George R. R. Martin Talks About Delays of ‘Winds of Winter’ Amid Controversy
George R. R. Martin just dropped some truth bombs at New York Comic Con about “The Winds of Winter,” and honestly? The man’s got more excuses than a college student missing finals week. But before you grab your pitchforks, hear him out – because his reasoning might actually make you feel a tiny bit sorry for the guy who’s been keeping us hanging on for 14 years.
The Deadline Dodger Admits His Crimes
George R. R. Martin actually didn’t dance around the elephant in the room during his NYCC panel. The 77-year-old author straight-up acknowledged what we’ve all been screaming about since 2011: “The Winds of Winter” is stupidly, ridiculously late. Martin stated:
I know there’s all this controversy about ‘Winds of Winter’ and how late it is, but I’ve always had trouble with deadlines… I don’t feel happy breaching contracts or missing a deadline or anything like that.
Oh, you don’t feel happy about it? That’s rich, George. Try being a fan who’s been waiting – really since Obama’s first term.
But here’s where the plot thickens – and it’s kind of heartbreaking, if you’re the forgiving type. George R. R. Martin revealed that his deadline issues aren’t new. This isn’t some recent development where success went to his head. The guy has been struggling with deadlines his entire career, even back when he was writing “The Hedge Knight” in the ’90s.
The Internet Mob That Won’t Quit
Here’s where George R. R. Martin actually makes a valid point that might make you rethink your rage-tweetin’ habits. Every time the man announces literally anything that isn’t “The Winds of Winter,” half the internet loses its freakin’ mind. Martin further said:
Every time that happens, and I announce it on my website, half the internet goes crazy. ‘Why the f— is George R.R. Martin writing this other thing when he should be writing ‘Winds of Winter?’ What is he doing?’ And I want to say, ‘I did it in 1993, guys. Come on! It was lying in my drawer, and they wanted it, so I sold it to them!’
Here’s a plot twist: Most of these “side projects” that send fans into meltdowns aren’t even new work. They’re old stories gathering dust that networks suddenly want to adapt because “Game of Thrones”made everything Martin touches turn to HBO gold.
Why George R. R. Martin Can’t Just Focus on One Thing
George R. R. Martin dropped another revelation that might explain why “The Winds of Winter” keeps getting delayed. Brace yourself for this shocker: the man actually enjoys writing other things as well. Martin said:
Yes, I do love ‘Winds of Winter.’ I’m still interested in it, I’m still working on it, but honestly, I love these other things, too.
Revolutionary concept, right? An author who wants to write about more than one story. But here’s the thing – creativity doesn’t work like a factory assembly line. You can’t just chain a writer to their desk and demand they produce the same type of content indefinitely.
The Real Reason Behind the Delay
While George R. R. Martin didn’t give us a release date (because of course he didn’t), he did reveal something crucial: he’s still actively working on the book. Not “thinking about it” or “planning to get back to it” – actually writing it.
The man has previously stated he’s about three-quarters done with “The Winds of Winter,” which means we’re looking at roughly 200-300 pages left. That might sound like nothing, but when you’re dealing with a story this complex, with dozens of character arcs that need to converge perfectly, those final pages might be the hardest ones to write.
The Curse of Success
Here’s what nobody talks about: George R. R. Martin is a victim of his own success. When “A Game of Thrones” was published in 1996, it took him six years to write. Nobody was breathing down his neck, demanding updates, or threatening to boycott his work if he took too long.
Now? Every word he writes gets scrutinized. Every project announcement becomes a controversy. The pressure is astronomical, and pressure doesn’t exactly breed creativity – it, very sadly, breeds paralysis.
The Bottom Line
George R. R. Martin isn’t deliberately torturing his fans (probably). He’s a 77-year-old writer who’s always struggled with deadlines, now dealing with unprecedented pressure to deliver a book that will inevitably disappoint someone, no matter how good it is.
Does this excuse 14 years of waiting? Absolutely not. But does it explain it? Maybe a bit. The man’s human, not a content-generating machine, and “The Winds of Winter” isn’t just another book – it’s the most anticipated fantasy novel of the century.
So while we’re all still justified in our frustration, maybe we can dial back the death threats and give the guy a little breathing room. After all, he did promise he won’t die before seeing the Jets and Giants in a Subway Super Bowl – which means he’s basically promised to live forever. That might be exactly how long “The Winds of Winter” takes to come out.
