By Annette Cole
Mastron, Communications Director for Southern Writers Magazine
I haven't been a Game
of Thrones watcher, yet. I was waiting for all the seasons to be completed
before I got hooked. However, you’d have to be living under a rock to have not
seen the books, multiple interviews, and trailers tied to the HBO show in its
final season. Hundreds of thousands have entered the world of Westeros created
by George RR Martin. Most have read or seen snippets about the sigils, stones, and symbols of
the powerful houses of the seven kingdoms.
Author George RR
Martin was on “60 Minutes” on 4-13-19 with interviewer Anderson Cooper. Martin
seemed surprised by his success. He shared, “If you have a story that is about
the human heart in conflict with itself about these very basic human emotions
about love and ambition and greed for power, it doesn’t matter if there’s a
dragon in it or if it takes place on an alien planet or if it takes place in
Faulkner’s Mississippi. Human stories are human stories; the rest is just
furniture.” I loved that statement.
Martin’s series is,
“loosely based on the historical period ‘The War of the Roses.’” He has created a world
with, Whitewalkers, supernatural villains who control an army of zombie-like
followers called “whites.”
To quote Martin, the
series, “Game of Thrones,” or “his baby,” he gave up for adoption when HBO
purchased the rights to his books. He was to complete the series. He missed his
deadlines to finish two more books to end the book series. The executive
producers Dan Weiss and David Bennyhoff realized the HBO show was catching up
to the end of Martin’s published books. They were left with no other option but
to create an end for the HBO show in Season 10. With overall guidance from
discussion with Martin on his general ideas for the ending of “the game,” Weiss
and Bennyhoff are writing season ending scripts.
Martin says the books
are still his “baby,” but the ending of the show won’t have his details. This
is the lesson to take away: the author missed the
deadlines on his last 2 books; HBO moved on without him; the executive
producers are finishing the series without the author’s detailed book as a
guideline because he hasn’t written it. HBO has the rights to the world he
created, so the author won’t be ending his own series.
The lesson for all
authors to not get distracted from your writing by awards, accolades, and
commercial success. Focus on your writing. The commercial world may move on
without your input even though you created the world in your books.
How will the Seven
Kingdoms end? HBO knows, but the author of the successful series didn’t write
the ending, HBO did.
How do you deal with
writing distractions?
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