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Should an eleven year old publish under her own name? Opinions please.



Would love to hear everyone's thoughts on this."
I am not entirely sure but I think if you go the self publishing route on Amazon that you have to add the name of an adult. I think I remember seeing a conversation about a father having to use his and his daughters name because she was underage.
Othe than that I would use the child's name perhaps but would keep them away from the social media aspect.
Keeping in mind that you are 'supposed' to be a certain age on most of the social media sites anyway.
I would be wary of letting any child interact with adults when it comes to marketing online.
Publish under their name and let an adult do the rest perhaps. The child in question would also have to be prepared for any negative feedback.
If you go the trad pub route then there are people/adults who will take care of most of those things anyway.
As a parent I would be incredibly proud of my eleven yr old but I would be really hesitant to allow any child that age to step into the virtual cage of publishing with their real name.

By using initials, there is at least some separation between "Jane Doe" and "JK Doe". Bear in mind, if her picture is on the cover, she will be identifiable anyway.
Also, if she's on Facebook (although I think the minimum age is 13, but that doesn't stop people), she should definitely have a separate public author page that can be kept separate from her personal page.

Good luck to her anyway. A bright future is in front of her for sure.

But I'd be wary of allowing it,more because of the way her other 'friends' might react

Also, later on she can also publish it as 'Jane Doe, under the pseudonym of Joe Blogs' or whatever, but she can't go the other way round if she uses her real name
I'm sure she'd love to see her name published though! It's a great achievement! (:
I appologise if none of that made sense. Not feeling too great, so brain isn't working properly

If someone was to come along and say if you want to publish you have to pretend to be a boy, you'd all be up in arms. Why should this be different? "You can't do this because someone else *might* do that" is nanny statism of the worst kind, in my view.
By all means tell her the options, and if she wants to choose a pen name, let her. But don't nanny her achievement away from her, for God's sake.

Patti's school kids sound a lot more mature than your average grubby school in the UK and I reckons she would regret it if she didn't. If the time comes when she wants to look at it badly, I think the best thing to do would be to change that attitude - because everyone does embarrassing things as kids, or not so smart things. It's a way of life.

I..."
As long as the child in question can deal with the reality of being known as the author in connection with her/his book that is fine.
What if the child isn't though. You wouldn't send your child out into a lion enclosure or into the jungle without an adult.
Let's be honest instead of idealist here. No parent wants to teach their child to change to be accepted by others and they shouldn't. I don't think publishing under a pseudonym or using initials instead of a full real name is the same as asking your child to bow down to others.
It is about keeping them safe which is your job as a parent and an adult. They are called children and not 'little adults' for a reason.

When I was 11, I was embarrassed to show some of the things I wrote to my parents. Many years later, I still have all my writing, and the only pieces that embarrass me now are the ones I would have shown to them then.
In short, there's way too much chance the kid is writing what she thinks will make the parents happy for it to carry her name forever. Growing up qua escaping your parents is a basic human right, and your name shouldn't be forever attached to who they made you be when you were 11.
I sort of suspect this is what happened with Jonathan Krohn (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan...). One could go so far as citing Prussian Blue (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prussian...).
Back off, and let the kid do what she's going to do on her own.

At 11?
What utter bollocks. They can escape all they want when they are old enough to do so.
For the record I am not opposed to a child publishing or showing their talent. I think the social media and marketing aspects of publishing a book could be overpowering and possibly harmful if there is no adult support.
Should the child publish if the book in question is 100% ready for the consumer...yes.
Should they do it alone without support....no.
Real name or pseudo...as long as the child is prepared for both negative and positive attention (even a lot of positive attention can be overwhelming), then again I would hope that there was an adult in the background to ensure their safety and well-being.

At 11?
What utter bollocks. They can escape all they want when they are old enough to do so."
I'm not saying she is an adult at 11, I'm saying she has a right to retain the possibility of growing into whatever sort of adult she wants to be -- eventually. We are basically in agreement here. But there are things from which a child can't "escape all they want when they are old enough to do so."
You might decide your kid eats meat and she might become a vegetarian when she's older; fine, she escaped. But it's wrong to tattoo your child, because she can't undo that when she grows up and develops her own aesthetic sense (which, as I say, she has a fundamental right to do). Publishing seems to me a lot like the tattoo case. That's going to be there forever.

If so I think you're agreeing with a lot of people here

I suppose the one point I wanted to make was that the original question does not specify whether the child is acting on her own or with a lot of guidance from her parents, and I think the more it's the former the more it's okay.
To keep up the tattoo example, where I live you have to be 18 to get one on your own. I got one illegally when I was younger than that, and I don't regret it a bit. It was my choice, and the effort I put into getting around the rules showed I was committed and ready. It took a lot of research and planning to get my illegal tattoo, and because I couldn't tell my parents (or really anyone) I was acting completely of my own will, and obviously not under someone else's influence.
That's why I say that (improbable as it is) if the 11 year old can publish on her own I think she's fine using her own name. Otherwise, completely agree pseudonym is the way to go.

