What's in a Name? The Importance of Character Names

I’m often asked where I get the names of characters. How do you come up with all the character names and keep them straight? They come from all over. I am constantly jotting down interesting names. I want my characters’ names to reflect something about his or her personality. Here are some things that I look for when I’m choosing a name.

  • Know the name’s meaning. You want to associate it with some trait your character has. Is it a family name or something that was popular during that generation?

  • I use the SSN baby name lists by year to give me ideas of what was popular when my characters were “born.”

  • Avoid having multiple character names that start with the same letter. The fabulous Kathy Mix gave me this advice this early on in my career. She said it’s often confusing for readers. She would always make a list, and when she used a name, she’d cross off that letter.

  • Avoid having multiple names that sound similar (e.g. Christy, Kristi, Chris). This is often another point of confusion for readers.

  • You want a character name that is pronounceable. I was going to name a main character Veronica, and she was going to go by Roni. (Rah-ni was the way I heard it in my head.) The gals in my critique group kept calling her Row-knee, so I ended up renaming her. It was too much to explain.

  • Create a character list (especially if you write a series). I have a giant spreadsheet for each series with all the facts about the repeat characters. It also helps me not to use the same name over and over for minor characters.

  • I usually don’t name characters for real people, and if I do, I’ll tell you who and why in the acknowledgments. Though I have been known to name minor characters after famous people in popular and literary culture.

My first traditionally published mystery was a short story in a Sisters in Crime anthology. Years later, a lady came up to me at a book signing and told me that her husband had the same name as one of the main characters in “Washed up.” That was fun.

What would you add to my list about naming your characters?

#ThisorThatThursday with Cindy Martin

I’d like to welcome fellow Sisters in Crime sib, Cindy Martin, to the blog today.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Finishing the first draft is the hardest part. I’ll get about ten chapters in and then come up with a new character, a new angle, something that makes want to start all over again. I do see the light at the end of the tunnel now for my first novel.

The easiest thing about being a writer: I love words and I enjoy using my creativity. Inventing characters is really a lot of fun and when they come alive on the page it’s magic. It’s a ton of work but also something that makes me happy.

Things you need for your writing sessions: I am all about a laptop on a desk. I like my solitude and dedicating a couple of hours to being in the zone. A cup of coffee and a snack, like an apple or bowl of healthy nuts helps too!

Things that hamper your writing: Too much noise, a rough night’s sleep.

Words that describe you: Creative, impulsive, relentless, social

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Impatient!

Something you’re really good at: Exercise and anything to do with fitness is in my DNA. As a part time fitness instructor, I enjoy helping others maintain a healthy lifestyle and learn to make working out a regular part of their day. I have a positive outlook, and I consider myself as friendly and wanting to make a difference whether its in the gym or on the page.

Something you’re really bad at: Video games. I could really care less. I prefer to watch my daughters and friends play and sit back.

Last best thing you ate: Toasted Coconut ice cream at our homemade local store. It’s why I work out!

Last thing you regret eating: Onion rings at the county fair. But, come on, they were good!

Favorite music or song: I like a mix of pop, rock and country. There’s nothing like a good Elton John song or Zac Brown Band to get me motivated.

Music that drives you crazy: Not a fan of rap music at all.

The last thing you ordered online: I just moved from the east coast of Florida to a newly constructed home on the west coast of Florida near North Fort Myers. So I’ve been ordering all kinds of furniture and necessities. This morning, my office chair arrived. It’s plush velvet and light gray to match my home library where I write from.

The last thing you regret buying: A quilt online for the spare bedroom. The colors looked nothing like the website. Back to shopping in stores so I can see and touch and feel.

Things you’d walk a mile for. Anything. I love to walk and run and bike. But the thing that would inspire me is a nice glass of Sauvignon Blanc at the end of that mile on the beach.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: I worked at the TV show, “America’s Most Wanted” for twenty years. One would thing I could look at anything. I’m pretty tough when it comes to viewing crime scenes and homicide photos. But, put a spider in the room, and I’m gone.

