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[2021] The Wild Discussion
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Aug 07, 2020 05:03PM

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Lots of romances involve couples who knew each other in the past and get reconnected or people finding new love after a death or divorce.

Someone getting over physical/mental illness, a sports, entertainment, or political figure who lost before winning, biography of a business person (who probably had some failures) all would work too.



https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
You can find it here... I do need to update it lol. Working on that now!
You can find it here... I do need to update it lol. Working on that now!

You can find it here... I do need to update it lol. Working on that now!"
Thank you Emily!
No problem! You can also find a list (with listopias linked) on the community spreadsheet under the 2021 Plans tab.



If it was just people not loving it enough to upvote but being ok with it, then I think it’ll be the same result as it’s the same prompt.

A couple of people commented that they didn't know what the phrase meant.
I personally downvoted it because I thought it was too limiting... I don't have many authors with a nom de plume on my TBR. So I would opt for making it *less* restrictive, not more.
That being said, Kim, I do think your revision is more likely to garner more votes.
That being said, Kim, I do think your revision is more likely to garner more votes.
Maybe phrase it as an author who publishes under a name other than their given one. For instance, many romance authors and some mystery authors use pen names, but usually just the one. It's not obvious though, you would have to research to find it out. Looking for an author with 2 pen names is too restrictive in my opinion.

Edit: Now I just saw Nancy’s suggestion, I like it - it’s plain and simple.

I upvoted it last time but I do think changing it from nom de plume would be a good idea.

The only person I read regularly who uses a pen name (at least that I realize uses a pen name) is JK Rowling/Robert Galbraith. I voted for the prompt with the hope that she may have another instalment of the Strike series coming out next year. If not, I would have to reread a HP book unless I find out about other authors I’d be interested in reading.
Sophie wrote: "Examples from many genres along with the prompt suggestion would help, as many people may not realize that an author they read is or has used a pen name.
The only person I read regularly who uses ..."
I don't know of any off the top of my head, but loads of romance writers use pen names. In fact, a couple of times I've come across writers who use as many as 4 or 5 different names to separate out their different pairings. Like one name for m|m romances, a second name for m|f romances, etc etc.
The only person I read regularly who uses ..."
I don't know of any off the top of my head, but loads of romance writers use pen names. In fact, a couple of times I've come across writers who use as many as 4 or 5 different names to separate out their different pairings. Like one name for m|m romances, a second name for m|f romances, etc etc.

I think the next book is actually out this September!

There are also books written by two or more people who combine their names or make one up such as Christina Lauren, P.J. Tracy and P.C. Cast.
You could also make a case for a book published anonymously or written by a ghost writer.

It really depends on what other suggestions it's up against. We do get resubmitted ideas making the list without any changes to wording.
I didn't vote for the nom de plume just because I've done it in various guises in other challenges. But there are authors I read who use pen names, Laura Lam, Seanan McGuire, Claire North, Gail Carriger, Marie Brennan... So I don't mind it, just not excited by it.
Now that I think about it, I was thinking that the prompt meant an author who wrote under two different names, not only ones who just wrote under aliases. So that would ease it up a bit for me.

I upvoted it last time but I do think cha..."
This is why it wasn't an upvote for me. I have seen it done a lot over the years. It's a struggle to find authors that I actually WANT to read who use pseudonyms/nom de plumes/pen names now.


Excellent news! Thanks for letting me know, Kelly!


Question: Would any author count who somehow tweaks their name a little for publicity purposes? Like Karen Rose actually uses her middle name as her last name in publishing.
Those 2 would count for "publishing under a pen name" but not "publishing under 2 names". I think the 2 names is definitely too limited. You are right that many authors, including some famous ones, are not using their "legal" name but we won't even know it without research.



Since the original poster said "written by an author who writes under more than one name" I interpreted that to mean writing under at least 2 names, not just one name that isn't their legal name.
I wonder if initials and stuff would count? I know J.K. Rowling would count because the "K" doesn't stand for anything (not to mention her actual pen names), but E. Lockhart's full name is Emily Lockhart - it's not exactly a pen name, but it's not her full legal name either. Would that count?

What about a change in publishing strategy? Sharon Bolton used to publish as S. J. Bolton because she was worried people would not buy thrillers written obviously by a woman. Later she switched to using her full first name. So that's technically two different names, is it? Because it was a conscious decision, not just a cover design issue?

