Humphrey Plantagenet, on 17 April 2012 - 02:32 AM, said:
The Others must have a need of the babies, otherwise it wouldn’t earn Craster his amnesty from them.
False logic construct. There could be any number of reasons why Craster appears to have an amnesty, most of them unrelated to any need for babies.
In fact it is a bad logic construct, demonstrably wrong, since sheep appear to do the same job. Clearly the Others do not 'need' babies, since they accept sheep in their place.
Humphrey Plantagenet, on 17 April 2012 - 02:32 AM, said:
The woman’s tone doesn’t suggest a construct to sooth collective guilt…but rather a fate worse than death for their sons. The wives seem to believe that the boys are sacrificed to give life to the Others and are suitably terrified of them. They might be wrong, or half wrong, but it’s as good (and fun) a source of speculation as any other in the books. Especially as we’ve been given so little on WW.
The womans tone doesn't suggest anything except urgency and fear. Urgency to get Sam to leave and take Gilly, fear of what is coming.
There is nothing to suggest that the wives thing the sons are sacrificed to give life to the Others, only that (they believe) the sons are part of what comes with the cold.
The point is though, that right or wrong, their is no way the women could actually know that. So it must be something they have made up based on almost no information (the Others are primarily a great unknown, even to the wildlings), and therefore more likely to be wrong than anywhere close to right. Especially when the logictics simply don't work.
Leave the @&*!^%$@ series out please (or spoilerise it), it hasn't reached here yet (first episode next weekend IIRC), nor many other places.
Not that I put much credence in the series. There are many changes made, and unless they explicitly affect the overall plot (and this one need not) many changes are made just to cover missing dialogue or make things more overt, regardless of their actual truth in the books.
Black Crow, on 17 April 2012 - 12:20 PM, said:
And here was me thinking that the Song of Ice and Fire is an epic Fantasy set in a world of magic and dragons, where the dead walk and the living are invested with arcane powers

Yep. But it is also 'realistic' in that characters generally don't get secret knowledge from unknowable sources. Characters get stuff wrong all the time. They put 2 and 2 together to make 7, or 3, or 5. Look at the N+A=J rumours - they make perfect sense given that people know Ned took 'his' bastard away from Starfall and Ashara committed suicide at the same time.
In this case I cannot see any plausible scenario where the wives would actually know that the son's are coming. Nor has anyone else presented one, just glossed over this point (at least not past the first couple of heresy threads). But I can see a perfectly plausible scenario where the wives believe this regardless of it being anywhere near the truth.
Basically it is not that the sons couldn't be coming, its that this is the only clue and it simply isn't credible. Without a single credible clue, the theory becomes totally speculative, as much as the idea that Sansa is the Great Other, say.