Things you always put in your books: Again, going back to my career at “America’s Most Wanted,” one of the things I’m passionate about is missing children. I typically have something to do with a crime involving a missing child and/or a murder of an adult. I like to incorporate scary locations like basements and old Victorian homes.

Things you never put in your books: I don’t like feeling cringy from sex crimes especially on children. Won’t do that.

Favorite places you’ve been: I’ve travelled all around the world. I like small towns and beach towns like the Outer Banks, the west coast of Florida (that’s why I moved here). I recently travelled to Sedona, Arizona and hiked the Grand Canyon, that’s a new favorite. I can never visit Sonoma in the wine country of northern California enough. For international, I’m a fan of Florence and Venice, Italy.

Places you never want to go to again: Kalamazoo, Michigan. Didn’t have a good experience on a work trip there.

Favorite books (or genre): I’m a thriller snob. I love a great thriller novel with a good twist: Lisa Unger, Ruth Ware, Freida McFadden, Lisa Jewell, Tara Laskowski, and Lisa Black are among my favorites.

Books you wouldn’t buy: I’m not a big fan of fantasy however I did enjoy the Harry Potter series. Other than that, I like crime fiction, biographies, and fiction.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I was exposed to some scary situations working at “America’s Most Wanted” and previously as a PBS documentary Producer. I interviewed members of the Ku Klux Klan and skin heads in a secret location. My tv crew and I were taken blindfolded. Obviously, everything turned out fine, and I got insight into what makes them tick. I’ve also interviewed two death row inmates face to face. I’m a curious person and I like to ask questions–even when I have to venture outside my comfort zone.

Something you chickened out from doing: Driving a jet ski on open waters in an extreme tour. I did it once and flipped with my daughter on the back. I’ll sit it out unless someone else is driving.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: I quilt for fun. I’ve made plenty of baby quilts for my daughters, my grandchildren, and friends. I enjoy the creative aspect of putting different colored fabrics together to creative a beautiful keepsake.

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: I mentioned I like quilting. It’s very different from sewing clothing. I tried to make matching Easter dresses for my oldest daughter and I when she was three years old. Thank goodness for my aunt, the seamstress. She saved that Easter wardrobe.

About Cindy:

For 20 years, Cindy Martin was a “America’s Most Wanted” TV Producer traveling worldwide to interview law enforcement, crime experts, victims and their families, and criminals. She wrote hundreds of scripts for the highly rated FOX TV show.

Cindy’s short stories are published in a variety of collections:

  • “Key to the Past,” in the “Crimes in the Old Dominion Anthology” (Sisters in Crime Central Virginia 2025 publication).

  • “Salt, Sand, Slay,” in the “Gone Fishin: Crime Takes a Holiday Anthology” (Sisters in Crime Guppies 2025 publication).

  • “Grave News,” in the “Notorious in North Texas Anthology” (Sisters in Crime North Dallas 2024 publication).

  • “Malice Challenge,” in the “Paradise is Deadly Anthology” (Sisters in Crime FL Gulf Coast 2023 publication).

  • Cindy was a finalist in the 2022 Six-Word Thriller Contest (Rocky Mountain Chapter Mystery Writers of America).

Let’s Be Social:

Website: Cindy Martin Author – Crime Writer

#WriterWednesday with Sebastian de Castell

I’d like to welcome Sebastian de Castell to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Things you never want to run out of: ideas for new novels

Things you wish you’d never bought: preconceptions about writing from self-styled gurus

Hardest thing about being a writer: pushing through the first draft when the plot isn’t feeling right

Easiest thing about being a writer: being on author panels

Things you need for your writing sessions: absolute quiet and an uncluttered computer screen

Things that hamper your writing: ruminations about my career

A few of your favorite things: travel sling bags, unusual silver coins, tarot cards

Things you need to throw out: travel sling bags. I’ve literally got more than a dozen of them.

Words that describe you: storyteller, traveler, romantic

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: arrogant, forgetful, unfocused

Something you’re really good at: talking

Something you’re really bad at: listening

Favorite music or song: “Fall at Your Feet” by Crowded House

Music that drives you crazy: Lazy lyrics over a barely discernible melody on top of overused electronic drum patterns.

