In Act II, Scene I of Shakespeare’s
Romeo and Juliet, Juliet says “What’s in a name! that which we call a
rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” While that may be true for a
rose, it doesn’t work with fictional characters. Readers who hear a name before
becoming familiar with the character often form their own ideas about
background and personality, so choosing an appropriate name can be crucial to
creating the right image.
I’m currently reading Some
Die Eloquent by Catherine Aird, and she has a secondary character named Dr.
McCavity. He’s a physician rather than a dentist, which would have been too flippant
for a mostly serious work. The name does fit him, though, because it makes me
think of a buffoon. Dr. McCavity is an alcoholic who keeps running into bollards,
those permanent posts that line roads to keep drivers from leaving the roadway.
If the name had been given to a strait-laced elderly man, I’m not sure I could
have treated the character seriously even if the story called for it.
I always put a lot of
thought into choosing character names. The graphic represents a dilemma I had
several years ago when I originally selected Warren for my protagonist’s last
name. Then I discovered that the book’s locale—Vicksburg, Mississippi—was in Warren
County. I didn’t want any of my readers associating my protagonist with a
wealthy or important family, so I change her last name to Gibson.
Then there is one of the
protagonists of my murder mystery. Victoria McDonald is the victim’s daughter.
Her mother was a successful attorney, but she had a tough road reaching that
place in her career and her personal life was quiet and unpretentious. So I
wanted them to have an ordinary family name that is easy to remember but isn’t
showy. McDonald just felt right.
My protagonist’s first
name is even more telling. The victim named her daughter Victoria because she
wanted her to have a victorious life. But Vic has insecurities and doubts and
she doesn’t feel victorious. Since she knows Victoria doesn’t suit her
personality, she insists that people call her Vic.
So where do I find my
characters’ names? When I’m writing my middle-grade historical novels, I get
the first names from lists showing the most common names given to babies born
in the same decade as my protagonist. Then I go through the top twenty or
thirty to see which one best fits my protagonist. This can be a dangerous approach
because readers have various experiences with those names, and someone who
remembers a Karen as her best friend will have a very different response than someone
who was bullied by a Karen. But unless I want to use names that are cliché (such
as using McCavity for a dentist or Candy for a super-sweet girl), it’s a risk I
have to take.
Choosing last names is a different
process. Yes, I do want family names that create the right image for readers,
but it is more complicated than that. If I have an ethnic background in mind
for my character, I look for a family name that works with it. And I don’t
always use something as common as McDonald. On trips in the U.S., I watch the
exit signs while Roland is driving and keep a notebook handy to write down the
names of likely-sounding towns. Or I may take a last name from a novel, such as
using Gardiner from Pride and Prejudice for one protagonist’s maternal grandmother.
It isn’t easy to pick the
right name.
But it is important.
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