caladanbrood, on 07 March 2011 - 12:45 PM, said:
This is a good point. But how big is the hardback? Because I have doubts that they actually need to split them up. The paperbacks from A Storm of Swords between them are shorter than, say, an individual volume of the Night's Dawn Trilogy. I heard Martin talk about "physical printing limits", but that sounded like an excuse to me - I've seen bigger paperbacks. Money-making ploy?
Formatting and font size. Actually,
A Storm of Swords is an eye-opening 70,000 words longer than
The Reality Dysfunction (maybe 30,000 longer than
The Naked God). If you really want to get puzzled, Jordan's
The Shadow Rising is 392,000 words, which is longer than
any of Erikson's books (though only just), but a clear 250 pages shorter than MoI/BH/RG/TTH/DoD in mmpb. And the font size doesn't seem to be much different.
As for which books get split and which don't, it's down to their printers, and some printers are far less flexible than others. Bantam UK (Erikson), Arrow (Diana Gabaldon) and Pan Macmillan (Hamilton) can print 1,300-page paperbacks, whilst Voyager (Martin) and Gollancz (Sanderson) can't. Gollancz split Martin's
Dreamsongs and they're going to split
The Way of Kings in paperback. I'd be pretty surprised if they didn't split
The Wise Man's Fear as well.
One contact from my blog has even claimed to have spoken to HarperCollins' printers (somehow) and apparently they got pretty irritable at the suggestion they could put ASoS and ADWD into one volume in paperback, and when it was pointed out that other publishers could print bigger books in one volume with no problem they abruptly left the conversation. So greed, yes, but from the printers to the publishers, not the publishers to the public.
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Sorry Wert, what was that? I - and more importantly Martin's heirs - couldn't quite hear you over the sound of the truckload of money being backed up to their place ...

So you'd gladly pay to read some random author's fanfiction idea of how ASoIaF ends? That's weird.
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So he doesn't have notes? I'm sure he does have conversations, brainstorming sessions with his mates/editors etc.
You'd be wrong. He's told the TV producers 'something' about a couple of the mysteries to the series, but only enough for them to cobble together an ending off their own back, not an outline he himself is committed to following. As for the rest, no. He's discussed plans for WILD CARDS and his anthologies with his writer's group but ASoIaF is apparently not talked about.
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I have heard that nervous publishing houses demand projected outlines at least these days.
They can demand all they want. When you reach Martin's sales bracket (individual books selling better than Pratchett and not far off Jordan), the author dictates terms to the publishers, not vice versa
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Makes sense really, as who - having invested millions - would trust GRRM when he says "Nah, it's all cool, got it all in my head. Well, a bit of it so far anyway. Until I change it ..."?
Maybe they don't trust him (I imagine they certainly take his estimates with a pinch of salt) but what are they going to do? "Sorry George, an outline or we won't publish the book! Hang on, come back! No, don't go to Tor, we're sorry!"