I do like imagniary worlds and medieval times, but I tend to get attached to characters and stop reading if the author kills them off. The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.I can hardly believe it, but I have fallen in love with this series. Want more stories like this? Become a subscriber and support the site! (via Movieweb, image: Amy Sussman/Getty Images, HBO) Whatever Martin comes up with, only if we just receive scattered fragments, will be better than the end of Game of Thrones. The frenzy around this work might seem over-the-top, but I think it’s a great testament to how invested in stories people can become, and how much a narrative can come to mean.Īnd it’s no wonder that fans are so eager. There’s an extremely dedicated fandom that discusses known parts of the unpublished book as “fragments” like it’s a sacred object and goes to great lengths for new information, like trying to decipher a blurry page caught on camera in 2016. Some fans worry that Martin, 72, may not ever finish The Winds of Winter or ASoIaF. Martin pushed back deadlines for years, though now he claims to be at work at it again, with a vague possible 2021 deadline. Martin has hardly been sitting on his hands-he has, in fact, produced almost endless content across the media board, including working on other projects set in or about the Westeros world-but save for a few sample chapters, The Winds of Winter continues to elude completion. The delay of The Winds of Winter, and a seventh and supposed final book after that, A Dream of Spring, are now part and parcel of the ASoIaF legend. So, I’m still working on the book, but you’ll see my ending when that comes out.“
That made it a little strange because now the show was ahead of me and the show was going in somewhat different directions. I had a five-book head-start, and these are gigantic books, as you know I never thought they would catch up with me, but they did.
My biggest issue there was when they began the series, I had four books already in print and the fifth one came out just as the series was starting in 2011. Speaking to PBS in Chicago, George RR Martin said, “Looking back, I wish I’d stayed ahead of the books. So while Martin surely shared some plot elements and arcs he had in mind with the HBO team, the final two books likely have many surprises and tons of additional storytelling in store-including a different end. Martin’s long-promised sixth book, The Winds of Winter, did not materialize while Game of Thrones was on the air (his last published ASoIaF book, A Dance With Dragons, came out a month after GoT’s debut in 2011). When Game of Thrones first began, Martin had a five-book head start on the series and never imagined the production would blaze through his published material and then veer off on its own.īut that’s what happened. Amongst other topics, Martin says that he wishes he’d “stayed ahead” of the books. While I first saw this Martin commentary in a recent article from Movieweb, it actually stems from an interview he gave to PBS in June. Martin appears to have once again confirmed that he’ll be going in a different direction. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire fantasy series, from which GoT was adapted, have hoped Martin’s literary version would bring about a more satisfying conclusion. From Daenerys “the Mad Queen” dying at Jon Snow’s hand to the ultimate ascension of none other than … Bran, the series finale seemed to exemplify how not to end a beloved epic.Įver since, fans of both Game of Thrones and author George R.R. Many fans of HBO’s Game of Thrones were upset by the show’s final season and its conclusion in particular.