LordOfLore
Banned
Link to the full thing.
Some quotes:
Some quotes:
Does the writing still feel improvisational for you? Even with an endgame in mind, do you still feel like youre learning things about the world of Westeros?
Yes. Thats not anything thats unique to Westeros or Game of Thrones. Its just the way I work and have always worked.
In the case of any of my novels, I know where Im starting from, I know where I want to end up, more or less. I know some of the big turning points along the way, the stuff Im building for, but you discover an awful lot along the way. Characters rise up and seem more important, and you get to what youd thought was going to be a big turning point and the thing youd thought about two years ago doesnt really work as well, so you have a better idea! Theres always that process of discovery for me. I know not all writers work that way, but its always been the way I work.
Do these new ideas along the way occur in reaction to the TV show Game of Thrones? Do you find yourself trying to complicate or diverge from whats airing on TV, or to dig into characters who arent as heavily featured on the show?
I dont consider it in those terms. The show is the show and its developed a life of its own at this point. I am involved in the show, of course, and have been since the beginning, but my main focus has got to be the books. You have to remember that I started writing this story in 1991 and I first met David and Dan [showrunners Benioff and Weiss] in 2007. I was living with these characters and this world for 16 years before we even started working on the show. Theyre pretty fixed in my mind and Im not going to change anything because of the show, or reaction to the show, or what fans think. Im just still writing the story that I set out to write in the early 1990s.
Aside from the War of the Roses, what do the books draw upon from history or life?
I had read a lot of history, a lot of historical fiction, a lot of fantasy. Theres a certain dialogue that goes on between generations of writers, particularly science fiction and fantasy writers, because were part of this subculture. When I read fantasy books by other writers, particularly Tolkien and some of the other people who followed Tolkien, theres always this desire in the back of my head to reply to them: Thats good, but Id do this part differently, or, No, I think you got that wrong.
Im not specifically criticizing Tolkien here I dont want to be portrayed as blasting Tolkien. People are always trying to set up this me-vs.-Tolkien thing, which I find very frustrating because I worship Tolkien, hes the father of all modern fantasy, and my world would never exist had he not come first! Nevertheless, I am not Tolkien, and I am doing things differently than he did, despite the fact that I think Lord of the Rings was one of the great books of the 20th century. But there is that dialogue thats going on between me and Tolkien, and between me and some of the other people who follow Tolkien, and its a dialogue thats continuing.
In the future, when A Song of Ice and Fire is concluded, do you hope to return to working in multifarious genres?
Yes but Ive still got years of this to go, and Im already 68 years old, so I have enough ideas right now to write other books until I was 168 years old. But Im probably not going to live to be 168 years old. So how much time do I have? Im always having new ideas, so I might never write some of these old ideas. So who knows? I write the things that I want to write.
Ive been lucky with the success of these books and the show. I am going to finish these books; I think I have that obligation to the world and my readers. Its the thing Im going to be remembered for. But I will write other things after that, I hope. I might go back to writing short stories. I loved writing short stories. I havent done them in many years, but there is something to be said. I am never going to write again a gigantic seven-book opus that takes 30 years!