13 / 76
Aug 2020

Well ... Only simple shapes because I don't have enough confidence in my line to draw characters and settings as breathtaking as I would have liked. Suddenly, for now, I'm happy with a small cube and lots of other simple geometric shapes, without shading with only a line art.

I would also like to be able to surprise the readers of so many, as for example for my very colorful cover and which has nothing in common.

It does have meaning, though not in quite the way your title does. My title is the point that Hannah keeps trying to make, again and again -- to her family, to her friends, and most of all to herself.

My title is very straightforward as it’s a comedic fantasy that doesn’t itself seriously all that much. The Longest Spring Break in NonHuman History is called that because our unlucky protagonist (Gwyn) gets kidnapped at the beginning of Spring Break, taken to a magical realm she’s been reading about as a child, and must figure out how to escape and get back home. In this realm, time moves 13x faster than it does in Earth, so 80 days pass in this realm while Gwyn is trying to escape but only 6 days pass on Earth. So a very long Spring Break, and a protagonist who learns she isn’t exactly human. Thus: Longest Spring Break in NonHuman History.

I know. I’m freaking title genius. :joy:

I am so simple minded, titles is so hard to come up with for me, words is just not my thing :sweat_smile:

Usually my storys i just my main characters name, but the comic im doing now is simply called "Djinns" and well, there are magical kind of people called djinns that is a big part of the story :upside_down:

My story is called "The Claimed: A Clash of Copper and Gold."

"The Claimed" because a particularly heinous tradition in the nation of feuding tribes where the story is set is "Claiming" enemies as personal slaves who lose their identity and belong exclusively to their one Master.

"A Clash of Copper and Gold" because the MC prince's feudal state has copper mines and his enemy's feudal state (which is also where his future love interest is from) has gold mines. Symbolism with gold and copper is used throughout the book.

Oh, very nice!

I feel that the titles of my stories are fairly straightforward. Trapped by the Mafia that I am currently posting here refers to both lovers being literally and figuratively trapped by their affiliation with the mafia clan.

My upcoming comic title MAOR is protagonist's name, but it also means 'light' or 'illuminary' in Hebrew. It's freakishly coincidental because my character can form light from his palms.

Yes, My story is called The Stalker, I decided to call it that because I really didn't want to call it Memento Reviews or something reviews (The Stalker is a review book). I called it The Stalker because I stalk books, but The Stalker is named after The Watcher. (a stalker with way too much passion)
I hope that answered your question!

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One of my books STORM SOWN is often misread as STORM SNOW. :smiley:

I came up with the title to depict that all the main characters in the story (protagonist and antagonist) are like seeds SOWN in a STORM, and the turbulent evolution they need to go through the storyline.
This is a Fantasy Story, so the elements of the fantastic are higher than drama or emotional content.

Part one of a Trilogy titled ‘The SEVEN OF LEGEND Saga’, STORM SOWN is almost 250 episodes long here in Tapas (Currently at Episode 38 of 100 scheduled) .
And also available on Amazon for $3.99 US.

My Title is Selected and refers to the main plot and around 9 other events that occur
I can't elaborate on all (spoilers)

It's Runner. lol The main characters are mostly Runners by profession which is based on the ancient Chilean Chasqui. That last bit as some backstory but even without the historical information, the characters run lol the title is kind of self-explanatory :stuck_out_tongue:

Synastry is astrological term it means:

comparison between the horoscopes of two or more people in order to determine their likely compatibility and relationship.

I chose this because I wanted astological term as the title, and it also has meaning. In this world people have elemental powers and different signs and elements react differently, in powers and in personally. im the end, everyone has to work together to survive.

I think this has been a thread before, because I remember explaining my title. Anyway, in short, my novel is called fair, no fair, because Simon is unreliable as a narrator and has a different view on things as other characters, so I want the reader to question whether actions by characters, both by Simon and other Characters are fair or not fair. What some may see as a fair reaction can be interpreted differently by someone else. https://tapas.io/series/Fair-No-Fair-/info

Great thread question by the way!

Why I named my story Open Flame is because I thought of how moths are attracted to fire, and when too close to the flame when you hit it you can die. (If I got this wrong there's no way in changing the title haha).

Basically it's about moderation of everything. , For the moth symbol meaning metamorphosis and change of a human being, and how there has to be balance .The flame symbolizes desire and if too close you singe your wings and can die.

I'm kind of ranting but thats some reasons why I chose the comic title Open Flame.

Also when I think of Open Flame I think of magic.

Yes the title was thought of randomly!

The Two Alphas of Rosewood Creek seem pretty obvious to readers at first but it definitely has significant meaning later on in the book. But if i speak on it anymore, I probably will give away the story. :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

The End of All Things is an obvious reference to an event that happens in the novel's prologue and is referred to as such throughout :sweat_smile: It's also played off as a bit of an over-dramatisation by the MC because though society collapsed and loads of people died, the natural world carried on, like when a lot of apocalyptic "end of the world" scenarios IRL really just mean the end of humanity rather than the world as a whole.

Yep! Secunda is also Latin and it means 'Second' and one of the overall themes of the book is about second lives. The Latin also ties in with scientific nomenclature since one of the main characters is a monster who has yet to be scientifically identified (as at time of the story, his kind are beasts of folklore, like the yeti).