George RR Martinis back at the centre of fan speculation after Newsweek reported on Feb. 23 that a line in the season finale ofA Knight of the Seven Kingdomshad prompted fresh theories about a surprise release forThe Winds of Winterlater this year. The idea rests not on any announcement from Martin, HBO or his publisher, but on one pointed moment in the finale and on Martin's own recent remarks about the book's place on his to do list.
This bout of excitement arrived after a long stretch in which Martin's unfinishedA Song of Ice & Fireseries has hung over the whole television franchise like unfinished business. Newsweek notes that whileHouse of the Dragoninitially revived enthusiasm for the world of Ice and Fire, its second season left some viewers colder, whereasA Knight of the Seven Kingdomshas been received as a success and has renewed appetite for stories set in Westeros. That matters because the books still sit at the heart of the entire enterprise, and because many readers have spent years waiting for Martin to deliverThe Winds of Winterand, after that,A Dream of Spring.
The spark, according to Newsweek, comes in the finale ofA Knight of the Seven Kingdomswhen Ser Arlan of Pennytree appears to drift towards death while telling Duncan a story, only to wake and say, 'A true knight always finishes a story.' Fans did not need much encouragement to hear that as a wink aimed squarely at Martin's long struggle to finishA Song of Ice & Fire. It is the sort of line that would normally be shrugged off as a sly in joke, except for one awkward detail.
Martin, Newsweek says, is heavily involved withA Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, which makes the line harder to dismiss as an accidental jab. The magazine also points out that Martin has not always shown much patience for jokes about his pace, so the fact that such a line made it into the finale has encouraged readers to wonder whether he was in on it for a reason. That is where the speculation leaps from playful to grand, because some fans now think the line could be laying the ground for an unannounced release ofThe Winds of Winterbefore the year is out.
It is a neat theory, but it remains only that. Newsweek is explicit that nothing has been confirmed, and that caution is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. There is no release date in the piece, no statement from a publisher, and no concrete evidence that Martin has finished the manuscript and is simply sitting on it.
What the article does have is Martin's own latest update, given in comments to The Hollywood Reporter and quoted by Newsweek. 'I have to write more Dunk and Egg,' he said, before adding that there is also meant to be anotherFire and Bloodbook. He then offered the line that fans have seized on, saying that if he could get some of those other things 'off my back,' he could finishThe Winds of Winter'pretty soon.' Yet he undercut that hope in the same breath by adding that while it has been made clear to him thatWindsis the priority, 'sometimes I'm not in the mood for that.'
That is not the language of a man teasing a launch campaign with obvious confidence. If anything, it sounds like the same old Martin blend of candour, distraction and resistance to a timetable, which is probably why his readers keep oscillating between faith and fatigue. Newsweek notes the possibility that he could be speaking vaguely in order to preserve a surprise, but the article stops short of treating that as anything more solid than informed guesswork.
TWOW or new Dunk & Egg Novellas this year lock it down, bet on it, confirmedpic.twitter.com/pUrt0gDZOM
Still, the timing of the renewed chatter is not hard to understand. Newsweek argues that interest in Martin's world has been sharpened again by the strong response toA Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, and there is a simple emotional logic to the fan theory that a franchise rebound might supply the motivation he has lacked. Readers who hated the ending ofGame of Thrones, and Newsweek says many did, have never really stopped hoping that Martin's remaining books might offer a different and more satisfying route through the same story.
That hope has always been the engine of the wait, and also the trap. Every stray remark becomes a clue, every interview is mined for signs of movement, and now even a dying knight's last line is being treated like a possible signal flare. Perhaps Martin is quietly setting up the sort of surprise readers have imagined for years. Or perhaps, as his own words suggest,The Winds of Winteris still where it has long been, somewhere between priority and mood.
Source: International Business Times UK