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Questions 3 and 4

  • Mar. 13th, 2004 at 12:10 AM
mischevious, chomp
Fan: Okay, this is a common dispute between me and my friends: in Song of the Lioness, is it a-LAHN or AL-lan?

Tammy: [looking perplexed] AL-lan. [laughter] Sorry...

F: Where do you get the ideas for all your names?

T: Names? Well, I started out--when I started reading fantasy in, um, the late '60s, and throughout the '70s, there were a lot of fantasy novels with names that were like six syllables long, with apostrophes and accent-marks, [laughter] And... yeah. And I looked at 'em, and I got to the point where if I saw a name like that on the book, I wouldn't buy it. Um, to me what made it really work was if they sounded like names real people would use. It was a problem I had with a lot of fantasy then... is, is--it wasn't--didn't feel real, if I wanted it. So I actually started using names from our world, like Jonathan, George, and Gary. And now, I like--I still like it to feel like a name real people would use. Now I'm a little more sophisticated, so I fiddled with spellings for a bit. But, baby names. In particular, for a starter book, The New Age Baby Names Book. Umm... it has names from all over the world. It has names like "Margaret" and "William" in different forms that they appear in all over the w-world. If you want a miniature history lesson, just take a look at all the different languages that have a variant of the name "Alexander" and you know exactly where Alexander the Great went conquering.

A word of advice about baby name books: Put a cover no one can read through on your baby name book. You will not believe the things your so-called "friends" say to you, when they catch you reading a baby name book. [laughter]

There is another source if you get to go online a lot. It's the Kabalarian site. And, this is on my webpage, too. www.kabalerians.com. 682,000 names. They have Celtic names, Gaelic names, Turkish names, Frankish names, plant names, virtue names. They are a beauty.

Now, since I do fantasy--and these, these are both sources for any--whatever you write, it doesn't have to be fantasy or science fiction--whatever you write. For me, I'll sometimes fiddle with the spelling a little bit, to make it a little more unusual. And sometimes I'll have a bigger, flowery, longer name like Veralidaine or Trisana or Sandreline, and then the nickname is the one that feels like a regular name. But that's where I start--is, is with baby name books. I have... twenty-two of them. [laughter] You never know! [more laughter]

I looked up Indonesian baby names--there weren't any! I had to go look up Indonesia on the internet. And then I found out: Indonesia isn't one country. [laughter] It is fifty cultures [??that are formed??] into one country. So I got a honkin' book of South Pacific baby names, and--and--and named them with that. This is an important thing.

Comments

[info]19_99 wrote:
Mar. 12th, 2004 10:01 pm (UTC)
Now I really wish I went! Six hours would have been worth it, thanks so much for typing this up though!

~Kes
[info]q_sama wrote:
Mar. 13th, 2004 08:00 am (UTC)
Oh, it would've been so cool to have you there - maybe next time? :) Say... may I friend you??
[info]19_99 wrote:
Mar. 13th, 2004 10:07 am (UTC)
I will be there next time, and I hope I'm not lying. Yes, please friend me.

~Kes
[info]futurestarlet wrote:
Mar. 13th, 2004 09:40 am (UTC)
Indonesian baby names? So are the Copper Isles based on Indonesia? Or is that culture one of the ones used in the Circle books (which I haven't read)?
[info]q_sama wrote:
Mar. 13th, 2004 10:05 am (UTC)
I got the impression she was referring to The Copper Isles. They have a destinct SE Asian feel to them, while nothing in the Circle books do, so far.
(Anonymous) wrote:
Jul. 17th, 2004 11:03 am (UTC)
Yeah, I read somewhere (I forget where exactly) that the Copper Isles use Indonesian culture.
(Anonymous) wrote:
Mar. 9th, 2008 12:26 am (UTC)
Yamani
i always thought that the yamani islands were based on japan because of the kimonos the yamani waving cats and loads of thins like that what do you reckon i also thin that there shoulld be a book that is based in the yamani isles cos like in all the books u hear about them but u dont actually KNOW much about them and that say maybe kels daugther gets chosen to be a shang or something??it doesnt have to be kels daughter and that i would just like to hear more about the yamanis
[info]q_sama wrote:
Mar. 10th, 2008 02:53 pm (UTC)
Re: Yamani
The Yamanis are based on Japan, but the Trickster series, rooted in the Copper Isles, are based on Indonesian culture(s).
[info]nelka35 wrote:
Mar. 23rd, 2004 12:02 pm (UTC)
Cool! And yeah, Kabalarians is an interesting site...

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mischevious, chomp
[info]q_sama
"Q" is for "quor"

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