
Time to talk titles of novels again! The names of books are very important, of course, and can be good in a utilitarian sort of way or very memorable. Today, I’m going to focus on the latter.
This topic occurred to me last week as I read The Late Show by Michael Connelly. It’s a page-turning start of a series featuring Renee Ballard, a Los Angeles police officer of Polynesian descent who deals with crime on her beat and sexism within her department. The novel’s title is perfectly fine — Ballard works the night shift in the 2017 book — but not one for the ages.
What are some titles for the ages? Looking at my list of novels I’ve read since starting this blog in 2014, here are a number of those that stood out:
Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage, Haruki Murakami’s 2013 novel starring a Japanese railroad engineer. A many-worded title that’s almost guaranteed to spark a reader’s curiosity.
There’s also Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet (2009), Jamie Ford’s poetically named historical novel that hinges on the U.S. government’s disgraceful internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II.
The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared! That title of Jonas Jonasson’s 2009 novel is unusually long, and descriptively grabs one’s interest. A bit clunky, too, but…
Then there’s The Case of the Deadly Butter Chicken (2012), one of the India-set novels in Tarquin Hall’s series featuring private investigator Vish Puri.
The title of Jesse Walter’s The Financial Lives of Poets (2009) gets readers’ attention as they contemplate the left-brain/right-brain thing.
How about My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry (2013)? Fredrik Backman, who is most famous for authoring A Man Called Ove, doesn’t need to apologize for his intriguing nine-word title.
Also in 2013, Fannie Flagg created quite a title with The All-Girl Filling Station’s Last Reunion — whose characters include a woman who was a World War II aviator.
The alluring and alliterative title of Jane Smiley’s Perestroika in Paris (2020) throws readers a curve because it’s not about political reform a la late-1980s Soviet Union but about an interesting horse.
Barbara Kingsolver’s Demon Copperhead takes the oft-used route of naming a novel after its title character, but what an unusual name that character has! A name that riffs on David Copperfield, star of the 1850 Charles Dickens classic that served as a quasi-template for Kingsolver’s 2022 book.
And lest we focus only on 21st-century novels with noteworthy names, there’s Janet Frame’s Yellow Flowers in the Antipodean Room (1969), about a supposedly dead man who turns out to be very much alive.
Some of the more memorably titled novels you’ve read?
Misty the cat says: “My college human is home for Thanksgiving weekend and majoring in Walking Me.”
My comedic 2024 book — the part-factual/part-fictional/not-a-children’s-work Misty the Cat…Unleashed — is described and can be purchased on Amazon in paperback or on Kindle. It’s feline-narrated! (And Amazon reviews are welcome. 🙂 )

This 90-second promo video for the book features a talking cat: 🙂
I’m also the author of a 2017 literary-trivia book…

…and a 2012 memoir that focuses on cartooning and more, including many encounters with celebrities.

In addition to this weekly blog, I write the 2003-started/award-winning “Montclairvoyant” topical-humor column every Thursday for Montclair Local. The latest piece — containing more news about my school district’s huge deficit amid pizza-for-Thanksgiving comedic content 🙂 — is here.
Late, sorry, went to Scotland, accidently minus laptop.
The Weirdstone of Brisingamen, better still, because I knew it was real, and all around. ( Cheshire, family, magical artist cousin) .
The Land of Green Ginger. So intrigued, once almost went to Hull, made it as far as the Humber Bridge.
Stig of the Dump – long before the rehabilitation of Neanderthals Had to be true, they couldn’t just disappear.
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Thank you, Esther! Hope you enjoyed your Scotland trip!
Those are three VERY memorable titles, and I enjoyed your thoughts and summaries that accompanied each one. 🙂
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Hi Dave — what a thoughtful exploration of book titles. I appreciate how you show that a great title does more than label a story: it invites curiosity, hints at tone, and even evokes a world before the first page. Reading your list reminded me why I often choose books just by their names. Thank you for sharing this — you’ve renewed my love for browsing titles before diving into the story.
