ralphkern
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2013
- Messages
- 1,156
I am close to finishing the first draft of my second novel and I am looking at changing some place holder names for a variety of reasons.
The most significant one, by far, is the name of a starship, that will also form the title of the novel.
At the moment, she is called 'Hawking' but there are a few reasons I don't want to use this name. For one, due to events in the novel it may be viewed as slightly disrespectful to who it is named after. Two, considering plot events that are involved, it would be a little too hackneyed. Three, it doesn't fit in with the naming conventions of that class of ship.
So the ship:
She is an explorer vessel, built during the days of humanities first forays to the nearest stars. She is not a warship although does get involved in a couple of battles, but they are mostly about using tactics and improvised weapons than her actually being armed.
The conventions for this class is that they are named after either famous explorers or famous exploration ships through history (this is historical to the novel as well, so would include contemporary space age).
At the moment, I am thinking 'Magellan' but feel that may be a somewhat cumbersome title, however am willing to go with it.
One's that I have eliminated for various plot reasons or simply they don't fit for me.
Discovery, Odyssey, Armstrong, Voyager, Enterprise(I'm sure someone would have suggested it!), Beagle, Columbus, Anything too far out of public consciousness (e.g. Zheng He).
Possibilities I am considering:
Apollo (although a 'competing' ship is already called Gagarin and I'm happy with that one as I don't feel Russian accomplishments are reflected enough in sci fi. This isn't a cold war allegory)
Magellan (As I say, nice but maybe a little too cumbersome)
Pioneer (not sure it captures the mood)
Endurance (I like this one as it fits in well with the theme of the book too, they have to overcome some nasty situations but... is may be too close to the title of the first novel in the series 'Endeavour' however that might be also be a bonus so an opinion on that would be welcome)
The theme of the book, that it would be nice to capture with the name, is that it is more a mystery crime thriller in space that spans several star systems than a straight sci fi. It is a mix of a whodunnit and then once that's resolved a whydidit, combined with a healthy dose of ancient alien artifacts.
Any suggestions or opinions on my ideas are more than welcome.
The most significant one, by far, is the name of a starship, that will also form the title of the novel.
At the moment, she is called 'Hawking' but there are a few reasons I don't want to use this name. For one, due to events in the novel it may be viewed as slightly disrespectful to who it is named after. Two, considering plot events that are involved, it would be a little too hackneyed. Three, it doesn't fit in with the naming conventions of that class of ship.
So the ship:
She is an explorer vessel, built during the days of humanities first forays to the nearest stars. She is not a warship although does get involved in a couple of battles, but they are mostly about using tactics and improvised weapons than her actually being armed.
The conventions for this class is that they are named after either famous explorers or famous exploration ships through history (this is historical to the novel as well, so would include contemporary space age).
At the moment, I am thinking 'Magellan' but feel that may be a somewhat cumbersome title, however am willing to go with it.
One's that I have eliminated for various plot reasons or simply they don't fit for me.
Discovery, Odyssey, Armstrong, Voyager, Enterprise(I'm sure someone would have suggested it!), Beagle, Columbus, Anything too far out of public consciousness (e.g. Zheng He).
Possibilities I am considering:
Apollo (although a 'competing' ship is already called Gagarin and I'm happy with that one as I don't feel Russian accomplishments are reflected enough in sci fi. This isn't a cold war allegory)
Magellan (As I say, nice but maybe a little too cumbersome)
Pioneer (not sure it captures the mood)
Endurance (I like this one as it fits in well with the theme of the book too, they have to overcome some nasty situations but... is may be too close to the title of the first novel in the series 'Endeavour' however that might be also be a bonus so an opinion on that would be welcome)
The theme of the book, that it would be nice to capture with the name, is that it is more a mystery crime thriller in space that spans several star systems than a straight sci fi. It is a mix of a whodunnit and then once that's resolved a whydidit, combined with a healthy dose of ancient alien artifacts.
Any suggestions or opinions on my ideas are more than welcome.