George R R Martin has stated on his blog that the seventh and final book of the A Song of Ice and Fire series will be titled A Dream of Spring, rather than the working title used until now, A Time for Wolves.
Here's what he said about it:
I've also come up with a new title for the seventh (and final, I hope, I hope, I hope) volume of the series -- A DREAM OF SPRING. I like the sound of that a lot better than A TIME FOR WOLVES, which has been my working title for book seven up to now, and I also think it gives a better sense of the book that I want to write. So -- A DANCE WITH DRAGONS, then THE WINDS OF WINTER, then A DREAM OF SPRING. Shouldn't take me long (hah).
it should imo take 4 more. it was supposed to be 3 more after feast but then feast merged. so how could it still be 3? eh we'll see.
and time for wolves might have been misleading. IT prob would have had a dual meaning Just like Feast for Crows wasnt about the 'crows' of the north and was onyl marginaly about euron crows eye so Time for Wolves may have been more metaphor for a world mentality then a literal stark redemption. George has made it clear that the ending will be bittersweet imo. So I would be surprised if it was just the starks sweeping everything before them
Yeah, hopefully he didn't spend too much time agonizing over a title change. That wouldn't bode well for how long it will take to get A Dance with Dragons finished.
"I am, in short, a man on the edge of everything." - Dark Tower II, The Drawing of the Three
I prefer A Time for Wolves aswell, although, A Dream of Spring gives the impression winter will not finish before the series ends.
But if you're all about the destination, then take a fucking flight.
We're going nowhere slowly, but we're seeing all the sights.
And we're definitely going to hell, but we'll have all the best stories to tell.
The more i think abou tthis title the more i begin to hate it.
But if you're all about the destination, then take a fucking flight.
We're going nowhere slowly, but we're seeing all the sights.
And we're definitely going to hell, but we'll have all the best stories to tell.
Sounds like a perfectly okay title to me, and if he says it is appropriate for the story he's writing (which he knows far, far, far better than anyone else) then I'm inclined to simply nod my head and agree.
"O let my name be in the Book of Love!
It be there, I care not of the other great book Above.
Strike it out! Or, write it in anew. But
Let my name be in the Book of Love!" --Omar Khayam
So, if it's called A Dream of Spring, does that mean that winter is going to finally fricking arrive in one of the next three books? We're only 4,000 pages in, and all I've seen is a few flurries.
Murrin wrote:I think it was officially Winter as of Feast. Didn't the white crows arrive from the Citadel at some point?
I know some crows arrived somewhere, but didn't that just mean that winter is coming? Or did it mean that it had arrived? I guess that I thought winter meant that it was going to be cold and snowing everywhere, at least down to Kings Landing (or whatever the big city's called; can't remember the name). All I can say, is that if winter has arrived, it's a bit of a disappointment. We're getting a helluva lot more snow in colorado.
The Maesters keep track of the seasons, and it's their job to determine when winter officially begins (since the timing of the season is so variational). They send out white crows to the rest of the Seven Kingdoms when winter starts.
I think in the chapters in the North the weather has certainly been getting worse; remember the long walk through the blizzard after the fight on the Fist? The bad weather started before aGoT and got gradually worse through the series. And snow in the Eyrie in the last book shows the beginnings of it in the south.
Murrin wrote:The Maesters keep track of the seasons, and it's their job to determine when winter officially begins (since the timing of the season is so variational). They send out white crows to the rest of the Seven Kingdoms when winter starts.
I think in the chapters in the North the weather has certainly been getting worse; remember the long walk through the blizzard after the fight on the Fist? The bad weather started before aGoT and got gradually worse through the series. And snow in the Eyrie in the last book shows the beginnings of it in the south.
Yeah, I remember all of the snow north of the wall; I guess I just thought that it was always cold up there. It hadn't really started snowing in Winterfell yet, that I recall. But I guess we didn't get much about the north in AFfC; maybe in Dragons it will be more wintery.
I always prefered A Time for Wolves myself. A Dream of Spring sounds a bit new agey to me, not to mention a bit Robert Jordan-y.
Then again, I have no idea what Martin is doing or planning, so who am I?
Well, after his last message to us (which I thought was rather snotty) regarding the progress he HASN'T made on A Dance with Dragons, I'm not sure that I want to invest all of the time required to keep up with him. You can't publish a book every five years and expect people to follow along. My memory isn't good enough to be able to pick up where we left off. When I started reading AFfC I was utterly, hopelessly lost.
Good for him that he has a billion other projects, but he wouldn't have any of those projects if not for the tremendous success of A Song of Ice and Fire. When I read his blog (and that snotty message), I don't get the impression that ASIF is his top priority. If he doesn't care, why should I?
I might not.
Am I the only one who was a bit ticked off by that message?
"Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." (Anais Nin)
Donaldson does ok in my opinion. Three years between books isn't great, but it's better than some, and at least he manages to keep to the promised timeline.
You do not hear, and so you cannot be redeemed.
In the name of their ancient pride and humiliation, they had made commitments with no possible outcome except bereavement.
He knew only that they had never striven to reject the boundaries of themselves.