George R.R. Martin Is Not Happy With ‘Winds Of Winter’ Fans, Not Happy At All

The post George R.R. Martin Is Not Happy With ‘Winds Of Winter’ Fans, Not Happy At All appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 07: George R. R. Martin attends the FYC special screening for HBO … More Max’s “House Of The Dragon” at DGA Theater Complex on March 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/GA/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images) The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images In a recent blog post about a film adaptation of Howard Waldrop’s novella A Dozen Tough Jobs, Game Of Thrones author George R.R. Martin takes a diversion to let his feelings about upset fans be known in no uncertain terms. Fans, of course, remain baffled and angry and depressed over the lack of any visible progress on Martin’s sixth A Song Of Ice And Fire novel, The Winds Of Winter. It’s been fourteen years since the publication of A Dance With Dragons, so being a little upset about the lack of book in hand makes sense. I wrote a post back in 2022 trying to mathematically predict when – if ever – Winds might finally be published. At the time, and assuming Martin would continue writing at about the same pace he’d been writing (just averaging out pages written per year) I came up with somewhere between 3.8 years and 5.18 years. Of course, that was back in December of 2022 and I don’t think we’ve had a single update of substance from Martin since then. If Martin continues to average around 3.625 days per page when he gets around to A Dream Of Spring, I predicted that it would take another 15 years after the 2027 publication date of Winds Of Winter. I’d be 61-years-old by then. Martin would be 95. And frankly, all of these mathematical predictions feel wildly optimistic at this point. Hell, in 2018 – seven years ago! – I wrote a post arguing that…

Jun 4, 2025 - 01:00
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George R.R. Martin Is Not Happy With ‘Winds Of Winter’ Fans, Not Happy At All

The post George R.R. Martin Is Not Happy With ‘Winds Of Winter’ Fans, Not Happy At All appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 07: George R. R. Martin attends the FYC special screening for HBO … More Max’s “House Of The Dragon” at DGA Theater Complex on March 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/GA/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images) The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images In a recent blog post about a film adaptation of Howard Waldrop’s novella A Dozen Tough Jobs, Game Of Thrones author George R.R. Martin takes a diversion to let his feelings about upset fans be known in no uncertain terms. Fans, of course, remain baffled and angry and depressed over the lack of any visible progress on Martin’s sixth A Song Of Ice And Fire novel, The Winds Of Winter. It’s been fourteen years since the publication of A Dance With Dragons, so being a little upset about the lack of book in hand makes sense. I wrote a post back in 2022 trying to mathematically predict when – if ever – Winds might finally be published. At the time, and assuming Martin would continue writing at about the same pace he’d been writing (just averaging out pages written per year) I came up with somewhere between 3.8 years and 5.18 years. Of course, that was back in December of 2022 and I don’t think we’ve had a single update of substance from Martin since then. If Martin continues to average around 3.625 days per page when he gets around to A Dream Of Spring, I predicted that it would take another 15 years after the 2027 publication date of Winds Of Winter. I’d be 61-years-old by then. Martin would be 95. And frankly, all of these mathematical predictions feel wildly optimistic at this point. Hell, in 2018 – seven years ago! – I wrote a post arguing that…

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