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Mehreen
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Dec 11, 2016 04:53PM

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I used a pen name because my family name (Beaule) is a French one, and most anglophones would pronounce it as in 'beautiful'. So I decided to use my ancestor's family name Boley, much easier to pronounce.
My Ripper Hunting Days

George Elliot was a pen name for Mary Ann Evans who was compelled to use it simply for being a woman. Her book: Mill on the Floss.


Yeah a day will come when pen names will be acronyms.

As a reader, that's helpful as heck. Both for authors where I want to gobble up every thing they've ever written, and for authors where I really don't :)
Some examples:
Iain M. Banks (Sci-Fi) vs Iain Banks (Literary Fiction). Here the difference is very much only in topic - his writing style is quite distinct and clearly the same author - but he's kind of a "dense" stylist. I can handle that in a fascinating and rich sci-fi world like his Culture novels, but not so much in a dreary real-world setting. So I only read the M. books :).
Claire North (Real world(ish) set fantasy that's pretty good) vs Catherine Webb (YA Fantasy, haven't gotten around to reading any of this) vs. Kate Griffin (Adult Urban Fantasy - and probably one of my favourite authors ever under this pseudonym). This is a good example that's the opposite of Banks, because they aren't only different genre-wise, but wildly (really wildly) different stylistically. Kate Griffin books are auto-buy for me, whereas Claire North I usually wait until a few friends have reviewed them because they're more hit and miss for me (but overall, pretty good.)
M.R. Carey vs. Mike Carey - Hugely well known comic writer (Lucifer, Constantine, etc), who also published the Felix Castor novels under Mike Carey, but published "The Girl with All the Gifts" which was a big hit a year or two ago under his initials. I read somewhere he wanted to do the opposite of George Elliot, and appear initially gender-ambiguous, and let readers approach the book (and the HUGE twist in it) without the baggage of all his authorly history. Here I happily read anything he publishes under both names, but I know a lot of fans of the M.R. books who have never (and would never) pick up a graphic novel - and have never noticed the Felix Castor urban fantasy novels he also published under that name.
And perhaps one of the best known ones: Nora Roberts vs. J.D. Robb. Here the J.D. Robb books often actually have Nora Roberts name right on the cover now, so it's not about privacy, it's the completely different genre - contemporary romance for Roberts, vs Sci-Fi futuristic romance as Robb. But that's now: Initially it was because her publishers 20 odd years ago didn't think readers would be able to keep up with two books a year, or that they'd take seriously anyone who could write that fast and it would dilute her brand, so they put them out under another name.
Wow, that turned into a bit of a ramble. Sorry :)
tl;dr: Using pen names to separate genres and/or styles, even when they're utterly transparent, can help keep different sets of books in front of the right audience, without alienating people who might not like one or the other.



In my case I needed to make a name more digestible, otherwise no sane Anglo-Saxon would come anywhere near, besides, needed to separate my activity as a practicing lawyer with authorship of books of controversial content and style-:)

In my case I needed to make a name more digestible, otherwise no sane Anglo-Sa..."
Lol Nik what is your real name? I'm curious.





I think it changed since this was posted, but you can sign up on Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ with each of your pen names.
Books mentioned in this topic
My Ripper Hunting Days (other topics)Authors mentioned in this topic
Jerzy Kosiński (other topics)Iain M. Banks (other topics)
Iain Banks (other topics)
Claire North (other topics)
Catherine Webb (other topics)
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