Posted on 9 February 2009 by James Cormier at 3:36 PM | Comments (0)
Tags: A Dance with Dragons, A Song of Ice and Fire, George R. R. Martin, Writing
I managed to overlook Shawn Speakman's article on Suvudu.com defending George R. R. Martin and the ongoing siege fans of his A Song of Ice and Fire series are waging against him.
Shawn's article is thorough and well thought out, allowing a measure of criticism for Martin's "unprofessional" behavior while generally defending his writing style and the long process of completing a beloved series.
Shawn was the first person I've heard describe Martin's problem as unprofessionalism. It really does encapsulate it well: if Martin is truly guilty of anything, he's guilty of setting unrealistic goals and putting them in writing -- of making promises he should have known he couldn't keep. That aside, you can't really fault a writer for the way his own process works. Shawn makes a good argument that that is truly the heart of the issue: the combination of Martin's free-writing style and his strict editor's eye makes for a long writing process, and one that is frequently subject to drastic change:
George is, from what I understand, a Freewriter.
So, what does that mean? Well, it means George does not plan in advance what he writes. As a result, George will often write several chapters, which takes up several weeks, decide on a different and better course of direction, and have to erase those chapters--and quite possibly several others that came before them. Those weeks are gone with no output to show for it other than having a better sense of where he is going. According to him, that very thing has happened several times over the course of the last few years, delaying A Feast For Crows and now A Dance With Dragons. Unlike King, who sometimes has lackluster endings to his novels due to, in my opinion, lack of planning, George is an editor who will not publish something unless it is done right. The manner in which George writes can be volatile to the reader who believes George just needs to spend a certain amount of time at the keyboard to produce a manuscript.
But writing for George is not a science. He is a Freewriter. To try to make him other than that is folly--and disrespects the earlier work that has given such joy.
Shawn also brought up the subject of what he calls "the creative wall," a realism of the writing life that many writers have described in many different ways:
Every writer I have spoken to comes to a point in their creative day where, no matter how much they wish differently, the written word just does not happen the way it should. The writing becomes stagnant; it becomes useless and is simply not good enough to be published. No matter if the writer sits and tries to hammer their way through, nothing changes. To sit at the keyboard during that time is a waste of time.
I call it the Creative Wall.
All writers come to that Wall during their writing day, at least all writers I know. The average amount of time differs between writers. For instance, Terry Brooks spends between five or six hours a day before he is simply burnt out. Steven Erikson, on the other hand, doesn't come to his Creative Wall until seven or eight hours have passed. For me, it is four or five hours. Every writer is different; every writer deals with it.
George comes to a Wall during his writing day too.
Hemingway described the experience, and how he dealt with it, in A Moveable Feast: "I had learned already never to empty the well of my writing, but always to stop when there was still something there in the deep part of the well, and let it refill at night from the springs that fed it." He often advised writers to stop consciously short of that Wall, saying that it was best to stop when you were still going good, to leave on a high note, essentially, while you still knew what was going to happen next. By so doing, one could begin the next day of writing that much more easily, having saved a bit of starter material.
But I digress.
Suffice it to say that Shawn's post is a worthwhile read for any Martin fan disgruntled over the long-delayed publication of A Dance with Dragons, and The Accidental Bard wholeheartedly joins him in his Defense.
Posted on 16 November 2008 by James Cormier at 11:47 AM | Comments (0)
Tags: A Game of Thrones, A Song of Ice and Fire, George R. R. Martin, TV
Posted on 18 June 2008 by James Cormier at 10:50 PM | Comments (0)
Tags: A Game of Thrones, A Song of Ice and Fire, George R. R. Martin, News, TV
The latest news on HBO front is that David Benioff and D.B. Weiss have turned in the second draft of the pilot script for A GAME OF THRONES, and their rewrite is presently being read and evaluated by the powers-that-be at HBO. In other words, it's the normal process, which is long and often slow. So far, the reports are good, and HBO seems to like what they're seeing... but no, there's no greenlight yet, A GAME OF THRONES remains a script in development, not a series in production.Read the full post here.
Posted on 26 March 2008 by James Cormier at 11:48 PM | Comments (0)
Tags: A Game of Thrones, A Song of Ice and Fire, George R. R. Martin, Joe Abercrombie, News
Posted on 23 March 2008 by CJ Stutz at 11:54 PM | Comments (0)
Posted on 3 March 2008 by James Cormier at 10:53 PM | Comments (0)
Tags: A Song of Ice and Fire, George R. R. Martin, News, TV
The deal for HBO to option the television rights to A Song of Ice and Fire was ongoing in 2006 and concluded in January 2007, when GRRM announced the news on his website. Subsequent blog entries confirmed that the writing of the pilot script had commenced. Prior to the start of the Writer's Guild of America Strike in November 2007, writer-producers David Benioff and D.B. Weiss had completed a pilot script which GRRM had signed off on. This script had been passed to HBO, who were considering it and running budget estimates for the series at the time that the strike began. As with all Hollywood television projects, work on the adaption was suspended until the strike concluded in mid-February 2008.Essentially, since HBO's option has yet to expire and the writers' strike has concluded, there is still a very real possibility of it happening. Wertzone goes on to describe the proposed scope of the project:
No final decision has been made but the tentative plan is for HBO to adapt A Song of Ice and Fire as a series of 13-episode television seasons (potentially seven seasons in length, one for each novel). Whilst the project would be high-budget, it would not be as expensive as HBO's previous major costume drama, Rome, and would probably be filmed in Eastern Europe or perhaps New Zealand due to the lowered production costs.As always, take anything you read on the Internet with a grain of salt: although Werzone seems to have based their information primarily on official sources, nothing is official until you hear it from either GRRM or HBO.
Posted on 24 February 2008 by James Cormier at 3:21 PM | Comments (3)
Tags: A Dance with Dragons, A Song of Ice and Fire, George R. R. Martin, News
As any good reader of the genre knows, George R. R. Martin is one of the biggest names in fantasy. His A Song of Ice and Fire series has pretty much set the standard for mature, well-written epic fantasy in recent years. The first three books in the series, A Game of Thrones, A Clash of Kings, and A Storm of Swords, respectively, were published precisely two years apart starting in 1996. Following the 2000 publication of Swords, however, everything slowed down. The fourth volume, A Feast for Crows, did not appear until 2005. Now, in 2008, the prospective publication date of A Dance with Dragons, the series' fifth book, remains tentative at best. So the question remains: what happened to Dragons and, perhaps more importantly, what is going on with Martin's writing process? More after the break.Copyright 2008 The Accidental Bard. Some Rights Reserved.