Unforgettable Names Spoilers .
#1
Posted 05 June 2013 - 07:49 PM
For some reason, some names get stuck in my mind and I keep repeating them (mostly when other people are not around :-)
The one that has the most effect on me right now is "Toras Redone" (I have no idea why but maybe it is tied to strong emotional attachment of betrayal and loss)
The other is "Bars. Iron Bars!". It is little pick me upper for me but has to be said in a particular loud way
Draconus is another one which gets a strong reaction.
I am wondering if there is any explanation for this. Like some "musical" or "emotional" resonance thing.
Also would be interesting to find out what others think are "catchy" names :-)
Interestingly SE comes up with some very good names (wonder if they is any pattern to making these up).
The one that has the most effect on me right now is "Toras Redone" (I have no idea why but maybe it is tied to strong emotional attachment of betrayal and loss)
The other is "Bars. Iron Bars!". It is little pick me upper for me but has to be said in a particular loud way
Draconus is another one which gets a strong reaction.
I am wondering if there is any explanation for this. Like some "musical" or "emotional" resonance thing.
Also would be interesting to find out what others think are "catchy" names :-)
Interestingly SE comes up with some very good names (wonder if they is any pattern to making these up).
#2
Posted 05 June 2013 - 10:12 PM
Kagamandra Tulas Shorn, High Mage Tesormalandis, High Mage Stumpy. I want a book about those last two.
Hello, soldiers, look at your mage, now back to me, now back at your mage, now back to me. Sadly, he isn’t me, but if he stopped being an unascended mortal and switched to Sole Spice, he could smell like he’s me. Look down, back up, where are you? You’re in a warren with the High Mage your cadre mage could smell like. What’s in your hand, back at me. I have it, it’s an acorn with two gates to that realm you love. Look again, the acorn is now otataral. Anything is possible when your mage smells like Sole Spice and not a Bole brother. I’m on a quorl.
#3
Posted 05 June 2013 - 10:23 PM
Telorast and Curdle. One's very much a fantasy name but in Erikson's typically catchy world-fitting mold, the other is a very Malazan-via-Glen Cook instantly descriptive word name. And they go great together.
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#4
Posted 06 June 2013 - 06:48 AM
I really like the name people from One Eye Cat (I think it's One Eye Cat) get. Like Sweetest Sufferance, Studious Lock, Precious Thimble and Humble Measures. They're kind of descriptive like the marines but also kind of lyrical? Other than that I really like some of the Marines names like Smiles and Bottle.
#5
Posted 06 June 2013 - 12:00 PM
Those Grey Sword names stuck, such as Farakalian or Itkovian. Though not descriptive, they have a certain appeal...or what have you.
#6
Posted 06 June 2013 - 03:39 PM
Dessimbelackis. Bairoth Gild. Pretty much all of the Elient. SE's naming conventions are off the chain and on the mark nearly 90% of the time.
I too love the names of native One Eye Catians.The adjective-noun style is fantastic.
I too love the names of native One Eye Catians.The adjective-noun style is fantastic.
This post has been edited by Spoilsport Stonny: 06 June 2013 - 03:40 PM
Theorizing that one could poop within his own lifetime, Doctor Poopet led an elite group of scientists into the desert to develop a top secret project, known as QUANTUM POOP. Pressured to prove his theories or lose funding, Doctor Poopet, prematurely stepped into the Poop Accelerator and vanished. He awoke to find himself in the past, suffering from partial amnesia and facing a mirror image that was not his own. Fortunately, contact with his own bowels was made through brainwave transmissions, with Al the Poop Observer, who appeared in the form of a hologram that only Doctor Poopet could see and hear. Trapped in the past, Doctor Poopet finds himself pooping from life to life, pooping things right, that once went wrong and hoping each time, that his next poop will be the poop home.
#7
Posted 08 June 2013 - 06:09 PM
From the start Fiddler brought up all the incredibly negative connotations
I don't have time to consider things I have to consider.