Favorite smell: my wife’s hair

Something that makes you hold your nose: our cats’ litter box

Things you’d walk a mile for: almost anything; I love walking

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: other people’s family dramas

Things you always put in your books: friendship and idealism

Things you never put in your books: other people’s family dramas

Favorite things to do: traveling, writing, cycling and ballroom dancing with my wife

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: filling out forms

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: I used to choreograph swordfights for theatre productions

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: Malevolent Seven. I never intended for it to be a published book and somehow it ended up being one of my most successful.

Things you never want to run out of: ideas for new novels

Things you wish you’d never bought: preconceptions about writing from self-styled gurus

Hardest thing about being a writer: pushing through the first draft when the plot isn’t feeling right

Easiest thing about being a writer: being on author panels

Things you need for your writing sessions: absolute quiet and an uncluttered computer screen

Things that hamper your writing: ruminations about my career

A few of your favorite things: travel sling bags, unusual silver coins, tarot cards

Things you need to throw out: travel sling bags. I’ve literally got more than a dozen of them.

Words that describe you: storyteller, traveler, romantic

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: arrogant, forgetful, unfocused

Something you’re really good at: talking

Something you’re really bad at: listening

Favorite music or song: Fall at Your Feet by Crowded House

Music that drives you crazy: Lazy lyrics over a barely discernible melody on top of overused electronic drum patterns.

Favorite smell: my wife’s hair

Something that makes you hold your nose: our cats’ litter box

Things you’d walk a mile for: almost anything; I love walking

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: other people’s family dramas

Things you always put in your books: friendship and idealism

Things you never put in your books: other people’s family dramas

Favorite things to do: traveling, writing, cycling and ballroom dancing with my wife

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: filling out forms

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: I used to choreograph swordfights for theatre productions

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: Malevolent Seven. I never intended for it to be a published book and somehow it ended up being one of my most successful.

About Sebastian:

Sebastien de Castell had just finished a degree in Archaeology when he started work on his first dig. Four hours later he realized how much he actually hated archaeology and left to pursue a very focused career as a musician, ombudsman, interaction designer, fight choreographer, teacher, project manager, actor, and product strategist. His only defence against the charge of unbridled dilettantism is that he genuinely likes doing these things and that, in one way or another, each of these fields plays a role in his writing. He sternly resists the accusation of being a Renaissance Man in the hopes that more people will label him that way.

Sebastien's acclaimed swashbuckling fantasy series, The Greatcoats. was shortlisted for both the 2014 Goodreads Choice Award for Best Fantasy. the Gemmell Morningstar Award for Best Debut, the Prix Imaginales for Best Foreign Work, and the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. His YA fantasy series, Spellslinger, was nominated for the Carnegie Medal and is published in more than a dozen languages.

Sebastien lives in Vancouver, Canada with his lovely wife and two belligerent cats.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: www.decastell.com

15 Things to Know about the Pearly Girls Mysteries

I am so excited! My new series, the Pearly Girls Mysteries, launches on March 18. This is my Veronica Mars meets the Golden Girls mysteries. It’s set in the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains.

Here are some things to know about Cassidy and her team at Celebrations at Ivy Springs.

  1. Ivy Springs is a fictitious tiny town nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia near Staunton.

  2. Staunton is the real-life home to the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library, the American Shakespeare Center, and the Frontier Cultural Center.

  3. Cassidy inherits her grandmother’s property and event planning business, Celebrations at Ivy Springs.

  4. The property has a refurbished farmhouse/office, glamped up barn, serenity garden, amphitheater, cave, and the remnants of the old family honky-tonk that burned down in the 1980s.

  5. The four Pearly Girls got their collective nickname from a school mate in the sixties who teased them about wearing their pearls like Jackie O. or Audrey Hepburn. The name has stuck for generations.

  6. The four Pearly Girls are named for my grandmothers (Ruth and Aileen), my great-grandmother Roxie Belle, and my grandmother Aileen’s best friend (Kate). These four spunky women taught me a lot of life lessons.

  7. Cassidy’s sidekick is a brown and tan Chihuahua mix named Elvis. He is modeled on my sister’s dog, Bingo. Both are mighty mites with big personalities.