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Thank you, Livora! Very well stated! Great titles can definitely do all the things you noted — even as some great books have so-so titles. 🙂 Over the years, I’ve also chosen to read some novels in part based on their titles.
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Dave, I appreciate how you acknowledge the subtle power of titles and your reflection highlights their role in sparking curiosity and shaping reading experiences.
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I appreciate the follow-up comment, Livora, and agree with what you added about the importance of book titles. 🙂
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It’s probably a contemporary cultural reflex, but I’m repelled by books with long titles. Somehow I suspect those books to be as longwinded as their titles. I’ve made an exception for “The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared!” because that title amused me and I wasn’t disappointed. Maybe I should rethink my strategy but there are so many good books with short titles out there and my reading time became very precious. I even stopped browsing in the bookshops but rely on either following up on authors I know or critical acclaim by book bloggers that have similar taste. I even stand sceptical towards the latest literary prize winners (especially the Noble and Booker Prizes) since I found that they have lately a tendency to reward a kind of very convoluted twisted prose that I find unreadable.
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Thank you, Shaharee! I hear you that very long titles can be off-putting, but, as you say, it depends on the title. Long ones can indeed be droll, sometimes in a so-bad-they’re-good way. I also agree that some novels that win major literature prizes are not always the most readable of novels.
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Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close comes to mind. 🤓
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Thank you, Lori! Glad you mentioned that Jonathan Safran Foer novel (which I haven’t read). It does have a very memorable title!
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I enjoyed reading it with an 8th grade reading club I used to sponsor. ☺️
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That’s a nice memory, Lori! 🙂
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Yes, Dave. Such great kids in that group! And we always made something to eat that the characters ate in the books (or something they might have eaten). I can’t remember what we ate for that particular book. I remember German potato salad for The Book Thief.
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Wonderful, Lori, to have combined reading with relevant food!
I immediately thought of Fannie Flagg’s “Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe,” Laura Esquivel’s “Like Water for Chocolate,” and W. Somerset Maugham’s “Cakes and Ale.” 🙂
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You’ve turned the art of book titles into a brilliant literary adventure.
Each example shows how a name alone can pulse with an entire story’s life.
Your writing continually sparks curiosity, wonder, and the joy of reading.
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Thank you very much, harythegr8! 🙂
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Thanks, boss level unlocked 🏆
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🙂
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Big love & thanks 💖✨
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I have two that were childhood favs… “The dog that wouldn’t be” and “The worldly adventures of a teenage tycoon.” Both were excellent. 😎
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Thank you, Darryl! I like both of those titles, and childhood favorites with interesting titles can definitely stick in one’s mind in adulthood. 🙂
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A catchy title I read a while back is “Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead” by Olga Tokarczuk. Good book, too!
.
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Thank you, Marie! That title is unforgettable! With both positive (the dead helping to fertilize the soil) and negative (disturbing the dead) connotations.
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Here are some of my favourite book titles:
A Postillion Struck by Lightning by Dirk Bogarde (1977) British
The Well of Lost Plots by Jasper Fforde (2003) Britain
Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel (1989) Mexico
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter by Mario Vargas Llosa (1977) Peru
Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness by Alexadra Fuller (2011) British-Zim
The West Rand Jive Cat Boxing Club by Lauren Liebenberg (2011) Zim-South Africa
and, of course, The Weight of Snow and Regret by Liz – almost finished this (excellent).
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Thank you, Chris! Many excellent examples of memorable titles — including Liz’s! Of the ones you named, I’ve read (so far) Like Water for Chocolate and Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter.
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Those two from South America… I’m very pleased that you have read those. Especially the first one – all those recipes!
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Yes, Chris! Those recipes were quite a bonus. 🙂
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Hmm, a very interesting topic. I can share titles I liked I.e. they piqued my interest: The Thorn Birds, The Weight of Snow and Regret, The Scarlet Letter, Peter Pan, The lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Stephen king has some good titles like The Dead Zone and Firestarter.
