amphibian, on 16 January 2016 - 04:34 AM, said:
I made my peace with long authorial delays over Gene Wolfe and the Latro series.
I think it likely he'll not finish the second series (first three ended in a decent place, then he gave us a fourth book with a cliff-hanger to a fifth book). The first book came out in 1987 and he finished the third by 1990. The unexpected fourth book was published in 2007. So that's 17 years between books.
One of the reasons why he didn't write a fifth book quickly is because he was taking care of his terminally ill wife and figuring out how to pay for everything (didn't make a ton of money throughout his career). Wolfe kept that private for a while, so I was testy about the long delay and his publishing what I see as "lesser works" in Soceror's House, Home Fires, The Land Across etc. Then I found out why he didn't tackle this last dangling project and I felt like an enormous jerk.
People deal with stuff. They can be private about it too. I strongly suggest avoiding any hardline declarations of things regarding this particular delay.
Yes, no, but.
Yes, GRRM can take as long as he wants. He ought to enjoy life and if the Jets make the post season, more power to him. As long as he and his publishers are cool with the delays, all's fine. If they're not, then I hope they can sort it out.
No, GRRM is not our bitch and we're not forced to hold our collective breaths, are we? His position on not wanting a Jordan/Sanderson is 100% reasonable. In fact, as nice it might have been for WoT fans, the whole idea is a little weird to me.
BUT.... as things stand, this blog post does show either horrible naiveness or a pretension of naievity.
The statement "Look, I never thought the series could possibly catch up with the books, but it has." is frankly laughable. It was already highly likely after season 2 that HBO would finish GoT before Martin would finish aSoIaF, even if he could deliver book 6 before season 6.
Equally strange is the line of thinking that the show moved faster than he thought.
He was involved in writing an episode each season, so he knew the pace, he knew they'd do one book a year and he should have known that AFFC and ADOD were pretty low on filmable content.
On top of that he probably knew HBO's modus operandi of planning a series for 5-7 years, he knew the initial contract and he for sure knew they were filming with lead characters in their early teens who would grow up. Producing filler episodes would not be on the cards.
On top of that, regarding this blog post, it was already highly unlikely that book 6 would influence season 6 as the filming of a season requires a script and is done at multiple locations throughout the year. Martin knows that, and he knew that the actual detailed contents of book 6 would have had almost no direct influence on season 6 from mid 2014 onwards, probably - only the helicopter view of the storyline would.
As for the spoilered last segment... yes, there might be deviations between the books and the show, but how wildly can he deviate from what the show shows in his writing? It wouldn't surprise me if Martin is partially getting his hand forced by the show for book 7. He's losing a chance of establishing canon here, and if for some reason the book's explanation is weaker than the show's, he loses credibility, too. Up until here, the show was seen as taking shortcuts. From now on, we might perceive the book is running into cul-de-sacs and taking de-tours.
Whether he could or should produce faster, is not the point. Imho, the point is that Martin risks becoming much less relevant to the medium that spreads his work to the largest audience possible.
He started in a position of strength: author still writing, alive and involved in the process. Now, the show bypasses him, and he is left having to establish on his blog that GoT is not aSoIaF.
Everyone is entitled to his own wrong opinion. - Lizrad