
The menu is not the meal. - Alan Wilson Watts
Back in the 16th Century, early critics cautioned against reading too much into a title, saying,
The title is usually received with mocking laughter and jokes. But it's wrong to be so superficial when you're weighing men's (and presumably, now days, women's) work in the balance. Good advice, but don't titles sell books these days? I think it pays to consider them carefully.
The purpose of the title is to attract, intrigue and compel. It’s the headline, the very first sentence and it must hook the reader. It wants to sound good, to roll of the tongue, but not be overly predictable or clichéd.
A good title can have double meanings, though it’s best to be careful there. For example, Mouse Work’s 1995 title, Cooking with Pooh is questionable, though funny.
Catchy titles can work, like Big Boom’s If You Want Closure in Your Relationship, Start with Your Legs but that’s not quite the style fantasy and paranormal romance readers are after. Maybe.
There
are other considerations. Titles have to fit on the book cover. I’m
not sure how Crown got
‘Charlatan:
America's Most Dangerous Huckster, the Man Who Pursued Him, and the
Age of Flimflam’
squeezed together with the author's name, Pope Brock, and a billy goat (I’m
serious) but they did.
Short titles can be preferable. George Orwell first called his masterpiece The Last Man in Europe until changing it to 1984.

Short titles can be preferable. George Orwell first called his masterpiece The Last Man in Europe until changing it to 1984.
I did a search and found there are rules
to follow for
selecting titles. Some writers ignore them, to their great success. For example:
Rule
#1
– Don't use noun-adjectives,
like Pamela Palmer's Desire Untamed (NY Times Bestseller)
Rule #2 - Don’t use proper names in the title, like JK Rowling's Harry Potter . . . right.
Rule
#3 -
Don’t
use words like Lord,
Magic, Moon, Sea, Wizard, as in bestselling JRR Tolkien's Lord
of the Rings, Ursula
K. Le Guin's The
Wizard of Earthsea, or
Patricia Briggs' Moon
Called.
Rule
#4 -
Don’t
use adjective-noun titles like Jeaniene Frost's bestselling Once
Burned,
Twice
Tempted Or
Suzanne Collins' Hunger
Games.
Rule
#4
- Don’t
use needless complexity, like Philip K. Dick's Do
Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.
Rule
#5 –
Don't be ironic, like Kerrelyn Sparks' bestselling Eat,
Prey, Love,
or Charlain Harris's Dead
and gone.



Book #2, Arrows of Time was named for the narrative structure. It’s based on the theoretical notion that time is fully symmetrical - arrows going both ways and around in circles. I named Strange Attractors before I wrote a word of it. The idea of ‘strange attractors’- a pattern that appeared chaotic until seen from the right perspective - intrigued me.
My most recent release, the novella Blood and Water in Vampires Gone Wild, was originally the idea of a series of books in this genre (paranormal vampiric romance) called Of Blood and Water. Those who have had a look know why!

* * *
Kim Falconer is a Supernatural Underground author writing paranormal romance, urban fantasy, YA and epic science fantasy novels. She also co-directs Good Vibe Astrology, an astrology and law of attraction school.
You can find out more about Kim at kimfalconer.com or on the 11th House Blog. She posts here at the Supernatural Underground on the 16th of every month. Her latest release is Supernatural Underground: Vampires Gone Wild.