Thursday, September 5, 2019 | By: The Write Way Cafe

Making the Title Count by S.P. Brown

The Write Way Café welcomes S.P. Brown, who challenges writers to look for meaningful titles in their plots and characters.

We've all seen it, those penny romance novels sitting in rows at the dollar store with titles like "My Holiday Cowboy" or "His Muscles are Strong." Their message is obvious, and their one purpose is to sell themselves. Your goal as the serious and enthusiastic writer is to avoid this obvious trap, but you also want to avoid other title traps as well. The title can be just as important as the novel itself, and obviously everyone wants to write a stellar book. The great author will shoot for a title that is so much more than a catchy phrase or an noticeable attempt to just sell their work. Simply put, the title can be intriguing and provide a huge focus of discovery for the reader. Look for that 'oh yeah!' moment when the title finally jumps out at you and the meaning comes full circle.

So how can a novelist make the title of their book count? The best novel titles are very meaningful to plot and character. And the best authors make their readers work for that special moment when the light bulb pops on and the meaning of the title is glaringly clear. And they don’t just lay it out simplistically for the reader either. They make them struggle for that payoff, which makes it sweeter when the reader finally makes the connection. And if the author has packed in a huge emotional punch, well, that’s all the better.

I hope I’ve accomplished something like this in the opening volume of The Stonehenge Chronicles. The book is titled Veiled Memory, and its title is loaded with meaning. I challenge readers to look for that meaning as they immerse themselves in plot and character.

Subtle foreshadowing is one way authors like to work in bits and clues to guide their reader to a full understanding of the title. These clues are often buried in plot and character, the two guideposts or pillars of a story. We all know what plot is. Philip K. Dick, that great science fiction author, explained it best when he said, "plot is just one damn thing after another." And character is much more than the people populating the novel, it’s who they are, inside and out, and what makes them tick for good or bad.

So look for those subtle clues if you have an inkling that the title of the work is going to be meaningful to plot and character and vice versa. And have fun in the discovery.




by S.P. Brown     When Celtic historian, Dr. Madeline Alleyn, abandoned her husband, it was to protect him and her unborn triplet daughters. Now, nearly eighteen years later, her 17 year-old girls are smart, normal, but something has never been right with Madeline. There are compulsions she doesn’t understand and secrets she’s intent on keeping from her daughters, secrets her dead father never fully divulged, secrets her mysterious mother took to the grave giving her birth.
      Now, the people Madeline is hiding from have discovered a way to unite the clans. They seek her mother’s archeological find, ten stone tablets with a story to tell of the existence of the Community, the secret origin of Stonehenge, and of quantum sorcery. But the secret community is divided, and the most dangerous among them think the time is ripe for showing themselves to an unsuspecting humanity. They must conquer. The prophecy of Tarkus demands it.
      Madeline is desperate to keep her children hidden. She knows the prophecy from the night her husband revealed his true nature to her. But time is running out. Will she be able to find her mother’s hidden artifacts before her enemies discover that her children are the key to world conquest?

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S.P. Brown has been reading and writing from a very early age. He blames this on his addiction to all those great characters produced by Marvel Comics. Inevitably, this led to a passion for fantasy/sci-fi novels, which led to his first book, Phoebe Alleyn and the Quantum Sorcerer. A professor and father of three daughters, Brown lives with his wife in Starkville, Mississippi, where he is hard at work creating new mythologies for children and adults.

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2 comments:

HiDee said...

Great advice! Thank you for sharing your thoughts with us today, S.P.

Anonymous said...

My pleasure HiDee.