Ah,  titles. Almost every author I know kvetches about them, getting them  right, searching for the perfect one. I don't count myself out of that  number. There's been many a time I've thought of the "perfect"  title...only to discover that five authors before me thought the same  thing. So frustrating.
But I have shown a propensity for writing a story after thinking of the  title FIRST...and not just once, but several times. Let me do a quick  recap....
A Pint Light  was my first title-before-the-horse, and it was a doozy. I saw the call  for vampire submissions three days before the due date (which was also  incidently the day I was leaving on a three week road trip with my  kids). And thought to myself, since most of the genre is dark and  angsty, wouldn't it be fun to do a lighthearted vamp tale? The title  then popped into my head, which then conjured the opening scene...and I  was compelled to write it (and finish it..in two days).  I now have a  series arc of 5-6 stories, all from that little title. And all the  subsequent titles were very easy to come up with as well, thankfully!
Soon  after, I was contemplating writing a holiday themed story, and began  trying to think of a plot, to no avail. So turned my mental energy to  thinking of a theme by using holiday songs. When Silver & Gold  came to mind, I stopped the search. I could immediately picture Silver  (the older guy discovering to his horror he's going grey) and Gold (the  young, hip blond colorist who refuses to fix it for him). It practically  wrote itself after that.
My first M/F story was another title randomly popping into my  head...one that took me into a completely different genre! One day I was  letting my mind wander and thought about how sometimes titles are overly  cerebral or clever, and why not just put it out there right off the  bat, with SEX in the actual title?? Sex On Sabbatical  had a fun ring to it, but to my surprise, it conjured up, not two guys  (as I had been writing to that point) but an older professional woman  having a fling with a young guy. Huh? Okay...back to girl parts, and as  long as I'm going to be there, might as well enjoy...built a four story  series, Seasoned Women, from that single title idea. Hence the Summer in the final title, Sex on Summer Sabbatical.
Another in that series was a no-brainer once I'd decided on the "seasons" approach. Let's see...spring. Spring Training, of course. And that would mean a ballplayer and a teammate's mom. ;) You'll get to see that one next, on March 7th.
I'm a sucker for submission calls, love the ideas that spring to mind  when I read them (whether I end up submitting there or not, they are  inspirational to me for some reason). The second book I wrote came from  on of those. Two years ago, I had read a publisher's call for "Drink"  theme stories, and in another of those weird mental synapes connections,  the name Wet Your Whistle flashed neon in my head.  Wrote it, finished it, and sent it off on April Fool's Day 2009. Quick  rejection. Mothballed it to write more polished stories and just went  back to revisit it around the holidays. Added 5K and did a LOT of  cosmetic work on points of view, and lo and behold, got a contract offer  for it on...karma drum roll please....April Fool's Day 2010.
Unfortunately, all my titles weren't so easy peasy. A few I was pulling  my hair out over, pesting my friends and betas, and generally driving  myself and everyone around me crazy over.
Last year's Valentine's release, A Detour Home,  went through several working titles including Rough Road Home, before I  realized that, oops, I already have a "Rough" title. Literally came  down to, what do I put on the contract paperwork? before I settled on  the final title. Even then, I put it to a vote between my editor, my  beta, and an author friend. It was 2 out of 3 for ADH, so my editor and  beta prevailed. ;)
Sometimes I know what I want to have the title be, in theory. But coming  up with the particulars can be difficult. For example, in last summer's  paranormal release about a were and a rocker, I wanted the  name of his band in the title. But coming up with a band name that's, a)  interesting and catchy, b) not taken in real life or in fiction, and,  c) something that also works as a title, is VERY difficult! After much  angst, I finally settled on One Wish for the band and One Wild Wish for the title.
Another  along these lines was my story originally in the Gaymes anthology. Wanted to name  the story after the team the guys played on...just had to come up with  the team name. After an unproductive brainstorming session with my hub  (who stuck to the "normal" team names), I finally settled on the Rough Riders.  My usual search revealed that there was a series in the erotic rom  genre by that name, but since it was the series title and not indivudual  title, plus m/f as opposed to my m/m, I figured I'd be safe.
After all, there's very little new under the sun, and, along with  character names, pen names, plot devices, and physical descriptions,  titles are also hard to keep strictly original. But it all how you weave  it all together, and a good title provides the perfect frame for your  creation, whether you wander about with your art, looking for a frame,  or carry around the frame, looking for something to fit inside...
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So, sometimes it's the egg first... and sometimes it's the chicken. ;)
ReplyDelete*waves at Candy Cane Guy*
I was one of the authors you thought of when you mentioned kvetching, wasn't I? I knew it! Titles are the pits for me, because I want it to be perfect for the story. *sigh* Often I'm still calling them by character name-- X & Y--until the very end. :( Or the Devon coined "10YOM" (10 yr old ms).
ReplyDeleteHugs
J
I'm with Jess - Takes me forever to title a book, and I've got more than a few book ideas with working titles with the characters' names or just the subgrenre and length. I wish I could think of catchy and cool titles, but most of my titles aren't that exciting. I've even had pubs ask me to retitle 2 books so far, cause the original titles bit. LOL
ReplyDeleteI'm not a writer, of course, but I've spent hours and hours brainstorming with students trying to come up with titles for their papers and projects. It can be so frustrating.
ReplyDeleteGreat Post Devon! I always wonder how authors come up with the titles for their books, or character names or band/team names. The insight into the process can definitely add to a reader's enjoyment of the book.
ReplyDeleteI'd say my titles come out of something the characters say and coincidentally happens to be a song title. Probably not the most original way to come up with a title, but it seems to work for me.
ReplyDeleteGreat post!!!