The Citadel

The Archive of 'A Song of Ice and Fire' Lore

So Spake Martin

August 2019

Discover Northern Ireland Interview
Submitted By: Elio

Trinity College Talk
Submitted By: GRRM

Mediafax Interview
Submitted By: Elio

[Note: This is a Romanian language interview, but can be translated with Google or other services.]

https://www.mediafax.ro/cultura-media/interviu-exclusiv-george-r-r-martin-autorul-game-of-thrones-lauda-efectele-scrisului-sf-nu-mai-eram-americani-rusi-romani-sau-chinezi-18307964

Belfast Telegraph Interview
Submitted By: Elio

https://m.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/entertainment/news/game-of-thrones-author-rr-martin-on-brexit-threat-of-violence-and-how-northern-ireland-can-attract-more-films-38424902.html

Joe.ie Interview
Submitted By: Elio

https://www.joe.ie/movies-tv/george-rr-martin-interview-678464

Irish Film Institute Q & A
Submitted By: Elio

Observer Interview in London
Submitted By: Elio

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/aug/18/george-rr-martin-interview-game-of-thrones-at-own-pace-now

Steve Wright in the Afternoon Interview
Submitted By: Elio

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0007gj3

An Evening with GRRM and Parris
Submitted By: Elio

BBC Inheritance Tracks
Submitted By: Elio

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p07kts7m

Wild Cards Trivia
Submitted By: Elio

La Garde de Nuit
Submitted By: Elio

La Garde de Nuit at Worldcon, and sat down for an interview with them. But they managed to have a contingent at the London Waterstones event, and arranged a brief sit down with George afterward. Not only is their event report the most detailed they've seen, they also had some fun moments with George afterwards.]

https://www.lagardedenuit.com/an-evening-with-george-r-r-martin-in-london/

Khan Interview (Korean)
Submitted By: Elio

http://news.khan.co.kr/kh_news/khan_art_view.html?artid=201908141712011

Belfast Telegraph Interview
Submitted By: Elio

https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/entertainment/news/george-rr-martin-i-need-to-get-back-in-my-writing-room-38403665.html

Irish Times Interview

https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/george-rr-martin-science-fiction-has-conquered-the-world-1.3978642?fbclid=IwAR3Jbdr4I3OEU0iCcVBjZeY3-hr_RFcapkmC1XUrK2vhbkTLeP2JxbPwBSM

In Conversation with Dan Jones
Submitted By: Elio

Waterstones Event
Submitted By: SeeThemFly2

I was at the talk, and the whole question was that the interviewer asked him which dragon he would ride and which sword he would want to wield. He actually paused for quite a while before answering the question (probably the longest of any of the questions he was asked). For the dragon answer, his tone was kinda jokey and he went with Balerion the Black Dread, saying if he could ride a dragon he'd go with the biggest one who remembered Valyria. For the sword question, he definitely used a more serious tone, and at the "who knows what magical properties a falling star has" point, it definitely sounded like he was dropping a hint.

Waterstones Event
Submitted By: sliderstandingby

I just saw George speak at an event in London, and at the very end the interviewer asked him what sword he would have, if he could have any. His response was that he would have dawn, because it was made from a falling star and "who knows what magical properties a falling star has."

Waterstones Event
Submitted By: Adam Whitehead

I attended GRRM's talk in London last night and tweeted about some of the things he said, which, as is Twitter's wont, some people misinterpreted or misunderstood, so I thought it might be useful to clarify and expand on these points here.

The evening started with George being surprised by bigwigs from Nielsen, who gave him two special awards for sales of A Song of Ice and Fire in the UK, confirming that A Game of Thrones and A Clash of Kings have individually sold over 1 million copies each in the UK since the UK Nielsen Bookscan started in 2001. Given the UK's much smaller market than the US, that's a huge sales achievement.

Most of the interview (with historian Dan Jones) was standard stuff we've heard many times before: George's early career in short stories, working in television (bearing in mind we were in a church, it was surprising that George got so wound up by reminiscing over producers messing with his scripts that he dropped a couple of f-bombs), writing Avalon and getting the inspiration for Bran's first chapter etc.