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Thank you, Robbie! All great titles, for various reasons. 🙂 Other striking Stephen King titles include “Rose Madder” and “Doctor Sleep,” to name a couple.
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Yes, both good books. Even IT which is so short, is very striking. What is IT? Why does IT matter? I saw on Amazon there is another newer book with the same title as my A Ghost and His Gold. I thought that was interesting.
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I agree, Robbie! “IT” is a title striking in its shortness and mystery.
Yikes — a later work had the same memorable title as your book? Not good.
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You can’t copyright titles. I was actually a bit flattered that someone liked it enough to use it.
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Interesting — I didn’t realize titles couldn’t be copyrighted!
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Many memorable book titles have been mentioned in your post and in the comments. I thought Love in the Time Of Cholera and One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez were both intriguing titles. I loved both stories too. The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón is another title that didn’t disappoint.
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Thank you, Darlene! I agree that Gabriel García Márquez wrote some greatly titled books; also memorably named are his “Chronicle of a Death Foretold,” “The Autumn of the Patriarch,” etc. I also agree that “The Shadow of the Wind” is a brilliant title. 🙂
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I can see I have some more Gabriel García Márquez books to read. All with great titles. Thanks!
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Well, I think One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera are his two best, in that order. 🙂
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The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared sounds like a very intriguing book, and I can see how the title, although quite long, draws your attention as a reader. I think unusual titles capture one’s attention, mainly because they stand out from the norm! I like high-conflict ones; at the moment, I’m reading a thriller called It’s Me or Her🎄❄️
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Thank you, Ada! Ooh…conflict titles (like “It’s Me or Her”) can definitely be memorable. I’ve never read it, but the “Fight Club” novel kind of fits that category.
“The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared” IS a good read, though not an extraordinary book.
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Those are great titles!
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Thank you, Becky! I agree — the ones in the post and the ones in the comments. 🙂
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Absolutely!
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🙂
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I always liked the book title Steal This Book by Abbie Hoffman. I don’t know how many copies of the book were stolen, but always wondered and so has Wiki–“The book sold more than a quarter of a million copies between April and November 1971.[3] The number of copies that were stolen is unknown.[4]”
Nice theme Dave. Susi
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Thank you, Susi! Love that mention! One of the most memorably titled books ever. 🙂
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Thanks Dave. I must say I was tempted to steal it; however, I borrowed it from a friend who I think did. So I guess I was complicit by proxy. Ha.
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Ha, Susi! 😂 Secondhand stealing. 🙂 But, seriously, I feel you were guiltless in that situation.
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I think I read Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, solely because of its title. Another title that intrigued me was Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo. It was a great read as well. I am currently reading The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern. The writing is very dreamy.
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Thank you, Word Mage! When a title alone makes one want to read a novel, that’s an effective title indeed. 🙂 And the other two titles you named are memorable, too!
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Well, it’s non-fiction, but how about: Fascinating Facts About Famous Fiction Authors and the Greatest Novels of All Time: The Book Lover’s Guide to Literary Trivia.
They aren’t long, but I loved Richard Brautigan’s titles: The Hawkline Monster, In Watermelon Sugar, Trout Fishing in America and A Confederate General from Big Sur,
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Thank you, Dan! Certainly a very long title of mine. 🙂
Those four Richard Brautigan titles are definitely colorful and in no way boilerplate!
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Your exploration of novel titles makes me see them as art in themselves—tiny story portals before the first page. Some of these names linger in the mind long after the book is closed. Truly, a title can be as unforgettable as the story it introduces!
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Thank you, harythegr8! Eloquently said! You’re right that creating a memorable book title is kind of an art in itself.
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Thank you! Words have the power to shape worlds, and a perfect title is the first spark of that universe. Every phrase we choose is a step into timeless creation.
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You’re welcome! I wonder how often the title is thought of before the book is written. 🙂
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Absolutely! A book’s title is like its first handshake with the world — it must intrigue, resonate, and hint at the journey within. Crafting it is both art and intuition.
