Many authors seem to pick character names at random. Others pick names that personify the character. Sometimes the name is obviously symbolic, sometimes not so much.
Back in school we had a prof. who taught nothing but Faulkner. He'd sit on the edge of a table, chain-smoke cigarettes, and put them out on the sole of his shoe.
One day he said, "Now class, give me words that have start with SN. Then he went to the board and grabbed a stick of chalk. The students started calling words out and he listed them on the board.
Sneak, snide, snatch, snore, snoop, snicker, snuck, snipe, snap, snot, etc. There were a few others, but more the most part they all had negative connotations.
"So what's the bad guy's name in the story?" (I think it was Long Hot Summer, but it may have been another story with the same character)
"Snopes." was the answer.
"And what is his first name?"
"Flem," said another.
He replaced the chalk on the board and sat down. True story.
I try to craft my character's name to their personalities or their physical descriptions, but I'm not always successful. But it does remind me of Sydney Greenstreet playing Mr. Guttman in the Maltese Falcon. So I'm going to keep on trying.
Any others of you out there pick names that represent your characters?


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