Tips for a top book title

Rachelle Gardner e1449073290776

This is a guest post by Rachelle Gardner, an agent with Books and Such Literary Agency. Rachelle is also an experienced book editor, publishing coach and speaker. Here she lists her top tips for creating a book title.

Know your genre

Identify what kind of feeling or tone you want to convey with the title. Write it down. This is important, as I’ve seen humorous books with dead-serious titles, contemporary books whose titles say ‘historical romance’, novels that sound like self-help books… you get the picture. Be clear on what the title needs to instantly communicate.

Brainstorm

1. Find twenty books on Amazon that are in the same genre as the book and whose titles you like. Write down their titles. Try to get a feel for what works with your genre. What do you like about the titles? What don’t you like? Then put the list away for awhile.

2. Make lists of words related to the book. Put them in columns: nouns, verbs, adjectives. If it’s a novel, list words that describe or suggest the setting. Then think about each of your major characters and write down words that relate to them. Think about the action in the story and write down verbs that capture it. If the book is non-fiction, list words that capture what you want your reader to think, feel or do after reading it. And words that describe what the book is about.

3. Nothing is off limits – write down anything you can think of that conveys anything about the book. Use visual words that suggest a scene. Other words that evoke an emotion. A sensation. A location. A question. You should have at least 100 words.

4. See if any of the words would work as a single-word title. Then start experimenting with different word combinations. Adjective-noun, verb-noun. Keep a thesaurus handy and look up other words. Write down as many word combinations as you can. Try not to self-censor at this stage.

5. From these lists, come up with at least 20 possible titles. Then put them away for 24 hours. Two things will happen: your subconscious may still be working on it; and when you come back to your list, you’ll have fresh eyes.

6. Go back to your title list. Add any new ideas you’ve had. Then narrow it down to three to five possibilities. Run them by a few people. (This may or may not help, depending on if there’s a consensus or the opinions are all over the map.) Take a little more time before narrowing it down to one. If you can, wait another day or two.

Remember your list of titles from Amazon?

Go back to it. Ask yourself if the title you’ve chosen would fit the list—without being too similar or generic.

A few more questions to ask about your title:

  • Does the tone of the title match the tone of the book?
  • Does it convey the right genre (including time period if applicable)?
  • Would it attract attention?
  • If the book were spine-out on the shelf (so the cover and sub-title were not visible) would it still attract attention?
  • Would a reader have any idea what the book is about just from the title? (Sometimes important for non-fiction.)

Once you’ve made a decision – celebrate!

A version of this post was originally published on Rachelle’s website.

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