It seems that Game of Thrones might be longer than 7 books/9 seasons.
Spoiler
Quote:
Looks like HBO's "Game of Thrones" could well breeze past author George R.R. Martin after all if comments by the author's editor today come true.
Penguin Random House executive editor Anne Groell suggests that Martin's "A Song of Ice and Fire" book series, on which the HBO series is based, may end up requiring an eighth book rather than finishing at seven as originally planned. Groell said in a recent Suvudu Q&A:
"Though seven is what we currently have under contract. I remember when he called me, years and years back, to confess that his little trilogy was... well... no longer a trilogy. He predicted four books. I said Seven Books for Seven Kingdoms. Then he said five books. I said Seven Books for Seven Kingdoms. Then he went to six. I said... Well, you get it. Finally, we were on the same page. Seven Books for Seven Kingdoms. Good.
Only, as I recently learned while editing 'The World of Ice and Fire', there are really technically eight kingdoms, all having to do with who has annexed what when Aegon the Conqueror landed in Westeros. So, maybe eight books for Seven Kingdoms would be okay. Also, he has promised me that, when he finally wraps this great beast us, I can publish the five page letter outlining the bare bones of the 'trilogy'"
Martin himself was asked about the comments by EW, and he tells them it's a possibility:
"My plan is to finish in seven... But my original plan was to finish in three. I write the stories and they grow. I deal with certain things and sometimes I find myself not at the end of a story. My plan right now is still seven. But first I have to finish Book Six. Get back to me when I'm half-way through Book Seven and then maybe I'll tell you something more meaningful."
Groell is currently working with Martin on his currently-in-progress sixth book "The Winds of Winter" and does know a few things about it. She, like many fans of the series, is also urging him to hurry up as she has warned Martin "to please not let the show get out ahead of him... His vision started this; I very much want his vision to end it, too."
The show's soon to finish fourth season is still based primarily on events in the second half of book three, but has begun to use elements from the fourth and fifth book, along with incorporating some new elements not seen in the books so far. Martin has commented on those changes and says they're likely to increase with subsequent seasons:
"By and large we are seeing more differences from the books and I've been predicting that from the beginning. There's a certain snowball effect of making changes and I think that will continue."
Showrunners David Benioff and Dan Weiss have been told the basic outline of books six and seven, something even Groell doesn't know, and reportedly have contingency plans in place should the TV series outpace Martin's final book installments.
The news comes as the show's current fourth season is now becoming one of the most watched series on television. The show is currently averaging around 7.2 million viewers for its first broadcasts, and a whopping 18 million gross weekly viewers for first-runs, encores, HBO GO and On Demand views.
That 18 million is just shy of the HBO watermark of 18.2 million viewers for "The Sopranos" fourth season which it will likely surpass either in the final two episodes of this season or next year.
In network and basic cable equivalent ratings, ie. Live+7 ratings, only four regular shows average above the 18 million mark - "Sunday Night Football," "NCIS," "The Big Bang Theory" and "The Walking Dead" with the latter at 18.4 million.
There are no storyline spoilers in the article, but overall it looks like the TV Show and Books will drift apart, and we might get more books than what was said before.
Eliseo Wrote:It seems that Game of Thrones might be longer than 7 books/9 seasons.
Spoiler
Looks like HBO's "Game of Thrones" could well breeze past author George R.R. Martin after all if comments by the author's editor today come true.
Penguin Random House executive editor Anne Groell suggests that Martin's "A Song of Ice and Fire" book series, on which the HBO series is based, may end up requiring an eighth book rather than finishing at seven as originally planned. Groell said in a recent Suvudu Q&A:
"Though seven is what we currently have under contract. I remember when he called me, years and years back, to confess that his little trilogy was... well... no longer a trilogy. He predicted four books. I said Seven Books for Seven Kingdoms. Then he said five books. I said Seven Books for Seven Kingdoms. Then he went to six. I said... Well, you get it. Finally, we were on the same page. Seven Books for Seven Kingdoms. Good.