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Book titles are flattered at that description of them. 🙂
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Absolutely! A book’s title is the gateway to its world, and your appreciation shows a deep understanding of the story’s essence. Every great title leaves a lasting impression long before the first page is turned.
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🙂 👍 📙
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Your smile lit up the page,
Your thumbs-up felt like a gentle nudge,
And that closed book? A story well hugged. 😊📙👍
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Thank you! The inventor(s) of those emojis can take a bow. 🙂
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Absolutely—emoticons are tiny strokes of art that speak louder than words.
Just a few symbols can carry whole emotions like poetry ).
Gratitude to the genius minds who made feelings dance in text (^◡^)ノ♡.
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Love it!
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These are great titles. Some made me giggle without even reading the context of the story. 😊 Maggie
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Thank you, Maggie! There’s something to be said for a title that elicits that kind of reaction without knowing anything or much about the book. 🙂
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Nice post Dave.. I am not a 100 percent so I won’t linger but A raging Calm by Stan Barstow always seemed a very contradicttory title to me…. So thus, quite memorable.
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Thank you, Shehanne! Sorry you’re not feeling well; hope you’re better soon. Yes, a contradictory (oxymoronic?) title like “A Raging Calm” will stick in a person’s memory — which Stan Barstow must have felt good about.
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Well it has sure stuck in mine. And thank you for the kind wishes.
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Yes! And you’re welcome. 🙂
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How about Steven Millhauser’s Edwin Mullhouse : the life and death of an American writer, 1943-1954, by Jeffrey Cartwright : a novel? (I loved that book!)
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OMG, that’s about the strangest/most-fantastic title ever. Great mention, Liz! Thank you!
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You’re welcome, Dave!
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🙂
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Dear admired author, Thank you indeed for your precious sharing. I look forward to reading you as often as possible. Best regards, Ahmadou
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Thank you very much for the kind words, Ahmadou! 🙂
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Yet another great post, Dave, and I fear you’re going to be deluged. For me, Fay Weldon’s ‘The Life and Loves of a She-Devil’ is one for the history books, not just for the title but because it’s a wonderful book. The link back to Chaucer, along with the double-entendre of the last word makes ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ another that scores on both counts. More recently, ‘Ten Minutes and Thirty-Eight Seconds in this Strange World’ by Elif Shafak also qualifies. ‘Dopesick’ by Beth Macy has a title which reverberates not just for the terrible-sounding title but the appalling and tragic scandal to which it refers. I’ll stop there, but I may be back … Thanks as always for the exercise of my little grey cells! 🙂
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Thank you, Laura! You’re right about the many comments this topic will attract, and it will be an enjoyable experience. 🙂 I appreciate all the examples of memorable titles you listed. I wonder if the riveting/tragic word “Dopesick” was coined by the author or existed before? I never previously thought of the association between Margaret Atwood’s book title and Chaucer’s work — of course! I’m very glad you pointed that out. 🙂
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You’re welcome, Dave. I think the Chaucer connection is made in the section at the back of ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ – it’s billed as some sort of appendix, but is actually a part of the book. I’ve loaned my copy out at present, so I can’t check, but it’s some sort of weekend symposium taking place many years after the events of the book, with a speaker making the comment. I could be wrong, but whatever. 🙂 I’m not sure about the origin of the word ‘dopesick’, but I have a feeling it grew from the victims of the scandal who became so ill if they didn’t carry on taking the medication. I’ll be having a look through the other comments on your post later to see what other memorable titles have come your way. Stay safe, catch you later. 🙂
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I undoubtedly read the back section of “The Handmaid’s Tale” when reading that novel, but it has been many years and I guess I forgot the content, Laura. 🙂 I also own a copy of the book, and will try to locate it. 🙂
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I could be wrong about that, Dave, but I know it came from somewhere. It’s been a while since … 😊
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I hear you, Laura. Impossible to remember everything exactly!
