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George R.R. Martin talks translating books to telebisyon

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It was called 'Game of Thrones' may-akda on season five: 'Nobody is safe' - Houston Chronicle
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\'Game of Thrones\' author on season five: \'Nobody is safe\'
By Benjamin Wermund | March 3, 2015 | Updated: March 3, 2015 11:14am
George R.R. Martin, author of the popular "A Song of Ice and Fire" novels, visited Texas A&M University\'s library to donate a first-edition copy of J.R.R. Tolkien\'s "The Hobbit" on Feb. 27, 2015.
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As fans already know, in "Game of Thrones," nobody is safe.
George R.R. Martin, author of the "A Song of Ice and Fire" series that spawned HBO\'s wildly popular "Game of Thrones" TV show, stressed that fact while visiting Texas A&M University last week to donate a first-edition copy of "The Hobbit."
"There\'s going to be some surprise deaths," Martin said of the upcoming fifth season of the TV show. "Characters are going to die and some of them are characters who are not dead in the books. But they\'re going to be dead on the screen. So nobody is safe. Nobody is safe."
Watch Martin talk about translating the book series to TV in the video above.
Here are four other takeaways from Martin\'s visit.
1. Martin re-reads J.R.R. Tolkien\'s "Lord of the Rings" series every two years. But it took Martin a while to get into the series when he first read it as a child. The author said he was a fan of the Conan the Barbarian series when he picked up a paperback copy of "The Fellowship of the Ring," which, as he said, begins with a "long essay on pipe weed." "I was expecting Conan" and its half-clothed women, Martin said. He stuck with the book, but nearly quit again when the much-despised Tom Bombadil entered the story. Eventually the story picked up and he got hooked. So hooked that he recalled "an agonizing period where I had to wait for the next book to come out." That\'s a feeling many of his fans know well.
2. Martin\'s advice for writers: "Keep your day job." While Martin has hit it big in recent years, he said his career "crashed and burned at least three times." He even briefly took courses to become a real estate agent in the mid 1980s. Writing, Martin said, is not a profession for ayone who needs or values security. "It\'s a profession for people who are a bit of a gambler and who are ready to have highs and lows and triumphs and failure," he said. "Writing is not a rational choice. Writing is a choice you have to make -- because you can\'t not write. There\'s something in you, there are stories in you, that you have to get out. And, you know, even if nobody would buy them or pay you a cent for them you want to tell those stories."
3. Martin follows William Faulkner\'s rules of writing: "The only thing worth writing about is the human heart in conflict with itself." Everything else, Martin said, is "furniture." It doesn\'t matter if it takes place on a space ship, in a castle with dragons or in contemporary New York City. "If it\'s about the human heart in conflict with itself, and you tell it truthfully and powerfully, as far as I\'m concerned, it\'s literature."
4. Martin\'s next donation to A&M will be some of his earliest writings -- from when he was seven or eight years old. Those include an "Encyclopedia of Space" with drawings of planets and the aliens the young author imagined lived on them. "I could barely write when I was writing stories," Martin said.
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