A lot of times the story itself comes fairly easily to me, but the title often doesn’t. What to call my novel? How do I catch the reader’s eye and have them want to buy my book, just by reading that stellar title? How, how, how? Hmmmm.
And to make things worse, book titles seem to go through fads or phases. For instance, the word “girl” has been used in just about every best-selling book’s title in the last few years. While using that word may not have catapulted them to becoming a best-seller, the following books were best sellers: Girl Gone; The Girl on a Train; Girl, Interrupted; Girl with the Pearl Earring; The Other Boleyn Girl; and of course, Stieg Larsson’s trilogy, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo; The Girl Who Played with Fire; and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest.
Hence, I decided to use the word “girl” in the title of a book and see what happens. I came up with Girl, Girl, Girl (see book cover). Amazingly, it didn’t sell. Maybe my heart wasn’t in it? Besides, I don’t think of human females as girls unless they’re under the age of 17. I’m not sure why that’s my cut-off age, but it is. I think once you’ve graduated from high school, you’re a young woman. Girl-kid, Woman-adult.
Often the title lets the reader know what kind of book they will be reading. I hope I’ve done that with my books. Whoops. The exception to this was the title of the very first book of the Alvarez Family Murder Mysteries, Murder is a Family Business. Looking back on it, I believe the title conveys a weightier book than mine. I had forgotten a famous crime syndicate called, Murder, Inc. was still in a lot of people’s minds. Guilt by association was my problem. Some readers, especially men, bought my book thinking it was going to be yet another exposé of the mob. Or possibly a written spin-off of the movie Murder, Inc, the film that launched Peter Falk’s career in his first major role as a contract killer.
Yikes. None of the above is anything like my book, a light-hearted romp through California’s Bay Area where not only is the murderer brought to justice but the shoes and handbags match. If I could, I would change the title, but the book has been hanging around for a certain amount of time, has had some small measure of success, and, besides, I can’t think of anything better. So, Murder is a Family Business it remains.
But since that goof with the first title, I tried to be careful in naming the rest. My latest book, a work in progress, has the working title, Bewitched, Bothered, and Beheaded. Hopefully, it conveys magic and murder. And if someone thinks of a guillotine, so much the better.
In closing, I should probably mention the title of an Elvis Presley movie, Girls, Girls, Girls. It has nothing to do with any of this, but I am a huge Elvis fan.





Heather, I agree that a title is usually what catches the reader’s attention first. And having a play on words I think draws them in even more. I like the new book title. My Spotted Pony Casino Mystery series is easy, sort of, I wrote down gambling terms and then I have to pick one and come up with a story that fits it. And I use animals in the titles of the Gabriel Hawke books, which usually get titled after I start the book, but this last one because of the premise-a fire- I titled it Damning Firefly. Fun post! I enjoy hearing how authors come up with titles!
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Nancy, sometimes I do have a title and cover in place, such as now with Bewitched, Bothered, and Beheaded. But when I don’t, oh, brother! It feels so incomplete. Also, I no longer do the covers for the Alvarez Family, and I’m lucky they let me do them for the Percy Cole series. I think it’s because it’s comprised of just a 1940s-style fedora and whatever the murder weapon of the particular book is. BTW, I love the title, A Neighborly Killing.
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Ha ha ha! Love the title of your WIP “Bewitched, Bothered, and Beheaded”! And now you’ve got me wanting to watch the Elvis movie!
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Do watch it! It’s so wonderful silly. We need that kind of thing every now and then. And he is the KING!!
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I love this. I’ve grown tired of the “Girl” in so many titles, and of the use of the term for so many of us, no matter how old. I usually have a working title, and to my surprise agents and editors seem to accept that as the required one. I’m always expecting someone to change it, and I’ve prepared myself accordingly. So often I’m disappointed. But I continue to hope someone cleverer than I am will come up with a better title for whatever I’m working on. Ah, Elvis. Still the King.
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Thanks, Susan, for your comments. I think you entitle your books succinctly and cleverly. I can see why your agents and editors leave them alone.
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I’m just the opposite of you. I usually have the title and often the cover in mind before I start writing. I especially like titles that jar the norm: A Neighborly Killing, The Funeral Murder, and Dearly Beloved Departed.
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