George R. R. Martin Character Quotations
George R. R. Martin Quotes about:
Character Quotes from:
- All Character Quotes
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Charles Dickens
- Aristotle
- Michael Josephson
- Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
- Henry David Thoreau
- Stephen Covey
- Thomas Jefferson
- Andy Serkis
- George Washington
- Mahatma Gandhi
- Samuel Smiles
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Johnny Depp
- Nicolas Cage
- Leonardo Dicaprio
- Quentin Tarantino
- Swami Vivekananda
- Theodore Roosevelt
- Rick Warren
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Book Quotes
The way my books are structured, everyone was together, then they all went their separate ways and the story deltas out like that, and now it’s getting to the point where the story is beginning to delta back in, and the viewpoint characters are occasionally meeting up with each other now and being in the same point at the same time, which gives me a lot more flexibility for killing people.
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Writing Quotes
I don't like the strictly objective viewpoint [in which all of the characters' actions are described in the third person, but we never hear what any of them are thinking.] Which is much more of a cinematic technique. Something written in third person objective is what the camera sees. Because unless you're doing a voiceover, which is tremendously clumsy, you can't hear the ideas of characters. For that, we depend on subtle clues that the directors put in and that the actors supply. I can actually write, "'Yes you can trust me,' he lied." [But it's better to get inside the characters' heads.]
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Struggle Quotes
There’s an old writing rule that says ‘Don’t have two character names start with the same letter’, but I knew at the beginning that I was going to have more than 26 characters, so I was in trouble there. Ultimately it comes down to what sounds right. And I struggle with that, finding the right name for a character. If I can’t find the right name I don’t know who the character is and I can’t proceed.
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Mother Quotes
I always give my students exercises where they really have to open a vein and bleed all over the paper and that's the way you get the important characters. Sooner or later every writer worth reading writes a story his mother wouldn't read and having to get that stuff out is part of one's growth as a writer.
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