like Jon. This intimate tie enhances the rich, intertwined history between the two great houses at the center of both series.

Granted, the show may simply have lacked sufficient runtime to explore Mushroom’s potentially embellished side-story. However, Sara’s inclusion could have organically deepened Jacaerys’ characterization while overtly foreshadowing the pivotal role future Starks would play alongside their Targaryen relatives.

As House of the Dragon pushes forward without Sara, it loses a prime opportunity to directly unite its narrative with the beloved lore that Game of Thrones fans hold dear across both the original work and the book prequels.

Unless the series course-corrects by reviving Sara’s storyline later, her absence will remain a missed chance to craft an added layer of mythological unity between Westeros’ past and future in this ambitious expansion of the Game of Thrones universe.

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