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Des précisions sur sa méthode de travail :
The other question that popped up several times is this one: Am I including the pages that Mr. Jordan wrote in that wordcount. The answer is yes and no. What I'm doing is writing through the book by viewpoint grouping. That means I start at the beginning, then write through to near the end with a certain set of characters. Then I begin again with a new set of characters. This helps me focus in on those characters so that I don't have to keep track of QUITE so many things at once.When I reach a section that Mr. Jordan finished, I insert it, then keep going. So the 200k that I've "written" so far includes chunks that I didn't write. However, the unfinished portions also include large chunks of Mr. Jordan's writing that AREN'T yet included in the 200k. I'll include them when I write those characters and get to the parts he has finished. Does that make sense?And now, since I finished another chapter on Saturday, we have an update to our list below!AMOL Relative Length Chart: 8/25/08Alcatraz/Evil Librarians 60,400New Spring 121,815Elantris 202,765---A MEMORY OF LIGHT 204k So Far!---

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Ah, je n'aurais pas cru ! Je me demande tout de même comment il procède quand plusieurs groupes se croisent, notamment sur la fin de l'histoire, je suppose. :)PS ! Ah, ok, "near the end",c'est bon, je n'ai rien dit... ;)

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D'autres petites infos datant d'il y a quelques semaines. :)
Jim always said he knew the ending of the series, Tom says. And when he was working on A Memory of Light, he wrote the ending. That plus the prologue and the rest of what he wrote totaled 200 manuscript pages [that’s about 50,000 words].Of the 200 manuscript pages that Jim wrote, the largest part is the prologue, the next largest is the ending, and the rest of the pages are chunks from elsewhere in the book. Brandon estimated that if Jim had completed the manuscript it would have ended up at 2,000 manuscript pages [that’s 500,000 words using standard manuscript format].Brandon says the goal is not to leave out anything that Jim has written. As much of what he has written will make it into print as physically possible. Any manuscript words that Jim has written will go in the book. If Jim said that something has to happen, it will happen.

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One YearPosted on 09.22.08Categories: Wheel of TimeLast week marked one year since Mr. Jordan's passing. I wrote out something to post, but I just didn't like it, so decided to scrap the idea. That was partially because I think I'd rather commemorate Mr. Jordan on a different day, such as his birthday next month or perhaps the publication date of EYE OF THE WORLD, rather than focusing too much on the day of his passing.However, after thinking about it over the weekend while at MountainCon, I decided that I really did need to post something, if only a link back to the essay I wrote back in July about his passing. It's probably the best I could do on this topic, and what follows below is just a tangential musing, more related to me than to him. It's related to thoughts that have been tickling my mind recently.A year ago, I assumed that Mr. Jordan had already exerted every bit of influence over my career that he was going to. During my youth, his books significantly shaped the writer I would become. Publishing with Tor became my personal holy grail, in a lot of ways, because of his presence there. His power for sales in the fantasy market (which pushed the genre with mainstream readers and also helped establish the fantasy hardcover as a viable publishing option even for midlist authors) changed how people buy books in our genre. Finally, his success at Tor allowed them to have the money to take chances on newer authors, such as myself. When you weigh all of those things, I think you'll find that my career--even before last year's events--was dominated rather heavily by the Wheel of Time and Mr. Jordan himself. But with his passing, I assumed that no more such influence would come.I guess you could say that I was wrong. From this point on, I doubt more than a passing mention will be made of me any my writing without Robert Jordan's name appearing as well. Any article, essay, or encyclopedia entry about me will list my work on the Wheel of Time as one of the most important events of my career. Twenty years from now, I will be doing conventions related to the Wheel of Time. It's entirely possible that my career as a whole could end up as a footnote to that of Robert Jordan.Does this bother me? To be honest, it doesn't. I knew all of this before I accepted the project, and if I'd worried about it, I'd just have done the book without official credit. But that wouldn't have been fair, either to myself or the fans. They deserve to know what they are getting, and deserve to understand that someone other than Mr. Jordan worked on this book. They deserve to know exactly who was involved. Beyond that, a man could do much worse than be known as that guy who was involved in the last Wheel of Time book. A series like this one doesn't come along but once a generation, and it's humbling to be part of it.Yes, I hope to be able to make my own mark on the genre. I hope that I can earn my own way onto the bestseller lists and into the hearts of readers. But in the end, if I'm like so many other good-- but ephemeral--midlist authors, I'm not going to consider my career a failure. I'll have told the stories that I want, and I'll have worked in a job I love for my entire life. Who can really ask for more than that? But it's nice to know that, either way, I'll have been involved in something lasting, something people will still be reading a century from now. The Wheel of Time has changed a lot of people's lives. Mine most of all. And I'm very thankful for the chance to work on this novel, and for the willingness of the readers to accept me in as one of them. So, I guess my thoughts upon the one year mark turn toward you--I've found that Mr. Jordan's greatest legacy is in the quality of fan that he inspired. You do him proud.Annotations coming soon. Thank you all for reading.Brandonp.s. Plaid Ajah: Yes. (Inside joke.)
Nouveau message sur Jordan et surtout la place de Sanderson en tant qu'écrivain. :)

