George R.R. Martin has acknowledged that The Winds of Winter, the long-awaited sixth novel in his A Song of Ice and Fire series, remains unfinished after more than a decade. In a recent interview with Time, the author called the project the “curse” of his life and addressed ongoing fan frustration over the delay.
“There’s no doubt Winds of Winter is 13 years late,” Martin said. “I’m still working on it. I have periods where I make progress and then other things divert my attention, and suddenly I have a deadline for one of the HBO shows. I have something else to do.”
Martin’s comments follow a renewed round of online jokes after he posed with real-life direwolves brought back through biotechnology. Posts began circulating suggesting that “we got real dire wolves before Winds of Winter.” When asked about the reaction, Martin expressed fatigue. “That’s the curse of my life,” he said.
Since the publication of A Dance with Dragons in 2011, Martin has taken on a range of side projects, including work on HBO’s House of the Dragon, the purchase and renovation of a movie theater in Santa Fe, and the opening of a bookstore. He said none of these have replaced his writing efforts, though they do require attention.
“I swear, I opened a bookstore and people say, ‘Why is George R.R. Martin opening a bookstore when he should be writing Winds of Winter?’ I don’t actually work in the bookstore,” he said. “If you go inside, I’m not going to ring up your order.” He added that while he owns a theater, he is not involved in day-to-day operations.
Martin said criticism often overstates how much time these ventures occupy. He also confirmed that the photo-op with the direwolves did not interfere with writing. “People make it appear like it’s one or the other. And it’s not.”
Part of Martin’s current work includes consulting on House of the Dragon. In a recent post on his blog, he expressed concern over a change made in Season 2 to the “Blood and Cheese” storyline. The scene, which involves a traumatic loss for one of the characters, was altered to exclude a child who appeared in the original source material.
“As I saw it, the ‘Sophie’s Choice’ aspect was the strongest part of the sequence, the darkest, the most visceral,” Martin wrote. “I hated to lose that. And judging from the comments online, most of the fans seemed to agree.”
Martin said he raised the issue with showrunner Ryan Condal during the early stages of development but later stepped back. “I argued against it… but only a bit. Ryan had what seemed to be practical reasons for it; they did not want to deal with casting another child, especially a two-year-old toddler. Kids that young will inevitably slow down production, and there would be budget implications. Budget was already an issue on House of the Dragon.”
According to Martin, Condal assured him the character would not be removed entirely and could appear in a future season. “Queen Helaena could still give birth to him in Season 3, presumably after getting with child late in Season 2. That made sense to me, so I withdrew my objections and acquiesced to the change.”
Condal later addressed the matter in an interview with Entertainment Weekly, explaining that decisions made for the show are the result of long discussions among the creative team. “There’s nothing we do on the show without talking it through and thinking about it very deeply for usually many months, if not years,” he said. “This is the show that I want to make and believe, as a fan of Fire & Blood and a deep reader of this material, it is the adaptation that we should be making.”
Production on Season 3 of House of the Dragon began last month and the season is expected to premiere in 2026. Martin has not provided an estimated release date for The Winds of Winter.