![]() ![]() ![]() Great harms may be done from the noblest motives, great good from motives vile and venal. The bravest may have moments when their courage fails. Some are strong and some are weak, some smart and some stupid. They do heroic things, they do selfish things. ![]() All of them are flawed, from the best to the worst. They are real to me, as I write them, and I struggle to make them real to my readers as well. ![]() “Dwelling where I am now, deep in the heart of Westeros, I find myself surrounded by my characters, the children of my mind and heart and soul. Martin then contemplates how, as much as we want to sort people into good or bad categories after they die, everyone, be they living, dead or fictional, is an imperfect tangle of contradictory characteristics. Martin argues that Shakespeare was “ it like it is,” in his quote (which is a Mark Anthony line from Julius Caesar) while Ghandi was describing the way the world could be, rather than the way it is. “Even the greatest of minds may disagree about what to do with those who came before us, fallible fellows all,” he writes on his Not A Blog, along with these two quotes: Martin took a break from writing The Winds of Winter earlier today (yes, guys, he really is hard at work on it) to share his thoughts on the reductive legacies of complicated historical figures and how to best reconcile their virtues with their shortcomings. ![]()
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