Harlequin Presents Readers discussion

129 views
Food for Thought > H/h names

Comments Showing 1-34 of 34 (34 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments I have to admit that the name of the H in most cases attracts me and will decide if I read a book or not. Not so much the h's name - hate Polly though - but definitely the H. Can't stand names like John, Michael, George (ugh!).

The names have changed a lot from the old books - names change by decade I've read on baby name websites. Whatever is "in" at that moment.

Any preferences?

Aruana


message 2: by Kate (new)

Kate (kateperegrinate) The only name I've ever come across in an HP that probably affected my ability to read it was Prince Gerd Crysander-Gillan in The Disgraced Princess: The Weight of the Crown. Seriously -- the hero's name was Gerd! As in the acronym for gastroesophageal reflux disease. Ick!

I have an issue when both the hero and heroine have unisex names because I forget which is the female and which is the male. (Yeah, I have really bad reading comprehension skills!)


message 3: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments Kate said:

I have an issue when both the hero and heroine have unisex names because I forget which is the female and which is the male

Lol! I haven't thought of it that way! I don't usually read Karen van Zee and probably never will. Here names are terrible.

Aruana


message 4: by Lisa Kay (new)

Lisa Kay (lisakayalicemaria) | 244 comments Kate wrote: "Serious -- the hero's name was Gerd! As in the acronym for gastroesophageal reflux disease. Ick!"

**giggles** or **gags**


message 5: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca (bd200789) Maybe Yvonne Whittal ? I have a few of her books.


message 6: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments Thanks, Rebecca! That's her! I just read her bio.

Aruana


message 7: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments Okay, two names I cannot stand is Guido - just had one of those - and Luigi. I always think of pizza or spaghetti when I hear those names.


message 8: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments Kouk, I am Afrikaans, which is derived from Dutch - I'm from South Africa. I had Dutch at school and I understand and can read it and understand it, but not speak it.


message 9: by Kouk (last edited Apr 10, 2012 06:05AM) (new)

Kouk | 201 comments Aruana wrote: "Kouk, I am Afrikaans, which is derived from Dutch - I'm from South Africa. I had Dutch at school and I understand and can read it and understand it, but not speak it."


That's interesting that you can read and understand it!
The language is a bit difficult to speak.

My message above is gone, because i tried to edit it, apparently i pressed the wrong button.
Sorry about that!


message 10: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments Kouk, ek woon in Kaapstad. Ek is 44 jaar oud en werk vir 'n groot IT maatskappy. Ek is mal oor lees en lees al vir jare Mills & Boon. Dit is my gunsteling boeke om te lees.


message 11: by Romance Lover (last edited Apr 11, 2012 10:54AM) (new)

Romance Lover (demetrahp) | 88 comments Dutch are not difficult to learn if your native language is English or German, they have the same root (German).
I'm Greek and when I read in a synopsis the greek names of the heroes I'm like: "Oh, God!", because the names are very... weird. Some of them I never heard in my life!


message 12: by Verity (new)

Verity | 567 comments Grrrr-inducing pet peeves across romancelandia : Poppy, Pippa, Bud, Xhex, Natchez, Rowdy, Dawg, Mario, Luigi, Bob, Garnet, Sholto, Tully, any tongue twisting names evah invented by over-imaginative author wannabes.


message 13: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments One of my favourites is St John or just plain Sin!


message 14: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Harlequin Presents are my crack! (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 2281 comments Mod
Haha, I was thinking of Sholto too.


message 15: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments The South African actor Sharlto Copley stars in the movie District 9.

Just thought I'd through that in ....


message 16: by Verity (new)

Verity | 567 comments Well @ least it ain't Humperdinck, or Gawd 4bid, Qing Dong.


message 17: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments @Verity : lol!


message 18: by Aruana (new)

Aruana | 248 comments Zephyr! Nooooo! I'm only reminded of the car going by that name. Freakin' hell!


message 19: by Kate (new)

Kate (kateperegrinate) To me, Zephyr is a minor league baseball team from New Orleans.


message 20: by Natalija (last edited Apr 20, 2012 02:14AM) (new)

Natalija I have a soft spot for heroes with names: Ethan, Ian, Simon, Ivan, Burke, Austin, Gideon. They aren't as strong as Jack, Rafe or Gabriel, but they suit perfectly the type of hero I like.

