Titles & subtitles

Published by: Harry on 1st Sep 2010 | View all blogs by Harry
Oh dear, the bothersome business of titles.

It's a strange thing, really. No one in the trade minds much what you put on the cover of your manuscript. Until a final decision is made by your publisher (and rubberstamped by you), all titles are effectively 'working titles' only. With subtitles (for non-fiction), it's the same deal. Only once has a book of mine worn the same title to the printers as it was wearing when it went to my agent for the first time.

Yet for all that a title is provisional, just as publishers are pitching to retailers, you're pitching to publishers. And titles matter. I've got a book proposal at the moment, which I want to call something like "STORY: Why smart people read bad books".

I think that sums up the promise of the book pretty neatly. And although the book does include a fair bit of popular science and smuggles in a bit of lit crit as well, the subtitle makes it feel like its own unique thing - not some mishmash of popular science and lit crit. (A mishmash, needless to say, which would never enjoy the happy suns of the 3-for-2 tables).

But is the subtitle too negative? After all, the book is also about why smart people read good books - why everyone reads books at all, and why story is so weirdly prevalent in our culture.

I ask, because I genuinely don't know. I thought my subtitle worked. I thought I'd cracked the secret of the commercial title/subtitle. My agent, however, reckons that the manuscript itself is good, but that the subtitle is too negative and fails to sell the book. Is he right? Maybe. He usually (drat the man!) is. But I'm crap on titles and I thought I had it. I think it's back to the drawing board time ...

Comments

22 Comments

  • Aonghus Fallon
    by Aonghus Fallon 1 year ago
    I kind of like the subtitle - so much so that I don't think you need a title, proper. And has your agent considered that most of us would get a certain pleasurable frisson from knowing that smart people aren't quite as smart as they think they are? Of course that may not be what your book is about it, but the possibility would be enough to make the average punter pick it up and have a second look at it.
  • EmmaD
    by EmmaD 1 year ago
    Ach, titles! They're so hard. But I do see what your agent means. I'm not sure people want to feel they're about to be told they're reading bad books - there's a slightly, scolding tone to it, for anyone except us booky types, who mean something very particular by 'bad books'.

    How about something like: STORY:

    good reads, bad books and guilty pleasures

    why good readers love bad books

    why bad books make good reads

    why clever readers love bad books [sorry, you won't get me to use 'smart' in the American sense]

    feel the guilt and read it anyway [no, not seriously]

    and so on... BTW, I do hope you get it published. I love stuff which draws together material from lots of disciplines.
  • Harry
    by Harry 1 year ago
    I agree, Aonghus. There's a little frisson about being let into a secret, and the subtitle hints that we're going to unmask something about people who think they're smart. I also worry about being too direct. "HOW STORY PERVADES OUR EVERYDAY LIVES" sends a message, of course, but it feels like a rather blunt one.

    In the interests of openness, I should add that my draft title has been "YGUDUH" - a deliberately baffling combination of letters and one only explained in the course of the book. Everyone tells me that that title is hopeless.
  • Weens
    by Weens 1 year ago
    Let's face it, everybody thinks of themselves as 'smart' or 'clever' as Emma would have it. So potentially, your title applies to everyone. That can't be a bad thing.
  • Liss
    by Liss 1 year ago
    "Supporting Shite: A study into terrible writing."
  • Wrathnar the Unreasonable
    "Piffle, and people who read it."
  • SecretSpi
    by SecretSpi 1 year ago
    Weren't there a few books around some time ago called things like "Smart women, foolish choices"? Not that I read them - but I had a friend who did (!). I always thought that was a very clever title - what women doesn't want to think she's smart, and which women won't admit to have made a foolish choice or two?
    But it may be a bit old hat these days.
  • Tony
    by Tony 1 year ago
    Yes, gosh - um... definitely... um... horrendous.
    How about STORY: Why smart people read bad books, too.
    You can read that as 'smart people, too' or 'bad books, too' - either way, more positive.
    Also, would you consider ART OF STORY or maybe better, SECRET OF STORY?
  • Kim
    by Kim 1 year ago
    The idea for such a book is inspired but I'm afraid that I agree with your agent Harry; something doesn't quite sit right in the title.

    Although some people may like to consider themselves as smart, it might alienate those who consider ourselves above average on a good day? We may feel that the book is pitched only at the select few who are blessed with a formidable intellect.

    I've racked my brain for an alternative and come up with squat to match Emma's first suggestion, STORY: good reads, bad books and guilty pleasures. It promises both enlightenment and entertainment and brings a smile from the outset.

