What's in a Name? by Natascha Biebow

names . . . Namely, if you can come up with a really unusual name for your character, people will remember it. They will remember that character’s personality traits, their unique story and maybe even use it in their everyday life. But you don’t want your character’s name to be too unusual so that it trips people up when they are reading the book aloud. Instead, the name should sound friendly, a little bit unusual and universal.
I took a look at my bookshelf:
There are names that alliterate:
Names chosen to go with a concept:
Names that say ‘what they are on tin’:

Names that are fairly unusual:





And then, there are the names that are really quite usual and sound just like that person:

And fanciful names made up to make a rhyme:

And names – like DUCK, BEAR, MOUSE, PIGEON – that are really quite comfortingly familiar and instantly recognizable in the kind of story that is really everyone’s story:

Of all these names, these are my favourite ones:

They make me laugh and you can see who these characters are right away.
Which NAME you choose, depends entirely on the story you want to tell . . . What will it be? What are your favourites?
_________________________________Natascha BiebowAuthor, Editor and Mentor

Natascha is also the author of Elephants Never Forget and
Is This My Nose?, editor of numerous award-winning children’s books, and Regional Advisor (Chair) of SCBWI British Isles. www.blueelephantstoryshaping.com
Published on January 31, 2016 20:30
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