13 Strategies to Create Character Names - Bookfox (2024)

13 Strategies to Create Character Names - Bookfox (1)

Most people have trouble coming up with cool character names, which is why some kids end up with names like Vagena (true story) or Gaylord (Gaylord Focker is truly the worst name ever).

But for fiction writers it’s harder because you have to come up with a dozen or so character names for every single story or novel.

By reading the naming strategies below you’ll certainly pick up useful skills in creating cool character names.

1. Pick a One Word Name

Musicians have long known that a single name can be more memorable than a fullname.

Cher. Bono. Eminem. Adele. Drake. Enya. Moby. Pink. Usher.

Noneof those are traditional names you’d find in the baby directory. If you’re going for a single name, you’ve got to get creative. Play with the sound of vowels and consonants. Mash together unlike letters. Include rare letters like Z and X.

And authors have used this technique, too. Here are my favorites.

Dim from Clockwork Orange. Not only is it a single word, it also describes him admirably.

O from The Story of O, which gets bonus points because not only is it one word, it’s only one letter. Extra bonus points because that one letter is a metaphor for a sexual organ (The Story of O is the original 50 Shades of Gray, folks).

2. Go Wild With Humor

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Thomas Pynchon is the king in this category: Tyrone Slothrop. Mike Fallopian.Zepho Bark. Pig Bodine. BigfootBjornsen. In fact, there are whole websites and books devoted solely to analyzing all Pynchon’s fictional names.

David Foster Wallace is no slouch when it came to generating hilarious, wild names. Mo Cheery. Todd Possalthwaite. Hal Incandenza. I love the combination of the normal first name with the second imaginative one.

P.G. Woodhouse, the king of British humor in the 20th century, has some doozies as well:Gussie Fink-Nottle. CatsmeatPotter-Pirbright.Tuppy Glossop. I just want to snort.

And we have to include Don Delillo’s best contribution for this category:Bucky Wunderlick.

3. Make the Name Match

Charles Dickens leads the league in this type of wordplay:

  • Murdstone: An abusive step-father (with a name like that, could he possibly be a hero?)
  • Stryver: Could you imagine this character as anything other than a hard worker?
  • Slyme: You get three guesses whether this is a villain, although you’ll only need one.

Or if you want a more modern example, think of J.K. Rowling:

  • Draco Malfoy: such an nefarious, evil-sounding name. Draco, the Latin word for Dragon, and Mal meaning bad or malfeasance.
  • Luna Lovegood. Such a sweetheart. And alliterative to boot, with those lovely Ls. But Luna, meaning lunar or moon, lets you know she’s a little wacky, too.
  • Voldemort. Yeah, pretty much the incarnation of evil-sounding. Mort meaning death, and Vold sounding like mold.

4. Reverse the First and Last Name

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I was just reading Doug Worgul’s Thin Blue Smoke and there’s a character named Ferguson. “Is that your first name or your last,” a little girl asks him. His first, oddly enough. Turns out his full name is Ferguson Glen. A first name for a last name, and a last name for a first name. It’s a great reversal which makes his name memorable.

It’s that kind of logic which a name generator can’t come up with. The name generator will always give you last-name-sounding last names, but to be unique, you have to use more of the naming strategies below to make sure you’re creating cool character names.

5. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat.

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One of the best names of all time is Major Major Major Major in Joseph Heller’s Catch-22. That’s right. Four Majors in a row. It’s an ongoing gag in Catch-22, and it still makes me laugh even halfway through the book.

And who could forget Humbert Humbert in Nabokov’s Lolita? The repetition of his name makes him laughable, a true example of how he’s worthy of mockery.

And I apologize for going super high brow to super low brow, but Jar Jar Binks. Richie Rich. Rin Tin Tin. Woody Woodpecker.

You want real life examples? Oh boy, do I have them. Honey Boo Boo is yet another example. Would anyone watch a show about Honey Boo? Flavor Flav would be another off the wall example (I apologize if you remember Flavor Flav). Marky Mark is a good example, too (and my wife still drools over him).

If you’re trying to name characters in your novel, I’d suggest reading my extensive post on writing your first novel: “12 Steps to Writing a Bestseller.”

