Sombra, on 23 February 2015 - 01:07 AM, said:
So, Wert ...
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GRRM’s friend, Adam Whitehead, was originally going to have a role in TWOW. Unsure if he will now (Miscellaneous TWOW Info)
From
https://bryndenbfish...inter-resource/ 5/2/15 update (not the retarded way Yanks write dates
)
Ha. I wouldn't presume to call GRRM a friend, more of a strong professional acquaintence. We've met a few times, got on well, got quite drunk once and had a fascinating
ASoIaF conversation interrupted by someone wanting to talk about American football (so it was like a live dramatisation of one of his blog posts
) and swapped the odd email, but that's about it.
And yes, at one point there was going to be a character named after me in TWoW. I have no idea if that's still the plan or not.
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I still think it may have gone down like this... at the time GoT took off on tv, George had an end target, but was at a loss as to how to reach it.
This is 100% not the case. If anything, these last two (or three) books have the advantage of having been planned by GRRM years ahead of time. The problem with AFFC/ADWD was that they were partially created on the fly and partially drew in on elements he had planned but in a completely different context. That made making coherent novels out of them complex. As of the end of both AFFC/ADWD, the story has moved firmly into the material he had planned for the end of the series and in terms of plot resolution it *should* be (touch wood) easier going. Certainly he's said there's far less rewriting this time around then on the last two, which is a hopeful sign.
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Abraham is one of the alpha readers for Martin and the others are also varying levels of published writers.
Abraham is actually the guy who came up with the idea for the AFFC/ADWD split. Depending on your mileage, this was either a bad move (leading to the lack in focus and too-large-a-cast some have criticised the last two books for) or a really good one (as it's entirely possible we'd still be waiting for ADWD without it).
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Deciding not to fast forward 5 years compounded the issue.
The 5-year-gap was definitely the biggest misstep in the series. It actually wasn't in the original plan (he came up with it after AGoT was published but while he was still working on ASoS) an introduced solely because not as much time was passing as he'd hoped. Then he lost over a year trying to make the gap work and then lost a lot of time in the writing of ADWD in trying to reconcile the ending of ASoS (which was based of the idea of gap) with now not having a gap, and his original plan for the series (revealed recently) required - gap or not - the characters to be a lot older than they are now.
Even writing that paragraph gave me a headache. I still have zero idea how GRRM managed to reconcile all of those outlines, ideas and plans and make them work (or if he has, as the last two books will determine how successful that has been).