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Naming a book series
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Series named after a main character are also common if a central figure is really the theme (e.g., the Honor Harrington series). I haven't read your books but from the first two descriptions could "Hollow Moon (Ravana O'Brien, #1)" and "Paw-Prints of the Gods (Ravana O'Brien, #2)" work?

On the other hand, the series I'm currently writing will have different titles, so I'm planning on something that is more overarching, and will probably feature the main character's name.

Hmm... Not sure. It's annoying that since I published Hollow Moon, other books have cropped up with a similar name in the fantasy genre. Then there's all the conspiracy theory books on the 'Is the moon an alien spaceship?' trope!
Britt wrote: "...My second series is called The Parasite Initiative, which I've named after a key event that will unfold and be resolved over the series... ...Series named after a main character are also common if a central figure is really the theme..."
The 'key event' idea is interesting. I'll have a think about that. There is a plot device in the books - an alien artefact given to humanity known as the 'Book of the Greys' - which might work to label the series. On main characters, Ravana O'Brien is somewhat on the sidelines in book three, otherwise I would've probably gone for that.
Leonie wrote: "My current trilogy titles all have 'Frontier' in the title. (Frontier Incursion/Resistance/Defiant) so that was rather easy...The Frontier Trilogy :)...
I'm seeing that naming convention a lot lately - it is effective. Maybe I should rename all the books...
Thanks all!

Another word that is often used for sci-fi series/universes is "Sequence", by the way (for example "The Pandora Sequence" by Frank Herbert, named after a planet, and "The Xeelee Sequence" by Stephen Baxter, named after an alien civilization). It sounds cool.

Jack Chalker had the Saga of the Well World as an overarching title for that series, and "Four Lords of the Diamond" for his series about four prison planets in a single solar system.
Anne McCaffrey's "Dragonriders of Pern" encapsulates all of those books.
For yours, maybe go for something whimsical, like the Electric Cat Series.

Something 'Sequence' does sound promising. I'll think about that a bit more. I confess that I've only read one of Herbert's 'Pandora' books, a long time back.
Trike wrote: "What's the common thread? [...] For yours, maybe go for something whimsical, like the Electric Cat Series."
Drat! I knew I shouldn't have written out the cat at the end of book two. Whimsical is good. A common thread in the first three books is the 'hollow moon', an abandoned asteroid colony ship that's become a refuge for those on the fringes. At the moment though I can't see a role for it in book four.
The overall setting is 'The Five Systems' - i.e. the Solar System and four neighbouring stars systems that have been colonised to some degree, set around the end of the 23rd Century. Except there's a sixth system in one of the short stories that may become important later. I'm really not making this easy for myself...

If it was Destination Void, I highly recommend you try the next one, The Jesus Incident. It's very different and not as slow-paced and philosophical as the first (although I liked that one too).


Right now, series sell better than anything else. So it's a safe bet.
Personally, I'd write a bunch of standalones, get them out there, and then spin a series from the most popular two.

That's a nice way to do market research. BTW - what's Trike mean? I have monsters in my book called Trikes that are biological demolition machines.

The Jesus Incident is the one I read. I enjoyed it, though I often find the author's work too weird. Hellstrom's Hive was downright disturbing.

Maybe you can use the name of something as far as you know you invent like a technology ...

Drat, yes. Have you read any of those books? I don't normally go for vampires but they look like they could be funny.


My second series got called the Viridian System series and none of the books have that as the title. I think that's better, but then this was planned as a series.

I don't do Twitter. Is it worth it? And I hate Facebook. The website however is under my 'publisher' brand - WyrdStar, which is nice and short.
I had new thoughts on series names -- (i) Ravana and the Cyberclones - or - (ii) Cyberclone Chronicles -- which almost make sense if you read the books...

Also, unrelated, but wow that website looks like a remnant from the 90s.

Probably because my website is cobbled together on a Windows98 machine (don't laugh). A refresh is on my 'to do' list...

I think that you should toy with the idea of the message you are trying to convey with the books and tie a name in from that. It would seem more organic that way in my opinion.

But than again I having problems titling two books I am writing. Actually one will be a series and I know the series name.
Books mentioned in this topic
Destination: Void (other topics)The Jesus Incident (other topics)
Hollow Moon (other topics)
Paw-Prints of the Gods (other topics)
Books to date are: Hollow Moon and Paw-Prints of the Gods; coming soon (June/July) is City Of Deceit. There's also half a dozen (to date) linked short stories. I'm currently calling it 'Worlds of Hollow Moon' on my website but that doesn't feel quite right. They're YA space opera with a touch of humour, if that makes any difference. Any advice appreciated!