It will give you all the tips and techniques you need for your characters and plot.

6. Use Your Name

Your full name. Or just your middle name. Or a name with your initials. It offersa lovely metafictional dimension.

Are you saying that the character is you? Or areyou saying that the character has something in common with you? Or are you just subvertingthe divide between fiction and nonfiction? Or are you just messing with the reader?

  • For instance, in Jonathan Safran Foer’s first book, the main character is named Jonathan Safran Foer.
  • And in Michel Houellebecq’s novel “Platform,” he kills off a character called Michel Houellebecq.

7. Use anAnagram Generator

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Pick something this character represents, like Narcissistic, or a joke phrase, like Travel King, and use an anagram generator to create a whole bunch of variations. Pick those that sound most like cool character names.

When you get rich and famous and get asked about the name, you’ll have a clever explanation in your back pocket, a kind of inside joke for people in the know.

Or if the anagram generator doesn’t work, you can look at Bookfox’s character name generator.

8. Add a Prefix or Suffix

Simply adding a prefix to your name is a great way to spice up an otherwise boring name. Let’s use my name as an example.

Lieutenant John Fox is much better than plain ole John Fox.

  • Sir John Fox.
  • Dr.John Fox.
  • Coach John Fox.
  • Officer John Fox.
  • Monsignor John Fox.
  • Reverend John Fox.

Or do the opposite and choose a suffix.

  • John Matthew Fox III.
  • John Fox Jr.
  • John Fox, Ph.D.

9. Use Alliteration!

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That’s a command, because you need an imperative to get your creative juices flowing. Alliteration is so obvious and yet so few peopleconsider it when creating names.

Consider Binx Bolling in Walker Percy’s The Moviegoer. I just want to rhyme with it: Binx is a sphinx. Binx is a minx. Binx suffuses the page with New Orleans spirit.

And remember Thomas Pynchon has loads of wonderful alliterative names, likeMeatball Mulligan and BigfootBjornsen.

10. Give A LongName

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Minimum three names, preferably four or five. And if you can add on a prefix or suffix, all the better.

Let’s not forget Harry Potter lore. Do you remember Dumbledore’s full name?“Albus Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore.”

In Raymond Queneau’sThe Blue Flowersthere is a characternamed Joachim Olinde Anastase Crepinien Honorat Irenee Mederic, and whose initials spell out his first name (clever, no?).

The longest name in the Bible is Isaiah’s son “Maher-shalal-hash-baz.” I would not recommend naming your character that. But I hope it inspires you!

Benno van Archimboldi, fromRoberto Bolano’s 2666. Not super long, but a full three words, and how could you not love this name? Don’t youlove how much information you have about the character just from the name? This reclusive Italian author writes Nobel-worthy fiction, which you probably could have guessedjust from the name alone (or at least it’s unsurprising when you hear it).

Charles Williams, who was one of the lesser known inklings along with C.S. Lewis and Tolkien, gave an impressive character name in his book War In Heaven:Aubrey Duncan Peregrine Mary de Lisle D’Estrange, Duke of the North Ridings, Marquess of Craigmullen and Plessing, Count of the Holy Roman Empire, Knight of the Cape and Sword, and several other ridiculous fantasies.” That’s some name, and some title.

11. Hyphenate the Name

A hyphenated last name tells you a lot about a character. Either they are French or they are a woman who hasadopted their husband’s last name and yet wanted to retain their own last name, which means they are of a certain social class and economic level.

Plus, it looks different on the page than everyone else’s last name, so it helps the reader to distinguish between characters, and it allows you to establish a dual-personality metaphor, a divided or split persona.

12. Make the Name Fit

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Consider Hiro Protagonist, from Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash. If you had any doubts about who the hero or protagonist was, well …

I can just see someonegiving a minorcharacter the firstname of Minorin their next novel, and then killing them off a few pages after they appear.

13. Avoid Proper Names

Cormac McCarthy, in his fantastic novel Blood Meridian, only gives titles and nicknames to characters. The two main characters in the book are referred to only by their age and by their profession: The Kid andThe Judge. (Just don’t ask me what’s he a judge of).

In Jose Saramago’s book Blindness, he doesn’t give anyone names, just calls them by their professions.

