John T

  • Yes, I’m blatantly copying @philippaeast with her Titles thread.

    I must be a bit slow because I’ve also had the same feedback from my agent Danielle (that the story needs a new title) – and yet I didn’t think of asking you brilliant lot for help. So thanks @philippaeast for the inspo 🙂

    Some of you have read ‘Snatched’ (thank you beloved…[Read more]

  • KazG replied to the topic Titles in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 9 months ago

    @alanr – just saw that I basically suggested the same as you!

  • KazG replied to the topic Titles in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 9 months ago

    I keep coming back to the words enmeshing/unmeshing. For me that feels really evocative of family tendrils, the way the brain works (especially in cases of forming, breaking and reforming connections). – it makes me think of a web and a net and a loosening of patterns. Don’t know how you might use it but I love that word!
    Enmeshing Seven /…[Read more]

  • I like that way of putting it. Helpful.

    I haven’t seen ‘Downsizing’ but it sounds like a film that is a bit overloaded with ideas and ends up getting lost among them.

  • On the podcast I am obsessed with (storygrid.com), they refer to a story’s theme as the “controlling idea”. I like this way of putting it, because a good theme helps you control the unwieldy beast that most (draft) stories are.

    A “controlling idea” might be something like “happiness comes through pursuing our true calling”, “money isn’t…[Read more]

  • Oh my goodness, guys, what great suggestions! I will check out those links too.

    @Squidge, I’d love to take a look at your exercise if you can send it?

    The focus for the book is about whether and how a family can truly reconcile after such a trauma, and what level of culpability a family must ultimately shoulder. Much time in the book is spent in…[Read more]

  • Seagreen replied to the topic Titles in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 9 months ago

    You talk about bonds and use the term ‘enmeshed’ so I’m going for The Untangling.

  • Elle replied to the topic Titles in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 9 months ago

    Hi Philippa,

    From all the information gathered I would suggest:

    – Missing You (works on several level depending on who the sentence refers to or who us doing the miss – if that makes sense)

    – The Other You

    – The Way Home (again can be interpreted on several levels)

    – Little Girl Lost (again lost can be interpreted on several levels)

    – Here…[Read more]

  • Thea replied to the topic Titles in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 9 months ago

    Hi Philippa, ‘Lost and Found?’ with or without the question mark, popped into my mind, I think because of the railway scene in your story. Perhaps if you simply included a question mark in your current title it would convey that the abduction is still haunting the family. Also, I really like Jonathan’s idea of using the number seven in the title.

  • I haven’t either, Sandra! Though in my writing I try to adhere to the RUE rule and thus probably don’t explain enough.

  • Nice to be back among old friends and, hopefully, some new ones. About a hundred years ago, I wrote a novel. I’ve finally got to the end of another but it’s far from finished. Looking forward to reading some short stories.

    • Good to know, Barry, we’ve been waiting for it! (For those Denizens who don’t know Barry, he wrote a fantastic, bittersweet coming of age novel set in the 1960s called The Pimlico Kid, which is well worth a read)

      • Thank you Daeds. it’s certainly been a long time, something I might blog about one day. On second thoughts, it might not be such good read! I hope all goes well for you and I’m pleased to see your productivity in recent times.

        Barry

  • Squidge replied to the topic Titles in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 9 months ago

    I like the ‘Here Ends…’, but what to say is ending.

    …the Seven Years of Pain
    …the Seven Years of Separation.
    Why not something like Seven Years Apart or The seven years of separation. The End Begins Here…? Just playing now!

    I also wonder if some of the other themes are more relevant to the title? There are an awful lot of themes going…[Read more]

  • Daedalus replied to the topic Titles in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 9 months ago

    Interesting one. Titles can be hard. Sometimes a really perfect one will just present itself. Other times…

    I was looking, as I’m sure you have, at a thesaurus to see if it was possible to simply replace ‘abduction’. The best I could do was ‘Here Ends the Absence’, or possibly ‘Here Ends the Departure’ which I’m not sure really does it.

  • Bella replied to the topic Titles in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 9 months ago

    A few initial ideas – not sure if they are anything like suitable:

    She once was lost

    But now she’s found

    (Been playing Amazing Grace…)

    Re-filling the nest

    Stolen childhood

  • During the abduction, she believed her family had abandoned her. Now that she has returned, she doesn’t know whom to trust, or where her “real” home is. She clings to cousin Jess, she mistrusts the adults, in the end she turns on her cousin too (bit of an all-is-lost moment there, before the end).

  • Yes, abducted aged 8, now 15. She grew up enmeshed with her cousin – they were like twins in a fairy-tale. She is blonde, her cousin brunette. Otherwise, an unstable childhood; her biological dad is estranged. Brought up by her step-dad since aged 4, and has twin half-brothers (now aged 7).

  • Hi guys,

    Titles are important, right, and annoyingly, I haven’t yet found the right one for my novel (I mean, it’s only been 3 years).

    I know this will be really tricky for you guys, having not read the thing, but I wonder if you could help me at all to brainstorm ideas? I’ve outlined where I’m at below.

    The elevator pitch of the the novel…[Read more]

  • RichardB replied to the topic For Those in Peril… in the forum Blogs 7 years, 9 months ago

    One of those moments that tend to restore your faith in human nature. And yes, very moving.

  • Load More