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When do you come up with a title for your novel?

Steerpike

Felis amatus
Moderator
I generally title things afterward. Sometimes at the start, but then it is always subject to change.
 

Chime85

Sage
Tbh, I usually have a "working title" to begin with. Something that reminds me of the general theme or subject matter of my work, straight off the bat. If I happen to like that title once finished, all the better, if I'm not so happy about it, I'l give it a long think afterwards.
 

FireBird

Troubadour
I usually pick one word to just label it for organizational purposes. I haven't actually finished anything yet so I don't know what I would change it to. Right now my working title is Requiem for instance. In this case it matches the work, but as long as I know which label goes to which WIP it doesn't matter.
 

Ireth

Myth Weaver
It varies. Sometimes, as in the case of my books Winter's Queen and Low Road, I come up with a title near the beginning and it fits perfectly and sticks. Other times I have a lot of trouble coming up with a title, or decide not to try coming up with one until the story is done.
 

JacobMGibney

Dreamer
I thought it would be really difficult to come up with a title I liked for my WIP but yesterday it just came to me. I was going to wait until I had finished writing but I guess it all depends!
 

Penpilot

Staff
Article Team
Yes. :D

But seriously. I usually have a working title. Sometimes its something like B2G that really means nothing to anyone but me. Other times, it's a title I'm seriously considering. But I never decide on a title until the piece is finished. The process of writing the story gives me a deeper understanding of it, so something I come up with at the beginning sometimes no longer applies.
 

Chilari

Staff
Moderator
I generally start with a working title as soon as I start getting mildly serious (ie, more than one Word file). These tend to be descriptive, like "bronze age town" for the one set in a bronze age town, and "lich story" for the one with the lich, or sometimes the main character's name. As I continue working on it, I might come up with a better working title, like, for the lich one, "Teurdin's End", which I'm quite happy with because it is the name of the village where the action begins because, at the characters later discover, an evil sorcerer called Teurdin was killed and buried there (guess who the lich is?) and if only for that little bit of wordplay I plan on returning to that story. Sometimes, as with that example, my second working title is something I think of as a potential title. Other times the working title is an upgrade but not good for a real title, like the bronze age town one is called "Perenke" now, which is the name of the town (what is it with me and naming books after places?)

Having said that, with The General's Secret I actually started with the title. I'd used a title generator when looking for something I could use for what is now called Flame Undying (my only completed first draft), and saved a load, and after a dream which gave me the idea for the story, I linked it with the title from my list of cool titles and that was it. The title shaped the story as much as my dream did. Now both those stories are well and truly binned, though.
 

JCFarnham

Auror
Sometimes it's worth considering that when your manuscript/idea is fully matured (not necessarily "complete") then and only then will a title show itself. I never force a title onto a piece of writing. It could happen before, during or after, but when the right title for the job appears I find there no question.

Before that time ... eh.
 

T.Allen.Smith

Staff
Moderator
Usually when writing & most of the self-revision is complete. I like picking a phrase from the writing itself to serve as a title. Because of this, I see little reason in choosing words that may wind up altered or cut during edit.
 

johnsonjoshuak

Troubadour
I didn't come up with the title for The Cerberus Rebellion until I was about 2/3 done. The other planned books in the series already had their titles at this point (one of those titles got scrapped, but you get the picture). This was the first book that really gave me trouble in finding a title for it.
 
I came up with the title for my novel (THE QUEEN OF MAGES) before I started writing it, when I just had a concept; then I was going to call it MINDFIRE, but went back to the original title later on (using MINDFIRE as the series name).

I already know the titles for books 2 (THE SILVER WAR) and 3 (...I ain't sayin' yet) in the series, but of course that could change if I come up with something better.
 
What does Mindfire think of you using his name?

You'll know when the right title hits you. I always have a generic working title which I use until the real title hits me between the eyes.
 

Shockley

Maester
The only work I've ever titled is the one I posted on the forum, and its clunkiness shows that it was whipped up on the spot.

I'm not too worried about titles, since most of this is writing I do for 'training' purposes and will never see the light of day.
 

SeverinR

Vala
Do you come up with it before you start it or come up with it after your done?

I write on a computer, so I have to have a title.
But in both completed (in process of editing) books, the names have changed.

The title can change all the way up to printing day. Nothing is set in stone until then.
 

Wulvaine

Dreamer
I typically have a working title. The novel I'm working on at the moment has already had its working title change, and I'm open to the possibility that it will change again several times due to the fact that I have a long way to go before it's done. However, I suspect it will still be some variation on the working title.
 

ncpendergast

Dreamer
Tbh, I usually have a "working title" to begin with. Something that reminds me of the general theme or subject matter of my work, straight off the bat. If I happen to like that title once finished, all the better, if I'm not so happy about it, I'l give it a long think afterwards.

Ditto. And when I start changing working titles back and forth before the first draft is done, that's generally a bad sign. My current project has its title since the very start, and I'll stick with it (it has a sub-title that changed a few times, because I split it into two books).

My short stories either start out with only a title that then breeds a story, or with an idea, and the title presents itself once it's done.
 
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