George did expand on the writing of "The Hedge Knight". Robert Silverberg got a ton of money to do Legends, an all-star anthology of the biggest names in fantasy. He'd recruited people like Terry Pratchett, Stephen King and Robert Jordan. Initially GRRM thought that he wasn't established enough in epic fantasy to contribute (as only AGoT had come out and he was deep in the writing of ACoK) but the money on offer was large and it was pointed out he'd get a good cross-pollination from other authors' fanbases reading his story and deciding to check out AGoT. George realised he couldn't write anything set during the series so did a prequel. When it was nearly done, George got a message from Silverberg telling him he'd heard that ACoK was going to be late and Legends couldn't be late for the marketing push it had been allocated, so Silverberg was going to drop George's story and had already commissioned a replacement. George ended up delivering his story on deadline, before several of the other authors had delivered theirs. That's why Legends has 11 stories rather than a more logical 10. George credits "The Hedge Knight" with helping massively boost the popularity of ASoIaF as a whole, as there was a very sharp increase in sales for ACoK compared to AGoT.

George noted that he had identified 12 possible stories/episodes from Dunk & Egg's life that could be expanded into short stories, including the 3 already published, so that's 9 potential further stories for the duo. From previous interviews we know that the next two - "The She-Wolves" and "The Village Hero" (both working titles) - are planned in some depth and "The She-Wolves" is partially or even mostly written, but GRRM wasn't sure what order to publish them in. Both are on hold until TWoW is done.

The first GoT spin-off is still officially unnamed: Bloodmoon sounds like a codename (or - my supposition - the name of the pilot episode) and George still wants The Long Night (or, from another interview, The Longest Night). The pilot has finished filming and HBO will mull it over before pulling the trigger (or not) on a season order in a few months.

GRRM also repeated that the inspiration for the Red Wedding was the Black Dinner of Scottish history, in particular the more "colourful" account that the doomed clan leaders were serenaded with a death march song and had a black boar's head (the symbol of death) served to them at dinner before their execution, which most historians now seem to believe was a total fabrication ("But it sounded better"). His Red Wedding was the Black Dinner "turned up to 11" but the TV version was "turned up to 14."

Also a reiteration that Fire and Blood wasn't supposed to exist, it was supposed to be his contribution to The World of Ice and Fire in the form of sidebars that he wrote shortly after finishing ADWD, but instead of 3,000 words he ended up submitting over 170,000 words (in earlier interviews he said closer to 300,000, but I wonder if the 170,000 is specifically the information on the Targaryens and the 300,000 includes all the info he contributed on the Empire of the Dawn, Iron Island history, etc, i.e. everything else in the book), as it had just all poured out of him in a few weeks (way back in the day he said it was around 2-3 months). His publishers were horrified, as it made WoIaF too big to be publishable. Elio and Linda compressed almost all of it down and summarised it to fit into the book, leaving George with this big manuscript which he then chopped up to produce the three anthology stories ("The Princess and the Queen", "The Rogue Prince" and "Sons of the Dragon"). The motivation to publish Fire and Blood came when HBO started talking about prequel spin-offs and George realised the manuscript could be a potential source of new stories and information, although ironically the one HBO decided to proceed with had nothing to do with the Fire and Blood material.

Fire and Blood II is planned out - GRRM is relishing the chance to tell the story of Aegon IV and his mistresses - but not yet written, and can't be published until after ASoIaF as a whole is completed.

George did talk about his schedule in terms of the order of things he wants to publish things in. No dates were mentioned and the order sounded aspirational rather than set in stone:

  • The Winds of Winter
  • Dunk & Egg IV (either The She-Wolves or The Village Hero)
  • A Dream of Spring
  • Dunk & Egg V (either The Village Hero or The She-Wolves)
  • Fire & Blood II
  • There will also be more Dunk & Egg short stories after the fifth one. As mentioned before he has twelve potential story ideas mapped out which will span their lives. He didn't mention Summerhall or how it would work scheduling the D&E stories versus F&B2, as presumably one of them will spoil Summerhall for the other, as his "constructive vagueness" over the events from WoIaF presumably won't fly again.
  • The schedule may sound "ambitious" given the long wait between ASoIaF volumes and indeed D&E stories, but if was suppose TWoW is closer to being done than not, take on board that The She-Wolves is mostly done and he effectively wrote Fire & Blood I in a few months, then the only question mark is really on ADoS, how fast it can be done and if it's really going to be the last book in the series. None of these questions came up, so I guess time will only tell on those.
  • Waterstones Event
    Submitted By: HarperVoyagerUK