I do think that would count as two different names because as far as I can tell, it looks like the "J" doesn't actually stand for anything, much like the "K" in J.K. Rowling.
I'm still not sure about authors like E. Lockhart or J.R.R. Tolkein, who are published under their real initials and don't have books published under their full names. Would they count as a pen names of sorts since they provide a bit of anonymity?
I'm also thinking, would Anne and Emily Bronte count? As far as I know, they didn't actively publish under their real names in their lifetimes (although I think Charlotte lived long enough to do so), but modern day publishers no longer use their male pen names. So it's not a case of the author writing under 2 different names - they wrote under pseudonyms in their lifetimes, and are now published by their real names.


I figured initials provided anonymity in the sense of Conny's example, with S.J. Bolton, who used her initials so it wouldn't be obvious she was a female writer, but I see what you mean! I agree it'd be a good KIS option.
And that makes sense as well - my main confusion was if the prompt was to find any writer who uses a pen name, or if it's an author who writes under their "main" name and then a pen name as well. (The recent rewording says "writes under more than one name" so I wasn't sure if it was different from the original post, which I can't find). Thanks for the clarification!!
even if it was reworded to include authors who don't use their real name? for example, Cassandra Clare or C.S. Pacat.
i wouldn't really recommend reading any jk rowling (not matter what pen name she uses) as she's a known transphobe but there's Seanan McGuire who also writes under Mira Grant & A. Deborah Baker! and a ton of romance authors, like mentioned
i wouldn't really recommend reading any jk rowling (not matter what pen name she uses) as she's a known transphobe but there's Seanan McGuire who also writes under Mira Grant & A. Deborah Baker! and a ton of romance authors, like mentioned

i wouldn't really recommend reading any jk ro..."
Definitely agree with you there - I plan on rereading the Harry Potter series since I haven't read them in 10 years, but I view that as "before" (it was back when she was a huge gay rights activist) and I don't plan on giving her any more money in the future.


But there are several authors who are horrible people in real life (and JKR is nothing compared to what the likes of Jamie McGuire get up to sometimes!), and I decided long ago that I will try to keep their real persona as separate from their work as possible so I can still appreciate their art. If there is any art to appreciate :D
Back to topic: I would definitely allow initials (like E. Lockhart and J.R.R. Tolkien) to count as pen names, because the name on their book covers is still not the same as in their passports, and that is the whole point of a pen name. So if a prompt simply calls for an author using a pen name (not two different names), I would count that and not even call it KIS.

Oh no, what has Jamie McGuide done?? (I have 1 or 2 of her books on my TBR!)
And to Kim - how would it sound if you rephrased the prompt like this:
A book by an author who publishes under a pen name or variant of their real name (including initials).


Love it, thanks!

I too LOVE Harry Potter, but there is a big difference between having controversial opinions v opinions based on hate and prejudice of another person. Especially in a modern day and age where there is a lot more information and understanding around acceptance of others (aka this isn’t the 19th century).

Irene wrote: "As much as I disagree with Rowling's recent actions and statements, I can't help loving her books, and I am very excited for the next Cormoran Strike book, so I'm afraid I will keep buying her books^^ But there are several authors who are horrible people in real life (and JKR is nothing compared to what the likes of Jamie McGuire get up to sometimes!), and I decided long ago that I will try to keep their real persona as separate from their work as possible so I can still appreciate their art. If there is any art to appreciate :D"
i don't think it is a fair comparison. one author's shitty behaviour doesn't make another's behaviour invalid, even if it's seems 'worse'. jkr is still a transphobe, an ignorant, ill-informed transphobe who is using her massive platform to influence literally millions of people--even politicians who can then influence legislation that affects trans people's rights. i'm a massive hp fan and have been my whole life but choosing to financially support her knowing this is its own statement about whether supporting the trans community or indulging in my reading preferences matters more to me. and i have to side with protecting an already vulnerable & marginalized community over my own whims. but that's just my opinion.
i don't think it is a fair comparison. one author's shitty behaviour doesn't make another's behaviour invalid, even if it's seems 'worse'. jkr is still a transphobe, an ignorant, ill-informed transphobe who is using her massive platform to influence literally millions of people--even politicians who can then influence legislation that affects trans people's rights. i'm a massive hp fan and have been my whole life but choosing to financially support her knowing this is its own statement about whether supporting the trans community or indulging in my reading preferences matters more to me. and i have to side with protecting an already vulnerable & marginalized community over my own whims. but that's just my opinion.
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