Bingo in his car seat

8. Cassidy’s relatives used the cave and other hiding places on the property for their bootlegging business during Prohibition.

9. The honky-tonk was the place to be in the heyday of country and western music. Famous singers and musicians would sign the bar and always pose for a photo or two.

10. Before the interstate, state roads along this corridor were often on the route of bands heading to and from Nashville.

11. Prior to becoming an event planner, Cassidy worked in marketing in Washington, DC.

12. Cassidy refurbished the top floor of her grandmother’s farmhouse for her on-property apartment. The downstairs is the office space and conference rooms for Celebrations at Ivy Springs.

13. The septuagenarian Pearly Girls have more tattoos than Cassidy does.

14. While the Pearly Girls may not be hip to all the new technology and platforms, they are plugged into Ivy Springs’s gossip grapevine. Nothing happens in this small town that they don’t know about.

15. Roxie had a very public fling with a musician in her past, but the secret doesn’t stay buried for very long.

Murder Strikes a Chord is available now for preorder at your favorite bookseller!

#WriterWednesday with Brad C Anderson

I’d like to welcome Brad C Anderson to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Things you never want to run out of: Toilet paper

Things you wish you’d never bought: A Skinny Puppy cassette. What, you’ve never heard of the band Skinny Puppy? There’s a reason for that.

A few of your favorite things: My comfy chair

Things you need to throw out: I suppose I ought to toss out that Skinny Puppy cassette some day.

Things you need for your writing sessions: Music! 😊

Things that hamper your writing: Reddit ☹

Hardest thing about being a writer: The first draft
Easiest thing about being a writer: Imagining scenes

Favorite foods: Peanut butter sandwiches

Things that make you want to gag: Liver

Things to say to an author: I loved the scene in your book where … happened
Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: I found a typo in your published novel.

Favorite places you’ve been: Pompeii!
Places you never want to go to again: Malvern, Pennsylvania.

Favorite books (or genre): Lovecraftian demon horror
Books you wouldn’t buy: Books written by politicians

Favorite things to do: Gardening
Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Taxes

The funniest thing to happen to you: When I was fourteen, this woman approached me at the bus stop and asked if I ever lived in Grand Prairie. I told her no. She was relieved because, for a moment, she thought that I (a fourteen-year-old boy) was her ex-husband who left town.

The most embarrassing thing to happen to you: I laughed so hard a booger shot out my nose.

 About Brad:

Brad C. Anderson is a science fiction author who loves exploring flawed characters' journeys through nasty situations. He lives with his wife and puppy in Vancouver, Canada, where he teaches undergraduate business at a local university and researches organizational wisdom in blithe defiance of the fact that most people do not think you can put those two words in the same sentence without irony. Previously, he worked in the biotech sector, where he made drugs for a living (legally!).

His stories have appeared in a variety of publications. He has published two science fiction novels, Ashme’s Song in 2025 and Duatero in 2022 as well as several non-fiction books. His short story, Naïve Gods, was longlisted for a 2017 Sunburst Award for Excellence in Canadian Literature of the Fantastic. It was published in the anthology Lazarus Risen, which itself was nominated for an Aurora Award.

Let’s Be Social:

Find him at http://bradanderson2000.com and https://www.facebook.com/bradanderson2000/

Why Authors Need an Information Sheet for Each Book

When you start to market your book (or series), you are going to have to provide a lot of different kinds of information for book tours, blogs, podcasts, and other promotions. I create a Word document for each book with all the information that I know someone will ask about. That way, when I need to respond to an email, send publicity information, or do a post on social media, everything is in one place.

Here’s what I include:

  • All ISBNs for the book

  • Back cover copy

  • Biography

  • Elevator speech for the book (1-2 sentences to describe the story)

  • Any tag lines you use

  • Links for purchase on a variety of retail sites

  • Summary of the series

I also keep an electronic file handy of my headshots and book covers in different sizes. I have a file of graphics that I created in Canva and Bookbrush for different seasons that are sized for a variety of social media platforms. I like both of these creative packages because I can depict the book in paperback, audio, and ebook for the graphics.

Having all of your book information organized will save you time when you’re responding to marking requests.