Only, as I recently learned while editing 'The World of Ice and Fire', there are really technically eight kingdoms, all having to do with who has annexed what when Aegon the Conqueror landed in Westeros. So, maybe eight books for Seven Kingdoms would be okay. Also, he has promised me that, when he finally wraps this great beast us, I can publish the five page letter outlining the bare bones of the 'trilogy'"
Martin himself was asked about the comments by EW, and he tells them it's a possibility:
"My plan is to finish in seven... But my original plan was to finish in three. I write the stories and they grow. I deal with certain things and sometimes I find myself not at the end of a story. My plan right now is still seven. But first I have to finish Book Six. Get back to me when I'm half-way through Book Seven and then maybe I'll tell you something more meaningful."
Groell is currently working with Martin on his currently-in-progress sixth book "The Winds of Winter" and does know a few things about it. She, like many fans of the series, is also urging him to hurry up as she has warned Martin "to please not let the show get out ahead of him... His vision started this; I very much want his vision to end it, too."
The show's soon to finish fourth season is still based primarily on events in the second half of book three, but has begun to use elements from the fourth and fifth book, along with incorporating some new elements not seen in the books so far. Martin has commented on those changes and says they're likely to increase with subsequent seasons:
"By and large we are seeing more differences from the books and I've been predicting that from the beginning. There's a certain snowball effect of making changes and I think that will continue."
Showrunners David Benioff and Dan Weiss have been told the basic outline of books six and seven, something even Groell doesn't know, and reportedly have contingency plans in place should the TV series outpace Martin's final book installments.
The news comes as the show's current fourth season is now becoming one of the most watched series on television. The show is currently averaging around 7.2 million viewers for its first broadcasts, and a whopping 18 million gross weekly viewers for first-runs, encores, HBO GO and On Demand views.
That 18 million is just shy of the HBO watermark of 18.2 million viewers for "The Sopranos" fourth season which it will likely surpass either in the final two episodes of this season or next year.
In network and basic cable equivalent ratings, ie. Live+7 ratings, only four regular shows average above the 18 million mark - "Sunday Night Football," "NCIS," "The Big Bang Theory" and "The Walking Dead" with the latter at 18.4 million.
There are no storyline spoilers in the article, but overall it looks like the TV Show and Books will drift apart, and we might get more books than what was said before.
I've been betting there would be more books than he said for a while now, this is not a surprise to me really. The story is just not far enough along for the pace he writes at, I don't feel that all the loose ends will be satisfactorily tied in less than a dozen. Curious about the books and shows being different though, if true. Not sure how that will work, though a few changes have already been made, mainly, the ages of some of the cast.
Haven't watched the episode yet but I know i'm going to find it boring. A full episode of all style, no substance.
Get back to the political intrigue and stuff. We didn't need a full episode devoted to one battle. The battle of Blackwater was different because it involved many different characters and plotlines intersecting. The Battle on the Wall however could basically have been done in about 10 minutes, and focuses on the only 2 characters on the wall that we actually care about.
They should have had this episode as episode 10. Episode 9 is usually the "big" one, and the pomegranate that goes down in the next episode is WAY more important to the plot.
You people serious? How is sam becoming a man and the wall being breached for the first time in centuries not worth the entire episodes focus? Sams entire character changed and you guys say the episode has no substance and is bad hahahahaha
Takebacker Wrote:You people serious? How is sam becoming a man and the wall being breached for the first time in centuries not worth the entire episodes focus? Sams entire character changed and you guys say the episode has no substance and is bad hahahahaha
Maybe for the show-only watchers it was good, but all I saw was HALF of some battle that took AN ENTIRE EPISODE along with some weird sex talk, bad romance, and pointless deaths everywhere. Oh, and dumb as hell dialogue.
Raph589 Wrote:Maybe for the show-only watchers it was good, but all I saw was HALF of some battle that took AN ENTIRE EPISODE along with some weird sex talk, bad romance, and pointless deaths everywhere. Oh, and dumb as hell dialogue.
Yeah.
Because comparing a show to a book always results in satisfaction.
Takebacker Wrote:Because comparing a show to a book always results in satisfaction.
Yeah.
Of course not, but this episode was, in particular, a bad adaptation of this part of the books and was a pointless waste of time. Again, I don't know how long next week's episode is going to have to be so they can wrap up each storyline and I fear some important moments are going to be left out for the next season.