Name: Anonymous 2010-03-20 4:12
What's in a name? A lot, when it comes to fantasy
"Portentous apostrophes and incongrously-named characters (hands up Terry Goodkind and Anne McCaffrey) drive me wild when I'm reading — authors should learn from the naming skills of Ursula Le Guin and Alan Garner"
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/mar/16/fantasy-character-names
Hello, /book/. In view of this article, I thought I'd ask: what are your pet peeves, and principles, when it comes to names in fiction - I mean that broadly: which authors, books or series do it well, which badly; how would you go about choosing or creating convincing names, what would you avoid; if we're talking invented worlds, how familiar / strange should a name be, how deep does the linguistic basis need to be? Or anything else that occurs.
"Portentous apostrophes and incongrously-named characters (hands up Terry Goodkind and Anne McCaffrey) drive me wild when I'm reading — authors should learn from the naming skills of Ursula Le Guin and Alan Garner"
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/mar/16/fantasy-character-names
Hello, /book/. In view of this article, I thought I'd ask: what are your pet peeves, and principles, when it comes to names in fiction - I mean that broadly: which authors, books or series do it well, which badly; how would you go about choosing or creating convincing names, what would you avoid; if we're talking invented worlds, how familiar / strange should a name be, how deep does the linguistic basis need to be? Or anything else that occurs.