Paran, on Oct 13 2008, 09:03 AM, said:
Thanks for the news Pat! I love the rate at which SE keeps churning these books out! Looks like DoD will beat out ADwD by my calcs, though I wonder what the odds would be? Can't wait for Stonewwielder either!
ADWD is currently slated for 4 April in the UK and 30 April in the USA, so if that holds up, it will beat DoD by two months. Of course, 'IF' is the operative word here.
teholbeddict, on Oct 24 2008, 08:33 PM, said:
Great! Now if only Martin would get on with it and finally release Dance with Dragons. How long can it take to finish a book which was supposedly half done when A Feast For Crows was published three years ago!

I'm also looking forward to the second book of the Rothfuss trilogy.
Yeah, the reasons for ADWD taking longer have been gone into several thousand times already. And the Rothfuss series is six books divided into two trilogies.
teholbeddict, on Oct 30 2008, 08:45 PM, said:
I honestly haven't noticed any evidence that would indicate the quality of SE's writing is suffering as a result of the books coming out yearly. In fact I would go in the other direction and say that the books are improving. I haven't noticed the numerous editing errors either. Events don't always take place in the order that one would assume but they always have a purpose and it's not just to move the plot along.
I didn't have a problem with Martin's last book I really enjoyed it. My major beef is the fact he stated he was half done with the new book when a Feast For Crows was published. He also stated that Dance could be expected within the next year. Obviously it wasn't and he has continued to put out possible completion dates and miss them ever since. I get the quality argument to some degree, but really how long does it take to write half a book? As others have stated in this thread it's not like it's even the last book in the series. As was also mentioned he doesn't write during Con season, so it's not as if he sitting there slogging away for the whole of the year. I would also argue that his series comes nowhere close to the depth of SE's.
The MBF books are definitely getting weaker as they're going along. You find lots of people saying DHG, MoI or MT (which interestingly took longer than most of the other books to write) are the best, but very, very few saying the same of BH, RG or TTH. Erikson's prose style has arguably improved, but apparently at the cost of his pacing and readability. And obviously the timeline of the books is now totally nonsensical.
As with GRRM, this has been explained numerous times before, but if we want to get into it again:
1) He doesn't write when he's on the road, so he lost a few weeks in the summer when he was in Spain but that's about it for this year. Popping up the road to Denver didn't lose him a lot of time (maybe a weekend). The rest of the time he does 'sit there slogging away'. A much fairer criticism is that he might procrastinate and rewrite far too much rather than just putting out what he's written. Of course, when he did do that with AFFC he got criticsed for it. It's not a straightforward situation.
2) The one-third of the book he had written after AFFC came out was apparently suffering from problems so he rewrote it to make it better. Since we have seen some of the chapters before and after this decision was made, we can authoritively say that this was the right decision.
Of the other books coming out next year, the big one I have my eye on is naturally Scott Bakker's
The Judging Eye, due out in January. China Mieville's
The City and the City also looks really interesting. The final WoT book will also be interesting, Alastair Reynolds also has a new one due late in the year and Richard Morgan's
The Cold Commands also looks good. Ian McDonald's
The Dervish House (which does for Turkey what
River of Gods did for India and
Brasyl for, erm, Brazil) will also likely be very interesting. Paul Kearney may also get out his sequel to
The Ten Thousand. Abercrombie and Lynch will also be very interesting, and I believe Ruckley's trilogy will be completed next year, although I wasn't as blown away by the first two books as some others were. Peter V. Brett's
The Desert Spear should be good, as the previous book,
The Painted Man, was probably the best epic fantasy debut of 2008. I believe Tad Williams'
Shadowrise is also due, which finally means I can read the damn thing.