View Full Version : Why can't I come up with a decent pen name!?
bluemoonscribe
02-05-2008, 08:00 AM
I'm struggling. I can't come up with a good pen name for my oft-mentioned Southern Vampire Romantic Comedy Series. My editor and agent have left it up to me. I don't like my own name because one, my name sounds like a popular brand of flour. Not terribly atmospheric. Also, I live in a conservative area where people make certain assumptions about those who write vampire books. So some anonymity would be good.
Most of my made up suggestions sound like adult film star names somehow.
Please help me overcome what should be a sadly simple problem.
Andrhia
02-05-2008, 08:14 AM
I bet using a couple of initials instead of a first name would make it feel less, er, actorish. :)
'L.M. Roanoke' or something...
julief
02-05-2008, 08:18 AM
If I had to get a pen name, I would keep my first name (Julie, which is common) and take my mom's maiden name. If I had to take another, I'd take my middle with my dad's middle.
I know that some writers use their kids' names or their grandparents'. You could do the drag name thing (use the street you grew up on for a last name).
I don't know if any of these are good suggestions for you.
BiggerBoat
02-05-2008, 08:22 AM
Okay, just take the name of your first pet as your first name, and the name of the street where you lived ... oh, wait ....
Were I in your place, I would try to think of a name that had some personal significance for me, or maybe honored someone important in my life. For example, my Dad's middle name was Archer, which would probably be a cool last name.
If you are less serious-minded, perhaps there is a name that could serve as an in-joke for your friends and family.
Also, you could imagine some alternate identify for your writer. How old is she? Then, look at popular names for that year (an easy find on the intertubes). Find a name that you like but which wasn't so popular as to be bland. Finally, your novel takes place in the south, so how about you borrow the last name of some obscure southern historical figure?
Whatever way you go, it's an enviable predicament. Enjoy!
drachin8
02-05-2008, 08:24 AM
Elizabeth Rose (...from the grave!)
Ann Cottings (a bit sharper, like a knife)
Amanda Wails (...like a banshee!)
Okay, obviously I am in a bit of a silly mood tonight. Since your vampire is southern, maybe try scanning some lists of southern baby names and then tacking something interesting onto the end.
If you could specify a bit more what kind of image you want this name to spark, though, it might help with the brainstorming. Do you want something languid that slithers off the tongue and drowns you in the thick summer heat? Do you want something with a bit of a spike that hooks you like a hungry fish? Or do you want something light and tangy, like the scent of citrus on the wind?
Try to find the image you want your name to project, and go from there.
:)
-Michelle
What name would you give yourself if you could change your name? And, yes, I know one can legally, but do you have a name you wished your parents had given you instead of the one you have? As for a last name, what about mother's maiden name, or grandmother's maiden name? You can also take two or three family names and mix up some of the letters to come up with your own name.
I used the last two letters of my maiden name "at" and the first three letters "man" of my Mom's maiden name. Atman works for me. My married name is too common and already used by a well known author. First name is pretty much a household name, so a change all around was necessary for me.
ORION
02-05-2008, 08:33 AM
well I have a different take on this from a bit of experience. I have a hyphenated name that the UK loved but the US has a hard time with. The advantage of having it similar or using initials is when you go to bookstores to sign stock PROVING who you are...
How about using your first initials and last name?
If it's like a flour it will be memorable...LOL
bluemoonscribe
02-05-2008, 08:35 AM
OK, so I want to keep my maiden name because, well, no one in my family has ever published a book and I feel the need to "represent." Also, it begins with H, right in the middle of the alphabet, which I figure will put me right in the middle of the bookshelves in the store.
So I wanted to convey earthy, classy southern, not bedazzled sweatshirt and drawn-on eyebrows southern. I was thinking Ivy Lee H. It's a combination of my favorite southern name (and Batman villiainess), my mother's maiden name and of course, my maiden name.
Siddow
02-05-2008, 08:39 AM
Samantha Jo Hurtin!