(My daughter borrowed my 1980s paperback copy of “The Handmaid’s Tale” when she was studying that novel in a high school lit course earlier this year, so I’m not sure where it is at the moment. 🙂 )
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I hear you too. I don’t tend to lend books, but my sister asked and I couldn’t say no. If it doesn’t come back I can get an eBook copy. It’s a text that’s had a profound effect, that’s for sure. 🙂
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Yes, some lent books come back and some don’t. 🙂 😦 I can remember at least two specific books (they both happen to be nonfiction) that I lent out years ago that I don’t expect to see again.
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Ditto. And irritating. 😐
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We should have attached boomerangs to those lent-out books. 🙂
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Great idea! 🙂
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🙂
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The title of Jonas Jonasson’s 2009 novel is quite a mouthful and intriguing. Two memorably titled novels I’ve read and added to my small library are “Their Eyes were Watching God” by Zora Neale Hurston and “A Brief History of Seven Killings” by Marlon James. I’ve learned that Hurston’s novel is an American 1937 literary classic. Marlon James, a Jamaican-American award-winning novelist, explores the lives of the characters involved in the attempted murder of the Jamaican reggae singer Bob Marley on December 3, 1976.
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Thank you, Rosaliene! You named two memorable titles! Like you, I’ve read “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” and it is very compelling. I’ve also read a biography of Zora Neale Hurston; her life was quite compelling as well. And, unsurprisingly in our racist/sexist world, not an easy life.
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“Their Eyes Were Watching God” is on my must-read list.
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It definitely deserves its status as a classic, Liz.
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Good! I look forward to reading it.
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🙂
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Several years ago I read,” The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society” by Anne Barrows and Mary Ann Shaffer,a mouthful !
Michele
E @ P, way back
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Thank you, Michele! I’ve read that novel, too, and should have remembered to include it in my post. A mouthful of a title indeed! 🙂 And a pretty good World War II-era book.
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Very creative titles, indeed!
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Thank you, Dawn! I agree. 🙂
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What a wonderful way to end the month of November and welcome December, Dave. Oh, I love reading the tiles that invite us into a story long before we read the first sentence. As I read through your list, I was reminded that the titles that stay with me are often the ones that appear at exactly the right moment. When I look back over my own reading life, the titles that called to me were not always the most unusual or clever. They were the ones that met me where I was.
The Secrets We Kept by Lara Prescott. (A recommendation from Elisabeth Vandermeer) This title that felt like an invitation into a story of hidden lives and quiet courage. You recall Elisabeth introduced me to Russian Literature and this book was all about the title Dr. Zhivago.
Circe by Madeline Miller. A single name that carried the weight of myth, power, and transformation. A great way to return to the myths that I read as a child.
The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion. A title that arrived like a companion during a season of deep reflection and loss.
I Was Here by Rachel Kadish. After reading “The Weight of Ink” I found her book, “I was here” to be a reminder of legacy, memory, and the need to leave a gentle mark.
Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss. What can I say. As a child I could not resist this title. It way my doorway into playfulness and possibility.
Medicine Walk by Richard Wagamese, a Canadian author. I read this book after I read Richard Wagamese’s obituary. This title felt like a blessing, reminding me that stories themselves can be a form of healing.
Looking at this small collection, I think the real truth is this
We are drawn to the titles that answer something within us. They open the door to what we are ready or perhaps longing to discover. From the exuberance of Dr. Seuss to the introspection of Joan Didion, each title holds a piece of the journey.
Your post reminded me that titles are not just labels. They are invitations. They offer a clue to the inner landscape we are about to explore, and sometimes they arrive right when we need them most.
Another wonderful post that prompted me to reflect on the beauty of my reading journey I am looking forward to hearing what others add to the conversation. I am going to leave a long quote today!!
“All that we are is story. From the moment we are born to the time we continue on our spirit journey, we are involved in the creation of the story of our time here. It is what we arrive with. It is all we leave behind. We are not the things we accumulate. We are not the things we deem important. We are story. All of us. What comes to matter then is the creation of the best possible story we can while we’re here; you, me, us, together. When we can do that and we take the time to share those stories with each other, we get bigger inside, we see each other, we recognize our kinship – we change the world, one story at a time…”
Richard Wagamese
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Thank you, Rebecca! Wow — quite a comment! I appreciate all the memorable title mentions, and your thoughts about the importance of titles/the power of titles/the relevance-to-the-stories of titles/etc.