#WriterWednesday with Melanie Smith

I’d like to welcome Melanie Smith to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Juggling all the other things that get in the way of writing. As an independent author, I am responsible for managing my brand, promoting my work, updating my website, publishing my next story and networking with other authors. Life often gets in the way of creativity. I am routinely trying to balance my private life and necessary tasks with my desire to just sit down and write.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

Writing. I know some authors complain about writer’s block. This has never been an issue for me. Maybe because I am constantly juggling multiple books at the same time. If I get stuck, or the plot isn’t moving forward, I simply refocus my attention on another story.

Words that describe you:

I asked my husband, and this is what he said — Competent, knowledgeable, family oriented, frugal, financially responsible, natural, adventurous.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t:

Accommodating – I sometimes let those close to me take advantage. I am also stubborn. Sometimes this is a good thing, but not everyone sees it that way.

Favorite foods:

Mexican food of any kind.

Things that make you want to gag:

Hotdogs

Something you’re really good at:

Computer programs, graphic design and promotional art, grammar

Something you’re really bad at:

Remembering names, singing

Favorite music or song:

I love all kinds of music, but my favorite is anything from the 80s

Music that drives you crazy:

Rap music

Favorite smell:

Honeysuckle

Something that makes you hold your nose:

The smell of death

Things you always put in your books:

Strong characters with tight family bonds.

Things you never put in your books:

Politics – people read my stories for entertainment. They don’t need to know what I think or how I feel.

Favorite places you’ve been:

I really enjoy visiting Yellowstone National Park. I also had an amazing trip to Italy.

Places you never want to go to again:

East LA

Favorite things to do:

Ride my Harley and explore the backcountry on my ATV

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing:

Public speaking

Best thing you’ve ever done:

Conquer my fears and publish my first book

Biggest mistake:

For many years, I treated my writing as a hobby instead of a talent

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

I have been skydiving, rappelled out of a ski resort tram, cliff dived at Lake Powell, and learned to ride a motorcycle on challenging canyon roads

Something you chickened out from doing:

Eating sushi or oysters

About Melanie:

Long before she delved into the world of fantasy and suspense, Melanie P. Smith served nearly three decades in the Special Operations Division at her local sheriff’s office supporting SWAT, Search & Rescue, K9, the Motor Unit, Investigations, and the Child Abduction Response Team. She now uses that training and knowledge to create stories that are action-packed, gripping, and realistic. In addition to writing, she is also the Editor-In-Chief for Connections eMagazine — a free quarterly publication focused on bringing authors and readers together.

You can find more about Melanie and her books on her website and social media platforms.

Let’s Be Social:

Visit Melanie on her website at www.melaniepsmith.com

Find her on Facebook at https://geni.us/MPSFacebook

Twitter https://geni.us/MPSTwitter

Instagram https://geni.us/MPSInstagram

YouTube https://geni.us/MPSmithYouTube

Locals Community https://geni.us/MPSLocals

BoobBub https://geni.us/MPSBookBub

LinkedIn https://geni.us/MPSmithLI

Pinterest https://geni.us/MPSPinterest

Goodreads https://geni.us/MPSGoodreads


Do You Have an Author Logo?

You are your brand. I think authors need a logo. It helps identify you and your writing on your website, social media posts, blog, and other communications and promotional materials.

There are quite a few graphic software packages with templates that will help you create one. There are also work-for-hire sites and graphic designers that you can pay to create one for you.

Here are some things you might want to consider about your logo:

  • Choose colors and fonts that reflect your writing style.

  • Make sure you have different file types for your final logo. You’ll need a high-resolution version for printed materials. You’ll want some smaller files, too. You may even want a black and white version.

  • If you plan to use your logo on different backgrounds, you’ll need to have one that has a transparent background.

  • Make sure all fonts/text in your logo is readable at different sizes.

  • You may want to have logos created for different sizes. If you try to enlarge a tiny logo to fit a large space, it often gets pixilated or jagged. I usually make a tiny one, a standard one, and a large one with a higher resolution for print items.

  • Test your logo designs with your electronic sites and print versions to make sure the colors and fonts look the way you want them to look.

What else would you add to my list?