No, really, pick from these:
Abigail, Alexandria, Alexis, Alyssa, Amanda, Amber, Anna, Annabell Ashley, Ashton, Augusta, Blanche, Brett, Brianna, Brooke, Camellia, Charline, Carline, Chloe, Courtney, Darline, Daisy, Deana, Delta, Dixie, Dolly, Earline, Elizabeth, Emily, Emma, Emmy, Faith, Georgia, Grace, Hannah, Harline, Jasmine, Jennifer, Jessica, Jo-Dee, Kayla, Laura, Lauren, Leann, Leslie, Loretta, Lorrie, Louise, Lynn, Madeline, Madison, Marie, Megan, Morgan, Naomi, Nicole, Olivia, Patsy, Patty, Pollyanna, Rachel, Reba, Rebecca, Rhonda, Rose, Samantha, Sarah, Savannah, Scarlett, Shania, Sissy, Susannah, Susanne, Suzy, Sydney, Tammy, Tanya, Taylor, Thelma, Trinity, Trisha, Victoria, Virginia, Wynonna
Abraham, Alan, Alexander, Andrew, Anthony, Austin, Beau, Billy, Blake, Brady, Brandon, Bubba, Buck, Buddy, Caleb, Charles, Chet, Christian, Christopher, Cledus, Clint, Cody, Colin, Conway, Cooper, Daniel, Daryl, David, Duke, Dwayne, Dwight, Dylan, Earl, Eddy, Ethan, Forrest, George, Glenn, Grant, Hal, Hank, Hunter, Jacob, Jackson, James, Jeb, Jebidiah, Jeff, Jeffery, Jesse, Jett, Jimmy, Joe, John, Jonathan, Johnny, Jose, Joseph, Josie, Joshua, Junior, Justin, Kenny, Lane, Lee, Leroy, Luke, Mark, Marty, Matthew, Mel, Michael, Neil, Nicholas, Noah, Orry, Parker, Randy, Ray, Raymond, Rhett, Ricky, Roscoe, Ryan, Samuel, Sawyer, Toby, Travis, Tristan, Tyler, Vince, Wade, Waylon, Wayne, Warren, William, Zachary
bluemoonscribe
02-05-2008, 08:41 AM
Siddow, you rock! Those are some great suggestions!
icerose
02-05-2008, 08:44 AM
My real name is Sara Price. If I ever take on a pen name it will be S. W. Jayne if I'm going for gender neutral or Sara Jayne if it doesn't matter.
I was named after my grandmother. Her middle name was Jane but I never got the middle name because a cousin of mine had recieved the same name as me, was three months old, and died like a week before I was born. So I never got the Jane. Thus my history with it.
I would strongly suggest having a pen name that is special to you.
I scrambled the letters in my real name (which I have always hated) and pulled names from them.
Suggestion: Keep it simple and easy to recall.
ETA: It isn't the name that makes you. You make the name.
ORION
02-05-2008, 09:33 AM
Use something that connects yourself to your work if you can...a maiden name...a middle name...
Having something in the middle of the alphabet helps..I found out after I used the last half of my hyphenated name that Wood is at the tail end of the book shelves...my other name starts with K which would have been a better choice...
P.H.Delarran
02-05-2008, 10:18 AM
I scrambled the letters in my real name (which I have always hated) and pulled names from them.
Suggestion: Keep it simple and easy to recall.
ETA: It isn't the name that makes you. You make the name.
exactly what I did, from my maiden name. then I went with the initials rather than the first two names.
No offense, but most Southerners giggle a bit at New Age names like Ivy. However, Lee's a good middle name.
Southern names are designed to sound beautiful when said in whole. Some Southern lit. characters that illustrate this are Scarlett O'Hara (whose crush is the base of my pen name), Huckleberry Finn… Can't think of any others, but also consider names like Harper Lee, William Jefferson Clinton, Loretta Lynn.
This (http://life.familyeducation.com/baby/baby-names/45487.html) is an interesting page on Southern names.
I've decided that my pen name will be Emily Catherine Wilkes: Emily Wilkes for poetry, E.C. Wilkes for sci-fi/fantasy novels, E. Catherine Wilkes for anything else. Dunno if I'll ever be published, but I have the name handy.