Loved the inclusion of “Green Eggs and Ham” by Dr. Seuss, a number of whose books had whimsical titles — including “One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish.” Many other children’s books by other authors have interesting titles, too.
And a beautiful quote from Richard Wagamese!
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you gave us some fun titles – and my fav of your post might be: Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet (2009)
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Thank you, Yvette! “Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet” is not only a book with a great title but also a great book. One of those two-timeline novels.
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well I just added it to my TBR – but that list is a little big right now – ha!
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I totally hear you about too-big TBR lists, Yvette!
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sigh – I guess it is a good problem to have
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True! 🙂
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Thinking on it, many titles came to mind, but I really think it was the book, more than the title I was remembering.
So, the one title that popped into mind without pondering was Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
I must say, I remember the title more than what is in the book, except the craziness in general… and a carousel. That must have been in Circus Circus.
Thanks Dave!
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Thank you, Resa! Terrific mention! One of the most colorfully titled books ever, with plenty of colorful writing between the covers. Hunter S. Thompson was quite a character.
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Yay!
Yes, it’s quite the … story. He was definitely a colourful character.
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I enjoyed that eccentric book a lot!
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Me too….AHH, that brings to mind another title. – “The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test” by: Tom Wolf.
Although it’s non fiction, it sure reads like fiction.
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The title of that Tom Wolfe book (which I’ve never read) is indeed vivid and memorable, Resa! Wolfe and Hunter S. Thompson were definitely both practitioners of “New Journalism.”
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Yes, “New Journalism.”
(Hard to read is more like it, but I’ll go with. the flow) 🤭
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Ha ha! 😂
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Well…if it walls like a duck …😂
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Ha! 🙂 Didn’t Tom Wolfe write “Waterfowl of the Vanities”? 🤔
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Flaming Water Foul.
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Good one, Resa!
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From your today’s proposals of memorable books I certainly remember Demon Copperhead and The 100-Year Old Man who climbed out the Window and Disappeared and that he even saved General Franco! One of the books I read many years ago and still rememember is Sophies Choice by William Styron and very much hope that we never have to face such a period again!! Many thanks, Dave, for your alway very interesting posts:)
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Thank you, Martina! Yes, the star of “The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared” has some very interesting experiences. 🙂 And the title of “Sophie’s Choice” definitely piqued the curiosity of anyone preparing to read William Styron’s Holocaust novel, and that choice was of course as horrendous as could be. 😦
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:):)
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🙂
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One I read recently is She’s a Lamb! by Meredith Hambrock. The title references The Sound of Music, which figures in the plot. Not a fun story, though. Delusion with a capital D!
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Thank you, Audrey! “She’s a Lamb!” is definitely a striking title! I hadn’t remembered those words from “The Sound of Music”; it has been many years since I’ve seen that movie. So, I appreciate the reminder. 🙂
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I like DEMON COPPERHEAD as a title, and I like another of Kingsolver’s titles, ANIMAL, VEGETABLE, MIRACLE, too–about a year when she and her family resolved to eat only food grown by them or produced in their neighborhood, or do without it. Gerald Durrell’s titles have always appealed to me, like MY FAMILY AND OTHER ANIMALS or MARRYING OFF MOTHER. Or what about Terry Pratchett’s FEET OF CLAY, which is about a Golem. My friend Clare wrote a novella about the day in 1959 when Swiss men voted against Swiss women getting the vote (they didn’t vote “yes” until 1971!) In English it’s called VOTING DAY (and I recommend it as an excellent book), but I love the title in German, which is THE DAY THE MEN SAID NO.
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Thank you, Kim! I agree that “Animal, Vegetable, Miracle” is an excellent title; I found that book to be a very good nonfiction work. The titles of most of Barbara Kingsolver’s other novels also “pop” — including “The Poisonwood Bible,” “Prodigal Summer,” and “Flight Behavior” (the last of which has a double meaning in the context of the book).