#8
Posted 08 June 2013 - 07:47 PM
Dessimbelackis has stuck ever since I saw someone on here call him Dessimbewacky 
Worry's already mentioned Telorast and Curdle, but for me a lot of the two-word names stand out most - Anomander Rake and Silchas Ruin being the main two. Spinnock is nice too - it just sounds lovely spoken aloud.

Worry's already mentioned Telorast and Curdle, but for me a lot of the two-word names stand out most - Anomander Rake and Silchas Ruin being the main two. Spinnock is nice too - it just sounds lovely spoken aloud.
- Wyrd bið ful aræd -
#9
Posted 10 June 2013 - 07:54 PM
Studlock, on 06 June 2013 - 06:48 AM, said:
I really like the name people from One Eye Cat (I think it's One Eye Cat) get. Like Sweetest Sufferance, Studious Lock, Precious Thimble and Humble Measures.
This. I also really like Lazan Door and Madrun Badrun (which may just be the most fun Malazan name to say out loud.)
This post has been edited by Salt-Man Z: 10 June 2013 - 07:54 PM
"Here is light. You will say that it is not a living entity, but you miss the point that it is more, not less. Without occupying space, it fills the universe. It nourishes everything, yet itself feeds upon destruction. We claim to control it, but does it not perhaps cultivate us as a source of food? May it not be that all wood grows so that it can be set ablaze, and that men and women are born to kindle fires?"
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
#10
Posted 10 June 2013 - 08:25 PM
Dessimbelackis is a great choice, there's just something about it, like Ozymandias. It fits right alongside Anomander as absolutely perfect for the character.
Skwish is also one of my favorite names. Sounds great phonetically, evokes funny connotations that are character-appropriate, and the spelling itself just tickles me.
Skwish is also one of my favorite names. Sounds great phonetically, evokes funny connotations that are character-appropriate, and the spelling itself just tickles me.
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#11
Posted 12 June 2013 - 08:54 PM
I have only read Gardens of the Moon, yet I've found that the names SE chooses for his characters are either creatively unique or wildly stupid with no grey-area. "Sorry" and "Worrytown" are two examples of such names that seemed like appropriations of fictionalized reality, which did not seem to sit well with a true conception of a fantastical world. I don't want to be reminded that "worry" or "sorriness" or any other human emotion is descriptive in a world contra our own.
#12
Posted 12 June 2013 - 09:01 PM
How come?
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#13
Posted 12 June 2013 - 09:49 PM
worry, on 12 June 2013 - 09:01 PM, said:
How come?
Not sure if this was me you directed your response at.
I can make an amendment to my statement by adding that I don't want human emotion to be descriptive in human terms and explicit in the things that are signified by those terms. To simplify myself,, I feel like it'd be shallow to assume sorrow or worry as emotive descriptors in the Malaz world, since these are linguistic appropriations that belong to "us" in our reality, not to SE.
When we recognize a word, such as sorry, that we already have purpose for, I don't think we can divorce it from it's hermeneutical baggage. It's a weak way of ascribing characters their intended (or opposite) tropes. If that makes sense.
#14
Posted 12 June 2013 - 09:56 PM
Got to say the Panspot'sun Desert-don't remember where the @#$% apostrophe goes-struck me as very funny. Both SE and ICE can be very punny when it suits them...
#15
Posted 12 June 2013 - 10:30 PM
close_one_eye, on 12 June 2013 - 09:49 PM, said:
Not sure if this was me you directed your response at.
I can make an amendment to my statement by adding that I don't want human emotion to be descriptive in human terms and explicit in the things that are signified by those terms. To simplify myself,, I feel like it'd be shallow to assume sorrow or worry as emotive descriptors in the Malaz world, since these are linguistic appropriations that belong to "us" in our reality, not to SE.
When we recognize a word, such as sorry, that we already have purpose for, I don't think we can divorce it from it's hermeneutical baggage. It's a weak way of ascribing characters their intended (or opposite) tropes. If that makes sense.
I can make an amendment to my statement by adding that I don't want human emotion to be descriptive in human terms and explicit in the things that are signified by those terms. To simplify myself,, I feel like it'd be shallow to assume sorrow or worry as emotive descriptors in the Malaz world, since these are linguistic appropriations that belong to "us" in our reality, not to SE.
