One of the questions that came into the website deals with the work on Wheel of Time. Obviously that’s a big undertaking of your time and definitely takes you away from your own creations. How do you feel about that, as an artist?
You know, when I agreed to do this, I did it with eyes open, knowing that what it was going to do was going to mean I could get to fewer of my side projects. I’m a guy that likes to jump around—lots of wacky little side projects and things—and this time, I wasn’t going to get to do that. But I was OK with that. Because I realized this was something important; this was something awesome I wanted to be part of. And there are some opportunities it cost—there are two big ones. One is that I can’t do some of these side projects. But there is another one: that is, I don’t get to read the Wheel of Time books when they come out, like everyone else does. And that’s also a sad opportunity it cost. I’m the only one that didn’t get a new Wheel of Time book last year, because I wrote the thing. So I didn’t get to, you know… Always before, I would wait, I would get the Wheel of Time book and I would go read it. And I don’t get to do that, not in the same way. But being a part of it the way I am more than pays for all these things. It’s just, there are some little things I think about and say…little tiny…I wouldn’t call them regrets, but certainly costs.
Right.
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