I’ve also read Gerald Durrell’s “My Family and Other Animals,” and agree that it has quite a memorable name.
I appreciate the other interesting title mentions, too!
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A memorable Italian novel title is “The Solitude of Prime Numbers” (La solitudine dei numeri primi) by Paolo Giordano. It’s a title inspired by a mathematical concept that perfectly captures the essence of the loneliness and isolation of the two main characters.
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Thank you, Luisa! ““The Solitude of Prime Numbers” is a terrific, evocative title — and I can see from your comment how it interestingly captures the book’s theme. Might be a long shot, but I’ll see if my local library has that novel. 🙂
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So glad you appreciated my comment!
I liked that novel a lot
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🙂
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I am glad you enjoyed The Late Show, and I am glad Misty’s human is home for Thanksgiving. Some of my favorite/memorable titles: The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven by Sherman Alexie, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce, The Magnificent Lives of Marjorie Post by Allison Pataki, Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman, and Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk by Kathleen Rooney. There is something lyrical to these long(ish) titles. I also like The Other Wes Moore by Wes Moore because it produces a “Huh?” reaction. I could go on (I seem to be attracted to books with memorable titles.
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Thank you, Madeline! I did greatly enjoy “The Late Show,” and am hoping my local library has the other installments of that Michael Connelly series starring Renee Ballard. 🙂 And I appreciate your naming of those various memorable titles! I’ve only read “Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine,” and liked that novel a lot — including the twist in it that I didn’t see coming.
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A friend who is Lakota recommended Sherman Alexie because he said I was reading an “Indian wanna-be” writer (Kingsolver). Reading Alexie’s book sharpened my awareness of the difference between books written by people who lived/experienced a culture or situation and those who are looking on. American Dirt by Jeanine Cummins is one of those–I wonder how the book would have been if written by someone who made the trek (I thought American Dirt was a good book, but I read it with a different eye.) Louise Erdrich refers to the “Indian wanna-be” phenomenon in her book The Sentence. Maybe you have already written a blog on this topic.
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I hear you, Madeline — authors of specific ethnicities/cultures have a better chance of depicting said ethnicities/cultures well, though of course many good novelists can get “in the heads” of almost any character. Other authors I like who are Native American or part-Native American include Tommy Orange and (as you mentioned) Louise Erdich. I’m pretty sure I’ve written on this topic; will take a look and post a link or links if I find it/them.
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Madeline, some past posts of mine that directly or indirectly address what you discussed:
https://daveastoronliterature.com/2024/12/01/a-title-wave-of-opposite-gender-novels/
https://daveastoronliterature.com/2024/08/25/should-cultural-appropriation-get-approbation/
https://daveastoronliterature.com/2020/12/27/many-first-world-characters-arent-secondary-in-the-third-world/
https://daveastoronliterature.com/2020/01/26/opposites-attract-some-authors/
https://daveastoronliterature.com/2019/10/13/native-american-characters-in-literature/
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All good, Dave. Thanks.
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You’re welcome, Madeline! 🙂
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I love the titles of Backman’s books! Big smiles here as I read, Dave. And the first book I thought of was “The Life We Bury” – by Allen Eskens. Such a title and a terrific book! 😊
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Thank you, Vicki! “The Life We Bury” IS a great/intriguing title! I just put that book on my to-read list. And I agree that Fredrik Backman has a knack for interesting titles. 🙂
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Sunday smiles, Dave! Thanks for your post! 🥰
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You’re welcome, Vicki, and thanks again for the comments. 🙂
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My pleasure! 🥰
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🙂
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I agree that THE LIFE WE BURY, by Allen Eskens, is terrific book. I’ve read all of his novels, and I especially recommend the latest, THE QUIET LIBRARIAN.
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Oh! Thanks for the suggestion, Kim. I’ve missed that one! 😉
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Thank you to Madeline Bialecki for recommending “The Late Show”!
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