As many of you know (and Jay now, after the Vent interview), I completed my first full-length novel over the summer. I'm still shopping it around, but the one thing that keeps bugging me is the title.
Currently, it's called "The Case of the Baleful Buzzard."
At first, I thought about calling each book in the series a "The Case of..." but I'm liking the idea less and less. Let me explain a bit about the series and the basic plot of this novel:
The series: I want to call it "The Armadillo Mysteries." The main character, Dilbert Pinkerton, is a mutant armadillo private detective. He digs for the truth. It's essentially superhero detective fiction, similar in vein to Simon R. Green's From the Nightside fantasy detective series and a few other inspirations. The adventures would be mostly self-contained with some small hints on future adventures thrown in or a background over-reaching plot (like the major crime boss Dill runs into).
The book: It started from a Facebook conversation I had once. I posted a joke that Superman couldn't be that country bumpkin Clark Kent. Friends joined in and started making similar jokes. One person said Bruce Wayne couldn't be Batman. I said "Batman's just a myth put on by the police department." And then I thought, "Huh, what if he was?" So that's basically the mystery: members of the police department in Nevermore Bay take turns dressing up as The Buzzard, have a Buzzard-symbol in the sky, have a Buzzardmobile, etc. And it's Dill's job in the novel to discover that mystery and then decide what to do about it.
Before I changed the title to "The Case of...", my working title was "The City of Smoke & Mirrors," which I'm thinking more and more of changing back to.
What do you creative folk think?
Currently, it's called "The Case of the Baleful Buzzard."
At first, I thought about calling each book in the series a "The Case of..." but I'm liking the idea less and less. Let me explain a bit about the series and the basic plot of this novel:
The series: I want to call it "The Armadillo Mysteries." The main character, Dilbert Pinkerton, is a mutant armadillo private detective. He digs for the truth. It's essentially superhero detective fiction, similar in vein to Simon R. Green's From the Nightside fantasy detective series and a few other inspirations. The adventures would be mostly self-contained with some small hints on future adventures thrown in or a background over-reaching plot (like the major crime boss Dill runs into).
The book: It started from a Facebook conversation I had once. I posted a joke that Superman couldn't be that country bumpkin Clark Kent. Friends joined in and started making similar jokes. One person said Bruce Wayne couldn't be Batman. I said "Batman's just a myth put on by the police department." And then I thought, "Huh, what if he was?" So that's basically the mystery: members of the police department in Nevermore Bay take turns dressing up as The Buzzard, have a Buzzard-symbol in the sky, have a Buzzardmobile, etc. And it's Dill's job in the novel to discover that mystery and then decide what to do about it.
Before I changed the title to "The Case of...", my working title was "The City of Smoke & Mirrors," which I'm thinking more and more of changing back to.
What do you creative folk think?