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Q&A

Are readers tolerant of unique and bizarre character Names? [closed]

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Closed by System‭ on May 8, 2018 at 00:00

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I'm trying to refine a name for my main character and characters in general but I will be focusing on my MC for the example of this question. My question is: What criteria would make a name hard for readers to read?

I'm thinking of using roman and latin, and possibly gaelic names for the book.

Here's what I got.

  • I really like the name Nyuna. (Pronounced Nuu-Nah)
  • Her full name (maybe): Nu'nah Lux
  • Nyu to her friends.
  • Little One is her pet name.

Others I have...

  • Nyuna Everstar Luxanna
  • Nu'nah Lucia Luinir
  • Lumii Luxann
  • Lu'mii Luxe
  • Reina Celestios
  • Nu'nah Lux

Or would that be terrible writing to put an apostrophe in there to easily break the name up into 2 syllables? What would be criteria that make a name difficult for readers? Multiple first names, apostrophes in the middle of the name, amount of syllables, ...? The above are examples of bizarre names I have thought about that I am unsure of.

Online sources aren't being helpful with this particular question so I thought I'd post here.

A general idea of what my main character looks like and does for a living:

Image does not belong to me. It was found on google images after 15 minutes of scrolling through pictures. It's kind of close enough.

This is what she looks like, except she glows a lot more and changes colors regularly.

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This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/35882. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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Weird names are fine and tolerated, my personal rule is to ensure there is no ambiguity in how the reader should pronounce them; and "Nyuna" does have that problem, it is not certain whether to try and pronounce the "Y". The sound is more important than the spelling I think, so I'd ditch the "Y", with "Nuna", or "Nuuna" if you want the first syllable drawn out a bit.

That said and following that rule, I do use weird names, often ancient actual names and foreign myth names few people would recognize, or vaguely recognize (e.g. "Heraud" appeared before "Herald" appeared before "Harold"). I do that to constantly emphasize the "foreignness" of my setting, or to bring special attention to my hero, or both.

You may be instinctively doing something similar; a distinctive name makes a character special. Everybody with distinctive names makes the setting special.

One more general warning on names, however, is to keep yourself a cheat-sheet of names you have used, both for lookup of characters you haven't written about for awhile, and as reference when you need to make a new name: try not to re-use an existing name, and try to make any NEW names not easily confused with a previous name, either by spelling or the sound of the name. (Some readers rely on spelling, some readers hear the words they read as if spoken in their head).

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