For the heroines I prefer old fashioned names like Emma, Margaret, Sara or Katherine. Not a fan of unusual names, for example, Jacinda, Jesmond, Delaney...


message 21: by Natalija (new)

Natalija Kate wrote: "To me, Zephyr is a minor league baseball team from New Orleans."

I think Lucy Monroe wanted to name Zephyr Nikos after the Greek god of the west wind :) To me "zephyr" is a very common sweet (similar to marshmallow) in Latvia & Russia.


message 22: by Xai Xai (new)

Xai Xai (xaixai) | 33 comments I love the name Alessandro !!!!!!


message 23: by Fanniny (new)

Fanniny Moreno Zavaleta | 99 comments I hate some of the latin names they use. I specially remember "Ruiz" (which in my country is a last name), I've never heard of anyone named Ruiz :s


message 24: by Dianna (new)

Dianna (diaja_la) | 4 comments I still find 'Carne' in Sara Craven's Summer of the Raven a disturbing hero name.

I sort of assume it's pronounced Khan, which means I then can't get the Star Trek reference out of my brain. And if it's not, do you pronounce the e and he's a carnie?

And Craven must have known it's Spanish for meat. H = a piece of meat.


message 25: by boogenhagen (new)

boogenhagen | 306 comments Dianna wrote: "I still find 'Carne' in Sara Craven's Summer of the Raven a disturbing hero name.

I sort of assume it's pronounced Khan, which means I then can't get the Star Trek reference out of my brain. And ..."


I think she totally did know what it meant, and was doing some SC humor there. LOL


message 26: by Dianna (new)

Dianna (diaja_la) | 4 comments She's deep, is SC :)


message 27: by boogenhagen (new)

boogenhagen | 306 comments Dianna wrote: "She's deep, is SC :)"

But now all I can see when I pick that book up is Ricardo Montalban with his mullet and manly bare chest framed by synthetic leather.

Oh dear! However is Carne going to open the local fete dressed like that?


message 28: by Dianna (new)

Dianna (diaja_la) | 4 comments You're welcome!

I think his wife would have something to say about it. Like 'if make your friend the pottery guy feel inadequate we lose a baby sitter and therefore no date night.'


message 29: by Mareli (new)

Mareli | 53 comments Being Italian I suffer a lot when the author decides to use Italian names because they are always totally wrong!!!! Those names don't exist here so... I suffer :( BTW Carne is Italian, it means literally meat ahahahahah incredible! I'm glad I never read that book, I'm sure I couldn't read it that name!


message 30: by Dianna (new)

Dianna (diaja_la) | 4 comments I wonder if it was translated into Italian what name they used?

I haven't come across it in HP yet but one hero name that seems to be everywhere at the moment is Jax.


message 31: by boogenhagen (new)

boogenhagen | 306 comments Re Jax - every time I hear that name I can't help thinking of Anne McCaffrey's The White Dragon and I start looking around for Ruth.


message 32: by Vintage (new)

Vintage (vintagesedona) | 312 comments Danielle The Book Huntress (Self-Proclaimed Book Ninja) wrote: "Haha, I was thinking of Sholto too."

Love Sholto.


message 33: by Ted (new)

Ted | 71 comments Sholto is H from one of Daphne Clair's books I think. I can't imagine a Sholto H. DC seems fond of the name Mark and variant Marcus. Several books of hers have heroes by that name.


message 34: by Vintage (new)

Vintage (vintagesedona) | 312 comments Ted wrote: "Sholto is H from one of Daphne Clair's books I think. I can't imagine a Sholto H. DC seems fond of the name Mark and variant Marcus. Several books of hers have heroes by that name."

I think Charlotte Lamb has a Sholto. It's Scottish/Gaelic depending on who translates it.

https://nameberry.com/babyname/Sholto


back to top