When we recognize a word, such as sorry, that we already have purpose for, I don't think we can divorce it from it's hermeneutical baggage. It's a weak way of ascribing characters their intended (or opposite) tropes. If that makes sense.
It appears you are saying you don't like it because it can become a lazy shorthand for the author, like just-add-water character development. I can see that, and it's probably been done in plenty of fantasy. SE, however, takes the naming convention in partial homage to/inspiration from Glen Cook (who never used it that way), and also there's an in-world Malazan explanation for the naming convention that you just don't have context for in GotM. In other words, regardless of whether you like individual names or not (or whether you change your mind on that or not over the series), it is distinctly not what you think it is as of now. It's not Prince Charming. So I hope you grow to like it, though it's still possible it won't appeal to you even when you see the difference developed.
This post has been edited by worry: 12 June 2013 - 10:37 PM
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#16
Posted 12 June 2013 - 10:38 PM
worry, on 12 June 2013 - 10:30 PM, said:
close_one_eye, on 12 June 2013 - 09:49 PM, said:
Not sure if this was me you directed your response at.
I can make an amendment to my statement by adding that I don't want human emotion to be descriptive in human terms and explicit in the things that are signified by those terms. To simplify myself,, I feel like it'd be shallow to assume sorrow or worry as emotive descriptors in the Malaz world, since these are linguistic appropriations that belong to "us" in our reality, not to SE.
When we recognize a word, such as sorry, that we already have purpose for, I don't think we can divorce it from it's hermeneutical baggage. It's a weak way of ascribing characters their intended (or opposite) tropes. If that makes sense.
I can make an amendment to my statement by adding that I don't want human emotion to be descriptive in human terms and explicit in the things that are signified by those terms. To simplify myself,, I feel like it'd be shallow to assume sorrow or worry as emotive descriptors in the Malaz world, since these are linguistic appropriations that belong to "us" in our reality, not to SE.
When we recognize a word, such as sorry, that we already have purpose for, I don't think we can divorce it from it's hermeneutical baggage. It's a weak way of ascribing characters their intended (or opposite) tropes. If that makes sense.
It appears you are saying you don't like it because it can become a lazy shorthand for the author, like just-add-water character development. I can see that, and it's probably been done in plenty of fantasy. SE, however, takes the naming convention in partial homage to/inspiration from Glen Cook (who never used it that way), and also there's an in-world Malazan explanation for the naming convention that you just don't have context for in GotM. In other words, regardless of whether you like individual names or not (or whether you change your mind on that or not over the series), it is distinctly not what you think it is as of now. So I hope you grow to like it.
I'm going to stick with the series all the same. Like I said, it's really not a huge distraction since the writing is, in fact, very strong and his concision is admirable for a fantasy series! I'm glad to hear this is all explained throughout the course of the story. Thanks for you feedback!
#17
Posted 12 June 2013 - 10:57 PM
I will revise a little to say that I don't want to paint any one thing as universally true (or untrue for that matter). There are lots of characters, from lots of places/cultures, and thus a wide variety of naming conventions are represented. I'll just repeat that as far as I recall, they all pretty much have in-world plausibility, but I can't deny there are po-mo/metafictional motivations on occasion as well.
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#18
Posted 15 August 2013 - 01:52 PM
I always loved the names Throatslitter and Deadsmell. Also Cowl is a cool name for an assassin.
'I am going to beat a god senseless.'
#19
Posted 16 August 2013 - 08:54 PM
The crimson guard have some great names. Short and memorable. I particularly resonate with Lor-sinn for some reason (otherwise a completely forgettable character).
#20
Posted 17 August 2013 - 01:39 PM
nacht, on 16 August 2013 - 08:54 PM, said:
The crimson guard have some great names. Short and memorable. I particularly resonate with Lor-sinn for some reason (otherwise a completely forgettable character).
Even though we've not met him yet, only heard of him. I still remember the name of Cal-Brinn very well. Cool name.

'I am going to beat a god senseless.'