Laurie Kingery writes


 

Posts Tagged ‘Book titles’

THE DOCTOR TAKES A WIFE

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

Horse And Carriage Wedding 2I just thought you might be interested to know that SOMEONE FOR SARAH, my January 2011 Love Inspired Historical,  is now officially THE DOCTOR TAKES A WIFE. As I told you in my 1/14 blog, I knew the previous title was going to go. So I submitted several titles to the editors but  they didn’t like them. I think the best titles included the word “Yankee” in them, for the hero, a doctor from Maine, but I’m guessing they thought it would sound like a Civil War novel and wanted to stay away from that.  I wanted to stay away from titles that would make it sound like a 1950’s medical romance in which the ordinary girl becomes a Cinderella/great success if life simply because she managed to snag herself a doctor to marry. My editors suggested more titles. I didn’t like them, so I came back with a few more. THE DOCTOR TAKES A WIFE was one of the ones I suggested, and this time they decided they liked it. It does sound a little medical romancy, but not too much. I like the way it plays off the old nursery rhyme, “The Farmer in the Dell”–”the farmer takes a wife, the farmer takes a wife, hi-ho the dairy-o, the farmer takes a wife. (Apologies to those who now have that song stuck in their heads…) It’s a title that’s been used on books before, but not recently.  I’d hate having a title that had been used many times before–I remember back in the early days of romance titles when DAWN OF DESIRE was done to death, and the year that there were three–count ‘em three–FORTUNE’S LADY’s.

It was a difficult book to title, as I may have said before. How do you sound western and Christian fiction and mention at least one of the characters  and maybe a theme? So I’m fairly happy with this title after so many suggestions. This title was suggested by that great mistress of titles, Cheryl St. John, who also writes for Love Inspired Historicals as well as Harlequin Historicals. Thanks, Cheryl! She came up with that one on very short notice–overnight, in fact. What a peach!

Blessings, Laurie

My second book has a title!

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

At long last, my second book from Steeple Hill, which will be released in August next year, has a title. Ta da–the new title is THE OUTLAW’S LADY, which was one of my list of suggestions. I think it’s a lot better than my working title, PICTURE OF AN OUTLAW. It just wasn’t an easy task to come up with something that suggests old-time photography without sounding stodgy, so I’m hoping the artist will give some hint of her profession on the cover. To that end, I searched endlessly for digital pictures on the web of Daguerrotype-style cameras to send to Steeple Hill to help the artist. If they chose not to use that, however, I imagine there will be some hint about it on the back blurb–which the writer doesn’t usually get to write, in case you didn’t know. I sent them lots of south Texas scenery pictures too, so I can’t’ wait to see what they come up with. That’s months away, however, so I might as well get back to MARRYING MILLY.

I just attended a dynamite talk (at Central Ohio Fiction Writers’ monthly meeting) done by my writer-friend and accountant, Donna MacMeans, on her “W” method of plotting, which came at just the right time because I was having trouble deciding which events should come first in the middle of the book, and the way I was doing it wasn’t working. So today I took my first hour of writing time and studied her handouts, and then replotted the order of that pesky middle. I think this is going to work! Thanks, Donna! It may have taken me some time, but I think it’ll save a lot of time and anguish later on.

That’s all for now.What do you think of the title? How do you come up with your titles? Please comment!

Blessings, Laurie