New York Post

END 'GAME'

Seas n 4 f ‘Ga e f Thr nes’ has featured s e f the st bel ved characters et. But h ld n t ur cr wn: N ne f the a be bac when the sh w returns next ear

- By SARA STEWART

AS we head into the finale of the fourth season of “Game of Thrones” tonight, unanswered questions abound: What will become of Jon Snow, out beyond the Wall without his sword? Will Tyrion find a way out of his death sentence, or will he be this season’s Ned Stark? Will Arya ever reach Sansa inside the Eyrie — and will Sansa escape (or embrace) the increasing­ly creepy grasp of Littlefing­er? What’ll Dany do after banishing her right-hand man?

HBO’s got plenty of time beyond tonight to answer all those questions, though: As of last week, the show officially tipped over into being the network’s mostwatche­d series of all time, with an average of 18.4 million viewers — which exceeds the 18.2 garnered by “The Sopranos” in its heyday. The series has been renewed for a fifth and sixth season, and if its popularity continues to soar, it will likely continue

further than that. (Though the show’s creators have said they don’t want to go beyond seven seasons.)

This could be a problem for the plot, as the show has now caught up with the first three enormous books in George R. R. Martin’s sprawling series. Coming up next is “A Feast for Crows,” the author’s fourth and least-popular installmen­t, in which much of the action takes place in the relatively obscure locations of the Iron Islands and Dorne (home of the late, lamented Oberyn Martell), and which follows several lesser characters while completely ignoring the story lines of some of the most popular and engaging players in the series — including Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen, though both return for the fifth book, “A Dance with Dragons.”

To confuse matters, the plots of “Feast” and “Dragons” happen si-

multaneous­ly, being set in different areas of the “Thrones” universe. So the show could potentiall­y combine the two books into one gigantic plot — but this would run the risk of burning through their stories pretty quickly.

Meanwhile, there’s the additional and bigger problem of Martin eventually running out of material for the show, which up until now has more or less hewed to the plot lines of his novels. He’s said he expects it to be a seven-novel series, and is currently in the middle of writing the sixth, “The Winds of Winter.” He released “A Dance with Dragons” in 2011. But “Crows,” the book before that, came out in 2005. And HBO can’t afford to wait years and years in between books. (HBO had no comment on the matter.)

The author, under the gun thanks to his own popularity, has admitted he needs to pick up the pace, recently telling Mashable “I need to write faster. The last two books took a really long time, so I’m hoping this one will go a little faster. But I make no promises. I found out long ago that when you look at the overall task, the cathedral you have to build, it looks so daunting that you just give up and sit down and play a video game.”

The master procrastin­ator is also no longer making any prom- ises about the Tolkien-esque series concluding at seven. Martin’s Random House editor, Anne Groell, recently let slip that although her and Martin’s motto had long been, “Seven books for seven kingdoms,” she’s recently started arguing for a loophole: “There are really technicall­y eight kingdoms, all having to do with who has annexed what when Aegon the Conqueror landed in Westeros,” she told book news site Suvudu. “So maybe eight books for seven kingdoms would be OK.”

But Martin’s work-avoidance techniques and his loose-lipped agent aren’t his only problems. The show has already gotten ahead of itself and spoiled a plot point the author hasn’t reached yet; earlier in Season 4, HBO accidental­ly committed a major error by fleetingly revealing, on the network’s official episode synopsis, a White Walker with a spiky head as “the Night’s King,” despite the fact that this character has not yet been introduced — only hinted at — in Martin’s novels thus far. This King turned one of Craster’s babies into a Walker, a new and intriguing developmen­t that, one assumes, Martin was going to get to eventually (the character is referenced in a series of short extra videos accompanyi­ng the Blu-ray sets of Seasons 2 and 3 of the show).

Could this be the beginning of a trend in which the show speeds ahead of the books, taking more and more liberties with Martin’s material? The author seemed to give his blessing to that in a recent Vanity Fair interview, saying that “ultimately, it’ll be different. You have to recognize that there are going to be some difference­s. I’m very pleased with how faithful the show is to the books, but it’s never gonna be exactly the same.”

Given the obscurity of the characters we could see in the upcoming installmen­t, viewers may certainly appreciate that.

I need to write faster. But I make no promises.” — ‘Thrones’ author George R.R. Martin on pending books

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George R.R. Martin

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