    Ironically, having combed the shelves of Foyles only yesterday looking for a similar book on film story i.e. how poor scripts make it to the screen and what we learn from viewing them, I’d definitely have picked up a book displaying such a title as Emma’s and given it a good second look.

    I hope that you are able to reach an amicable solution with your agent. Good luck.
  • Caducean Whisks
    by Caducean Whisks 1 year ago
    Sorry H-Bomb, I don't like the subtitle, either. It puts my back up straight away - rather like those dated ads, asking, Hey, do you want to make a million quid while you're asleep?/Get your whites whiter than white?/Save £££ on your gas bill? Even more sorry, but it would make me turn away; it's a bit too smug. And which thought police decided on the list of "bad" books, anyway? (see? It's bringing up all sorts of negative things for me). I like Emma's suggestions, though. If the suits change it in the end, why worry unduly? I'm sure it will be a corker in the end and you'll tell a good story ... which matters just as much *ahem* :)
  • Green polka
    by Green polka 1 year ago
    Titles are hectic and I think Emma has some great ideas. At the moment my novel is called the 'Emancipation of Mimi' and the main character in not Mimi nor not Mariah Carey either, it just sounds right! Needless to say, this will change in due course.
  • Slippers
    by Slippers 1 year ago
    I don't think a subtitle is necessary if you can come up with a catchy one liner. When the shelves are being perused it's the title that stands out and says here I am, come and read me.

    I've just finished reading about Clint Eastwood and this short ditty popped into my head:

    The Good, The Bad & The Story (and if you want a subtitle) :Why we read
  • Caducean Whisks
    by Caducean Whisks 1 year ago
    Slippers, that's *it* (squeals). Love it.
  • Harry
    by Harry 1 year ago
    All very helpful. (And Emma is clearly a load better on titles than I am.) As it happens, I think maybe the solution is something even broader than E's suggestions. After all, a book on the storytelling impulse in humans isn't just about why re read books - it's also about films, and anecdotes, and jokes, and myths, and confabulations [compulsive lying in certain sorts of mental illness], etc. Back to the drawing board for now ...
  • EmmaD
    by EmmaD 1 year ago
    Harry, if you're broadening out the enquiry have you read Richard Kearney's On Stories, about Narrative? Fab stuff, highly readable - it's in Routledges philosophy-for-real-people series - and as he's a novelist as well as a philosopher, he really does make sense (and saves you actually having to read Ricouer himself, who is a bourne from which no traveller returns, except Kearney)... I based the core argument of my PhD on it.

    Harry, I think Slipweed has just solved your problem - that is just the best title ever!

    Kim, have you found Robert McKee's Story? It's the bible of scriptwriting... (sorry, Harry, that's the only drawback of calling yours that...)
  • Harry
    by Harry 1 year ago
    Well, Slippers' title is good, but I have to say I tilt towards Liss & Wrathnar's suggestions (see above).

    Robert McKee - yes, I've read as much of that book as I can stand. My brother once went to a weekend workshop run by the great man and said he found it so boring he was forced to eat his own leg. I'm fairly sure he exaggerrates a little, or if not, then he's got a good prosthetician.

    Richard Kearney - no, but I've just ordered it. Yummy!
  • Liss
    by Liss 1 year ago
    Nice one Mr H ;) I'd read it
  • EmmaD
    by EmmaD 1 year ago
    Harry, if you want my PhD-achieving argument about why historical fiction is the most philosophically exciting kind of fiction of all, just let me know...
  • Kim
    by Kim 1 year ago
    Emma, thank you. Ironically it is the very book I purchased in London on Tuesday; I can't wait to get stuck in. :-)
  • Caducean Whisks
    by Caducean Whisks 1 year ago
    H, assuming you're going to deal with the ancient bardic tradition of oral story-telling and cranking up Slippers' suggestion a notch or two, how about "The Book, the Bard and the Story". It kept me awake most of the night. Thanks necessary.
  • EmmaD
    by EmmaD 1 year ago
    Harry, the On Fiction blog might be worth a nose for this project:

    http://www.onfiction.ca/

    It's a group blog on the psychology of storytelling...
  • Harry
    by Harry 1 year ago
    Sorry for slow responses ... I've been a bit preoccupied with non Cloudy matters.

    Whisks - yours is the title, of course. No need for further thought. Emma - how come you know everything? You're like a kind of literary Google.

    Am part way into Richard Kearney. Enjoying it, but I have my arguments with it too. And all the better it is for that
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