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Chapter Name or Number?
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I number them, but only because I don't want to spend my time thinking about a chapter name, when I could be diving into the story.
Truth to tell, I like books that name their chapters when I read.
Truth to tell, I like books that name their chapters when I read.
I named the chapters in my first novel, and just numbered them in the second. The moods of the two different stories seemed to call for the different methods.

This is how I feel. I wouldn't mind writing a book one day that used chapter titles instead of numbers. I sort of did that with one of my shorts.
I do love me some Act Titles though.

At one time or another I've used all the following styles:
* I, II, ...
* Chapter I, Chapter II ...
* Chapter One, Chapter Two ...
* One, Two ...
* 1., 2. (Each one followed on a new line of centered text in bold containing a time and location stamp like:
1.
The Present--Cargo Liner Carapace, Deep Space)
* 1. It Must be Thursday, 2. Punctuality ...
* House of the Manifest God, The Battle of The Locus ...
The important thing if you choose to name them, I think, is to make the title relevant to the chapter's content, but without doing any spoilers.
As a reader, chapter titles hardly register on me until I'm finished a book. If I like the book I might go back to the TOC and look at chapter titles more closely. But some people do look at chapter titles first, and if they see a chapter called "The Death of Sir John" then that can be a bit of a spoiler (or feel like it, even if Sir John doesn't actually die in that chapter). I've seen people put off by that.
Tolkien, I think, did chapter titles well. Unfortunately, I also think his famous chapter titling made a lot of wannabe writers think it makes you look more authorly to have them, and then proceeded to write bad or pretentious chapter names.
As a rule...numbers of any kind are better. Roman numerals used to be the thing, but if you have more than like 30 (XXX) chapters, they can become unreadable to modern audiences:
CHAPTER MMMCDLXVIII: THE BEGINNING
Pro'lly not a good thing. ];P

For the new one I'm using the chapter number and a name. For example, Chapter 7: Interrogation.

Chapter 12 or THE STORM.
It spikes interest.

I agree with Micah. It depends on the book.
I can't see any advantage to locking yourself into a particular style.


lol. Good point.

I started off with unique chapter titles, but most my chapters are also broken down further into scenes and what Micah noted became an even bigger challenge. Now I stick to Chapter Number.


While I like reading books with chapter names, I already have problems finding book titles, let alone chapters. It's only numbers for me.


A possible solution to that would be to name the chapter and number the scenes.
One novel I finished but abandoned had 3 Books in it, each one named. Then originally I had chapter numbers, which I started at One for each Book. Later realized that might look confusing so I named the chapters as well.


A possible solution to that would be to name the chapter and number the ..."
A good way to handle that would be 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, etc, then 2.1, 2.2, 2.3.
A nice modern take on it.
I guess it would depend on the novel. I haven't published any, yet, but the one I'm currently working on has chapter numbers and names. I see chapter names as little teasers to keep the reader wondering what is coming up.
For Boo!, my non-fiction book about ghosts, I broke it into a few parts, then had little headings every few pages to give an idea what the section would cover.
Very White Jesus is more like a series of tiny stories rather than a novella, so I gave little titles at the beginning of each story but did not number them. For The Asphalt Carpet I gave headings every couple of pages to indicate the places Daniel was traveling through.
For Boo!, my non-fiction book about ghosts, I broke it into a few parts, then had little headings every few pages to give an idea what the section would cover.
Very White Jesus is more like a series of tiny stories rather than a novella, so I gave little titles at the beginning of each story but did not number them. For The Asphalt Carpet I gave headings every couple of pages to indicate the places Daniel was traveling through.

I use a simple chapter heading followed by a featured quote. This way the quote and heading don't compete, my TOC stays tidy and readers can interpret the quote however they like without spoiling anything in the story itself.
Of course the quotes are relevant but vague.

I myself actually number and title them, ex: Chapter 1-Reminiscence. I do it so people can identify a chapter and it keeps the title in their minds so that when they read the chapter they have an idea of what it's about and at the end can figure out why I gave it such a name. Also from a simple point I like both, I feel it gives a simple way to remember each chapter.


If a future project has just one POV character, I'm fairly sure I'll stick with numbered chapters. Easier to remember, and to reference after the fact, in reviews or discussions and such.
I can't say I would never use separate names for each chapter, but I can say right now that that option appeals to me the least.




So ideally, if chapters were being named, something like:
1. NAME or Chapter 1: NAME
Would be ideal. XD
Grey wrote: "I love it when authors name chapters, but I also want the numbers to make it easier to keep track of things, or when I'm recommending a section to other people.
So ideally, if chapters were being ..."
I used both, and I'm sure most authors do.
So ideally, if chapters were being ..."
I used both, and I'm sure most authors do.

It just appeals to me do it that way.





Question: Do you prefer to name your chapters or number them? Any reason?