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Sanderson confirme qu'il a vraiment un excellent état d'esprit. J'aime bien son positionnement par rapport à l'oeuvre de Jordan; on sent qu'il n'a pas accepté simplement par pur mercantilisme.

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J'imagine à quel point il doit être anxieux maintenant qu'il a livré cette première moitié à Harriet ! Il doit attendre (et nous aussi d'ailleurs) le verdict avec impatience. :rolleyes: En tous cas je suis de plus en plus émerveillée par la productivité de cet auteur ainsi que de son état d'esprit.Décidément j'adore de plus en plus cet auteur, ses bouquins sont géniaux, sa position vis à vis de WoT et de Jordan est remarquable et en plus il écrit vite, que demander de plus ? :p

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I've begun to get pages back on the sections of A Memory of Light I sent to Harriet, and the responses are very encouraging. There are things I need to change, of course, but that's the case in any book. Mostly, she's asked me to be more descriptive in places. We've also got Alan and Maria working full time catching inconsistencies and the like. But I'm really enjoying the process. Harriet is a world class editor--she really is great at what she does.
:sifflote:

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Sanderson a un style très agréable, et assez concis, il peut très bien rajouter quelques descriptions dans la limite du raisonnable et rester très digeste, ça ne me fait pas peur. :)Par contre ça veut dire rallonger encore le roman, il va être loooooong ! :rolleyes:

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Valashu a écrit :Sanderson a un style très agréable, et assez concis, il peut très bien rajouter quelques descriptions dans la limite du raisonnable et rester très digeste, ça ne me fait pas peur. :)Par contre ça veut dire rallonger encore le roman, il va être loooooong ! :rolleyes:
En ce qui me concerne, j'aimerais bien que le roman soit le plus long possible, pour finir la série en beauté. Surtout que j'avais trouvé le 11 trop court et trop creux.Je serais aussi tentée de dire que plus le dernier tome sera long (dans les limites du raisonnable s'entend, pas plus de 1000 pages :p), plus il risque d'être bon. C'est qu'il y en a des choses en suspend à la fin du 11! Le temps de bien démêler tout ça, de vaincre le Dark Lord et quelques Darkfriends au passage, le tout en tentant de nous surprendre :huh:, et de faire un bel épilogue qui rassemble tous les survivants, nous voilà avec un pavé!Et oui, en anglais ça s'appelle du "wishful thinking".

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Au détour d'un autre billet :
Don't worry--work on AMoL is going just fine. No rough points here! I just had to cut back for a few weeks to take care of other obligations. (I believe I warned you about them back in June.) I pushed very, very hard through August and early September on the Wheel of Time book because I knew that I needed to get ahead in order to have a chance of hitting my deadline by December. There were weeks when the percentage bar went up four or even five percent. Lately, it's gone up one percent. Remember, however, that my normal writing goal is 10k a week, and so cutting down to 5k these last few weeks hasn't been as big a stall as it might look. (It's just a big one in comparison to the 20k I was often doing the weeks before.)
Pour justifier le ralentissement des progrès de sa barre de pourcentage !