Ravenlocks
02-05-2008, 04:41 PM
Call yourself Blue H. Blue is already part of your identity here, so why not take it offline?
aruna
02-05-2008, 04:53 PM
Use something that connects yourself to your work if you can...a maiden name...a middle name...
Having something in the middle of the alphabet helps..I found out after I used the last half of my hyphenated name that Wood is at the tail end of the book shelves...my other name starts with K which would have been a better choice...
My publishers warned me about W! I wanted ot write using my maiden name, which is Westmaas. It's a good solid name in Guyana with a certain reputation (left-leaning political activists!) and rare. But my publisher didn;t like it because it starts with W. They suggested my mother's maiedn name (Cox) or my grandmother's maiden name, Hamilton. I chose to cut Westmaas in half, to Maas, which is OK, but somehow I;m not happy wityh it. I wish I could have gone with Westmaas. I;m even thinking of adding the West back in, as in Sharon West Maas.
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BlueLucario
02-05-2008, 04:58 PM
I think you should try something that matches your interests. Like Silver Cat. Obi Wan Peterson. Yoda Simmons.
drachin8
02-05-2008, 05:26 PM
I think you should try something that matches your interests. Like Silver Cat. Obi Wan Peterson. Yoda Simmons.
LOL! I so want to be a Yoda Simmons now (the love-child of Yoda and Richard Simmons)!
"Work those thighs, girls! Use that force!"
If only I were a boy...
:)
-Michelle
Shadow_Ferret
02-05-2008, 05:27 PM
Also, I live in a conservative area where people make certain assumptions about those who write vampire books. So some anonymity would be good.
How many of you are there that they've started lumping you all together?
bluemoonscribe
02-05-2008, 08:34 PM
How many of you are there that they've started lumping you all together?
Actually, I'm the only one I know of in my small Kentucky town. What I mean is some people automatically assume you're some weirdo eccentric who has a coffin in her basement and blood in the fridge. (People have some strange ideas about Anne Rice around here.)
slcboston
02-05-2008, 09:35 PM
I don't understand what all the fuss is about. My pen already has a name stenciled on it. Says "Pilot" right there on it...
What? That's not what we're talking about? :Wha:
OH - THAT kind of pen name.
Never mind.:gone:
ClaudiaGray
02-05-2008, 10:18 PM
I grew up in Mississippi, and I knew an Ivy, so I don't think you're "non-Southern" with that. The middle of the alphabet is a good place for your last name to be (see my pseud last name here). So Ivy Lee H_______ seems workable to me.
But be sure to run it by your agent and editor. They may say it's all up to you, but that's what mine said to me until I proudly declared my pseud and they vetoed me.
Dreamer3702
02-05-2008, 10:40 PM
I'm using my middle name as my last name. ---> J. J. Carrera <--- the initials are of my first and (maiden) last name. My maiden name is unpronounceable (sp?) and my (soon to be) last name is to "ethnic".
Paichka
02-05-2008, 10:43 PM
I guess I ought to have a pen name then -- my last name is Warren. :sigh:
I understand the reluctance to talk about your genre -- the hubs mentioned to one of our friends last night that I'm writing a book. The friend (a very Christian, very southern guy) looked at me and asked what sort of book. I said, "Oh, fantasy, you know -- like Harry Potter crossed with Dragonlance."
:Shrug:
The look I got from him. Yikes. I half expected him to break out the holy water and try to cast out my demons. Or whatever.
So I think I'll be Delilah Foster. That's my great-great-great-aunt's name. Maybe. :)
The pen name I use for writing competitions is very short: one syllable for the first name, one syllable for the surname. Easy to remember, and obviously English, so easy to pronounce.
I used to fantasize about long and flowery Italian names, but I ditched that idea as not practical.
girlyswot
02-06-2008, 08:42 AM
No offense, but most Southerners giggle a bit at New Age names like Ivy. However, Lee's a good middle name.