Well being a dark lord you would wouldn't you.
I've always written under my own name, with one exception.
It was when I'd contributed a bit of stuff to a magazine that was just starting, and because it was a bit on the 'never-never' and I was helping out, two of my articles went in each issue for a while. One article was published under the name of M.D.Jackson. There was an editorial thanking M.D.Jackson for his contributions, explaining that any errors were due to the fact that the contribution appeared written in wax crayon on brown wrapping paper, but it's the only materials the ward sister to allow him to have.


There are many reasons why a person might desire or even need a little distance between their writing and personal lives. Many of these issues do not show their faces until adulthood.
Just off the top of my head, she could want to write about something a little controversial when she gets older which clashes with a day job. Or, she could turn out to be gay and want to be out in her personal life but not professional, so as not to embarrass an elderly aunt.
Perhaps this seems a little premature, but you can't take back a decision like this.
I know that, if she uses her own photo, the use of a pen name may sound purely semantic, but believe me, there is a huge psychological difference for the author.
I have a pen name. Even though my real name is there for anybody who wants to look and I use photos of me in connection with my book, I feel that having a distinct identity for my writing gives me valued personal space.
When readers Google Rosen Trevithick, they find details relating to my work and not information about where I hang out, who my friends are, my sexuality or my health - all things that may be visible under my real name.
I use my real name on social media sites where I connect with people from my personal life, and my pen name when I connect with readers and other writers. My personal friends know that if I post something about Rosen Trevithick, then that's me, and the different name has never been an issue for them.
I can compartmentalise - emails to Rosen can be dealt with when I'm working and I can turn off professional messages when I need to relax, because professional contacts don't look for me under my real name.
Another valid point is that having a pen name will allow her to choose something entirely unique.
I have writing projects from just five years ago that I've been glad of the opportunity to distance myself from. I'm not saying that she will - it sounds like a great project. But you can chose to be closely associated with a pen name, whilst you cannot choose to be disassociated from your own.
Nevertheless, she should be proud and tell everybody that she's written a book and if anybody tries to bully her we'll send the UKAKF mafia around to sort them out. If a kid at my school published a book when we were 11, I'd have been seething with jealousy!

I use a pseudonym and I'm not remotely ashamed of either who I am, or my written work as Rosen.


Emma Watson was 9 when she was cast as Hermione Granger, yet she was able to cope and keep her name (okay, becoming a movie star isn't in quite the same league as publishing a book...)
As to whether she's old enough to make her own choice, I think if she's capable of writing the book and getting it published, even with a little help, she's certainly capable of knowing what she wants to be called as the author. Her book; her choice. Let no one force anything else on her.

I gave multiple persuasive reasons to use a pen name, not one of them was bullying.
An eleven year old cannot be expected to fully appreciate future implications, which may extend to occupation, sexuality, unexpected health conditions and many other pressures of the adult world.
Being capable of writing a book does not imply the ability to process adult issues.
And Emma Watson is an actor and therefore her face is most probably recognised wherever she goes, so a pseudonym would have less effect that it would to an author.


I do think that she should be encouraged to use a pen name, but not forced. I say encourage get to simply because she can choose to keep that part of her life separate if she uses a pen name, but not so much if she uses her real name, which she will probably be using for social media, etc, in the future

*word for the day! ;)

Thank you!
You've given me lots to think of and present to her. Yes Katie, that's exactly the plan I had and this conversation has given me plenty of pros and cons to discuss with her that I'd not considered.

There are lots of decisions children make but considering something in the long term is not something they do well. There is simply not the life experience to do that. Not a bad thing but a fact.
I personally think it should be considered carefully, as Kate says, lay out the known facts, but the in my opinion the decision should not be left to an eleven year old on her own.


But kids should be encouraged to take pride in their achievements, particularly creative ones, so I don't know. I think what I'd do now if I was 11, and what I'd do if I was in your situation, is go with a modified form of the real name - so still identifiable, but with enough distance that the young author can choose the extent to which they want to be identified with the book in real life. So in my case I might publish as Andy Lawston (damn my distinctive surname) rather than Andrew, something like that.
Yup, on the fence on this one :)

Sadly enough it's my dream to be sitting in a coffee shop one day and hear someone say how much they liked D.D. Chant's new book, never knowing that I'm sitting close enough to hear. ;-P
I did choose something that held meaning for me, though. My sister calls me DeeDee as a pet name and Chant is a family name.
Having a pen name has never made me feel as thought my novels weren't really *mine*. I am D.D. Chant, the same way I'm DeeDee to Amy, or Ducky to my Dad, or any of the other pet names people call me by.

(jokes, you said something else last week didn't you)

*Like*

(jokes, you said something else last week didn't you)"
No. That was someone else. ;)

Would love to hear everyone's thoughts on this.