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I would have been, if he has been TRUTHFUL in the first place. If he was really "essentially done" with the book, then no matter what the issues, it wouldn't have taken 5 years.
Unless of course he essentially rewrote it from scratch. Which is what happened.
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Also, the room they're willing to give someone like Martin, who's produced multiple best sellers and has legions of fans, is FAR greater than it is for someone like Sanderson, who was, at that time, still perceived as a risk. And even now is not nearly in the same "league" in terms of self-marketing, as Martin. Bookstores would never block a aSoIaF book. They'd take it if it was as long as the rest of the series combined, and they'd take it tomorrow. Why? They know that the book will fly off the shelf no matter how big it is. Selling Sanderson still represents a risk, and was one even more then. Stocking Martin represents no risk at all. So he has considerably fewer roadblocks to getting published.
What the heck? You know that A Memory of Light, Sanderson's new book, is actually the last Wheel of Time book and is being credited to Robert Jordan with 'Brandon Sanderson' in small letters at the bottom? The Wheel of Time books are massive sellers, and the eagerly-awaited final novel (albeit now split in three) will outsell ADWD at least four-to-one, based on previous sales of the two series. The fact that the bookstores can still dictate terms to Tor on that basis shows that GRRM's 'clout' in the business is not as great as you make out.
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All of which only amplifies my concern that he's lost his plot. Because realistically, that's the only thing that would put things off this long. He either has no enthusiasm for it anymore, or no sense of where to take it.
Or he's just doing what he's done since writing the first book, producing a novel in 3-5 years. That's been the case all along with the sole exception of ASoS, which took a shorter amount of time due to GRRM doing 12-hour days on the book (including two subsequent Christmas Days) to get it finished as soon as possible. Funnily enough he didn't want to do that again and again for another four books in a row, as that would have entailed burn-out.
RangerSG, on Apr 12 2009, 01:02 AM, said:
Once again, this argument conveniently overlooks the fact that the ONLY person who raised the release expectations was Martin *himself* by stating in the afterword of aFFC that aDwD would be out in less than a year. So this isn't a question of writing a book from scratch and polishing it. This is a matter of a book he said was essentially finished 5 years ago being shelved because he can't be bothered to work on it. No one here has said that Martin couldn't have taken his own sweet time if he hadn't piled the expectations on himself. But you don't raise expectations of a quick follow-up, then walk away from it without an explanation. And then tell your readers it's THEIR fault when you miss your self-imposed timetable.
I agree in principle that the root cause of all the problems was GRRM saying he had 1/3 of the book ready to go in mid-2005 and that it should be out in late 2006/early 2007, which raised expectations to a high level. I also agree that he never really came out clear and strong and said, "I've dumped most of that material and am starting a lot of it again from scratch." You had to dig through some of his statements and convention interviews to work that out. In fact, he backed off from making comments about ADWD at all to avoid the problem of him saying something, people getting excited, then disappointed when he didn't make it. GRRM has said himself he's always been optimistic. Sometimes he's right (ASoS came out many months ahead of schedule) but mostly he's not.
That doesn't really change the fact that it's a grossly inaccurate attempt at simplification to say he shelved the book 5 years ago because he 'can't be bothered to work on it'. He works on it most days. The problem is that this is, in terms of plot structure and complexity, one of the most complicated-to-write fantasy books of all time. If he screws it up, he not only damages this book and the series, but the work needed to bring
The Winds of Winter and
A Dream of Spring in at a decent length and in a decent period of time will be increased exponentially. We'll also probably see the series spreading to eight books at least if that happens.
So pulling off ADWD in a way that it's both good and fulfils its complex role in the overall structure in the series is what is causing the immense writing and rewriting time on the book. So he takes the time and hopefully we get a good book. If he hadn't, we'd have gotten
Crossroads of Twilight Redux. The bigger danger that I can see is that he goes in the opposite direction and over-writes and tries to make it 'perfect' and we lose the spark of spontaneity that made ASoS such a great book.