  • The Doctor
  • TheDoctor’s Wife
  • Womanwith Dark Glasses
  • Man with Black Eyepatch.

It gives the whole novel a sense of a fable, and also makes them nameless stand-ins for all of humanity. Plus, those are pretty cool character names.

Fairytales often use this strategy, too. Brothers Grimm fairytales feature the Baker’s Daughter, the Tailor’s Apprentice, the Miller’s Son.

And here are a few more examples of cool character names, from television and elsewhere. Particularly in the case of the cigarette man, not giving him a name gives him an aura of mystery and secrecy.

  • The DoctorfromDoctor Who
  • The cigarette smoking manfromX-files
  • The Time TravellerfromThe Time Machineby H.G. Wells

If you’d like to read more about cool character names, check out a list from The Guardian of the Worst Character Names of all time, and The Weeklings has a list ofthe 50 Best Character Names of all time.

Also, The Paris Review has a great article on how to name your characters.

Lastly, if you’re still stuck on how to come up with your cool character names, get this excellent resource. The Character Naming Sourcebook isa book with more than 25,000 names, including their histories and meanings, written with the author in mind.

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13 Strategies to Create Character Names - Bookfox (2024)

FAQs

13 Strategies to Create Character Names - Bookfox? ›

Unforgettable characters should have unforgettable names. A name should tell your readers so much – place, time, personality – even if the story you are telling is quiet, contemporary and real-world. It should also speak to the genre you are writing and ground your readers in the fictional world you have created.

How do I come up with names for my characters? ›

How to Name Your Characters
  1. Consult the phone book. Grab a random name from the phone book to get yourself started. ...
  2. Grab a baby name book. ...
  3. Use a random name generator. ...
  4. Pay homage to famous names from a book or movie. ...
  5. Make use of root meanings. ...
  6. Don't get hung up on finding the perfect name.
Aug 6, 2021

How do you name characters effectively? ›

Unforgettable characters should have unforgettable names. A name should tell your readers so much – place, time, personality – even if the story you are telling is quiet, contemporary and real-world. It should also speak to the genre you are writing and ground your readers in the fictional world you have created.

What is the correct way to format a character's name? ›

Script format calls for all character names attributed to dialogue to be in FULL CAPS. Note: It is okay only to use a first or last name of the character name moving forward after they've been introduced — Indiana, Clarice, Brody.

How are character names chosen? ›

When you name your characters, consider that person's background, social status and region. Historical writers know to thoroughly research popular names of the era when their story is set. And if you are writing in the first-person point-of-view, readers may not even care what the narrator's is named.

What are the most common character formatting options? ›

Character formatting in MS Word is the term for formatting you apply to text. You may apply three different character formatting styles in Word documents: Font, font size, bold, italic, underline, strikethrough, subscript, superscript, font colour, and highlight colour in individual character formats.

How do authors name their characters? ›

Names must be deliberate and memorable, distinct. Too many characters with similar names—even names that start with the same first letter—and readers can be confused. Names also need to make sense for the location, time, and tone of the story.

What is the top 10 rarest name? ›

  • Hester. Fewer than five girls. It features in one of the most famous books in American literature - but Hester has fallen out of fashion in recent years. ...
  • Romilly. Five girls. ...
  • Bee. Eight girls. ...
  • Lilac. 25 girls. ...
  • Ottilie. 25 girls. ...
  • Zebedee. Nine boys. ...
  • Lorcan. 13 boys. ...
  • Rafferty. 18 boys.
Nov 8, 2022

How to create a catchy name? ›

As you brainstorm a name for your brand, consider employing these methods to inject a little fun into it:
  1. Alliterate.
  2. Use acronyms.
  3. Rhyme.
  4. Turn it into a pun.
  5. Abbreviate.
  6. Use symbolism.
  7. Personify your product.

What is a catchy name? ›

If you describe a tune, name, or advertisem*nt as catchy, you mean that it is attractive and easy to remember.

How do creators come up with names? ›

Researching the Meaning and Origins of Names

Many screenwriters start their naming process by researching what existing names mean and where they come from. In many cases, finding a name that reflects a character's personality, background, or role in the story can provide hints without being too on the nose.

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