*blinks* Ain't things different the world over? I'd classify Ivy as a solid, old-fashioned, working-class name unlikely to have been used since the 1930's or 40's. New Age? How so?
escritora
02-06-2008, 09:02 AM
The pen name I use is my sister's first name and my mother's last name...Auria Cortes.
aruna
02-06-2008, 11:10 AM
*blinks* Ain't things different the world over? I'd classify Ivy as a solid, old-fashioned, working-class name unlikely to have been used since the 1930's or 40's. New Age? How so?
And the Baby Name Wizard (http://www.babynamewizard.com/namevoyager/lnv0105.html) reveals all: You are in part correct. Ivy had its heydey before the 1940's (type it in and you'll see). It definitely isn't a New Age name; New Age I would say is around the 60's and 70's, and it was completely out at that time. But guess what! In 2006 Ivy surged right up in popularity.
What surprises me is that before the 40's Ivy was also a boy's name, even more so than for girls. According to the Wizard.
BlueLucario
02-06-2008, 04:58 PM
Why don't you just make up a name? Doesn't have to be accepted. Look at Maya Angelou.
Hummingbird
02-06-2008, 08:42 PM
The look I got from him. Yikes. I half expected him to break out the holy water and try to cast out my demons. Or whatever.
Lol Aw man, it's been a while since I've had something close to that happen. Did he recover? ;)
The worst I've had is stares. People staring at me after I said that I write fantasy. It appeared that they had forgotten the genre even existed.
As to names, I know if I wanted to use a pen name I would use my pet's name and my mom's maiden. It sounds cool. Lol.
Something else you could try is creating a character like yourself as if you were going to write a story and use the name you would give that character. ^.^
AllisterGrim
02-07-2008, 12:33 AM
I think a pen name is primarily a marketing tool. As such I think it pays for them to be ruthlessly engineered. All the advice about branding is probably relevant.
First off you want a name that's easy to pronounce and to spell. This way its easy for them to search a shelf for, or to type into a search field. Ideally it should be a little unusual so that its memorable. Names that sound like generic last names probably aren't that great (IE Smith, White). An English word that you don't normally see in a last name would strike me as working well for that purpose.
I think it also would pay to think about where your book will find itself in the shelves. One thing you may consider doing is picking a pen name alphabetically close to the name of a popular author. This increases the chances that someone may see your book while looking for something else.
MMWyrm
02-07-2008, 03:01 AM
Sounds a bit weird, but I dreamed my pen name - M. Lori Motley. The M and the Lori are from my real name, but my legal last name is my married name, and I'm divorced. No way I'm putting that shmuck's name on my fiction.
I recently needed another pen name for a different genre, so I stuck my name in an anagram program and saw what it came up with.
dempsey
02-07-2008, 03:04 AM
I used a random name generator.
First hit gave me something that I felt I could live with. So I went with it.
DWSTXS
02-08-2008, 08:18 AM
how about.........Sharpie ?
Siddow
02-08-2008, 08:26 AM
I think a pen name is primarily a marketing tool. As such I think it pays for them to be ruthlessly engineered. All the advice about branding is probably relevant.
First off you want a name that's easy to pronounce and to spell.
This just brings to mind the greatest stage name of all time, a true victim
pioneer in the art of 'ruthless engineering'.
I bring you: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engelbert_Humperdinck_(singer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engelbert_Humperdinck_%28singer))
:roll:
ErylRavenwell
02-08-2008, 08:35 AM
Mine is a riddle (not Ravenwell). It has a unique property and if you substitute the first letter of the surname with the prenomen's, you'll get the surname of my favorite character. There's a term for the property, but I won't tell because I'm secretive to a fault. :D
Kallex
02-09-2008, 07:12 AM
Hmmm... Deliah Foster, snot bad atoll.
wayndom
02-09-2008, 08:47 AM
Pookie Klinghoffer.
Thank me later...
bluemoonscribe
02-09-2008, 08:51 AM
Pookie Klinghoffer.
Thank me later...
:roll:
Actually I was thinking of Chesty LaRue.
No?
Paichka
02-09-2008, 10:15 AM
That reminds me, my porn name is Misty Berwick. I think that would be an awesome pseudonym.
chevbrock
02-09-2008, 11:20 AM
"Rose Black"
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