


"Working on my books, I'm a team of one," Rothfuss said. Rothfuss described pursuing the project, in part, to teach him how to collaborate. Dungeons & Dragons" #1, by Troy Little, reveals Morty's character sheet. Dungeons & Dragons, co-authored with Jim Zub, with art from Troy Little.Ī variant cover for "Rick and Morty vs. Rothfuss appeared on the B&N podcast to promote the trade paperback release of his four issue comic book miniseries Rick and Morty vs. "I have such respect for the writers' room that they've put together, really genuinely lovely people." "The TV show is always sort of a source of unexpected delight," Rothfuss said. Rothfuss also talked about his satisfaction with the team assembled for the TV adaptation of The Kingkiller Chronicle coming to Showtime. "More importantly, I'm finally getting my life sorted out so that I can go back and approach my writing and my craft with the joy that I used to feel back in the day, when I was just an idiot kid playing D&D or working on my unpublishable fantasy novel." "But I am moving forward," Rothfuss told B&N's blog editor Joel Cunningham. The cover art for the French edition of "The Name of the Wind," the first book in Patrick Rothfuss' trilogy "The Kingkiller Chronicle." Marc Simonetti / Bragelonne Rothfuss said his first draft was missing a third of the characters eventually introduced in The Name of the Wind, describing the original version as "a book you would not have liked, because it was just discernibly bad." But while he had the skeleton of a complete narrative, The Kingkiller Chronicle has changed substantially since. Rothfuss described how he finished his first draft for the entire Kingkiller Chronicle trilogy in the year 2000, about seven years before the publication of the first book in the series, The Name of the Wind (followed in 2011 by The Wise Man's Fear). I had just been published for like two months, I had no idea what I was talking about." I made promises very early on in interviews where I'm like 'Yeah, I'm going to do these books one a year.' But I was an idiot. "But things are moving forward, if not fast-again I've never promised fast, ever since I knew what I was good at professionally.

" Kingkiller, my work on the books, is-again, it might seem strange for people to hear-but nobody laments the lack of tangible progress more than me, in terms of the next Kingkiller book," Rothfuss said. I say, 'When it's ready I will bring it to you,' and until then, trust that I am working," Rothfuss said during the podcast interview-he did describe how the writing process is proceeding. While Rothfuss has long been reluctant to discuss any potential release dates for Book 3 of The Kingkiller Chronicle-"I never talk about deadlines anymore. The Kingkiller Chronicle author Patrick Rothfuss gave an update on both the Kingkiller TV show and his progress on Book 3 in the bestselling fantasy series, The Doors of Stone, during an interview for The Barnes & Noble Podcast.
