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Post by Tryina Denouement on Aug 10, 2014 12:47:04 GMT -5
like hell would that ever happen but she does have several catchier names tho Maybe an anagram of the name? how do you even
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Post by bandit on Aug 10, 2014 13:29:33 GMT -5
How about you figure it out yourself since it's your book and you clearly aren't open to our ideas.
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Post by Tryina Denouement on Aug 10, 2014 14:45:09 GMT -5
How about you figure it out yourself since it's your book and you clearly aren't open to our ideas. i am open but i am honestly so fcking confused i'll think it later
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Post by Dante on Aug 14, 2014 2:46:48 GMT -5
Why not a parody of Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher"?
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Post by Tryina Denouement on Aug 14, 2014 8:18:28 GMT -5
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Post by Tryina Denouement on Jul 14, 2015 7:24:56 GMT -5
I need a new title suggestion. It's for a different book. (I figured out the title for the other one, thank you very much! It's gonna be called The Iliyocaian Dream)
It's a story about this terribly arrogant city girl named Stephenie Disney, who's forced to move to an old villa in the countryside. Then she discovers that her new house has a ghost in the form of a rich heiress named Eliza Johnson who was killed by her fiance and her jealous uncle. Then salsa happens. Oh, did I mention that the portrait of Eliza herself plays a critical role in this?
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Post by Dante on Jul 14, 2015 16:09:35 GMT -5
If that's the case, you could do worse than The Portrait of Eliza Johnson, or for something snappier, The Portrait. Something detached and sparse can also seem cryptic and spooky - The Picture on the Wall (or wherever it may happen to be found)... The Last Heiress of [villa's name] is a possibility, too - hook people on that aspect of the story. Depending on the nature and strength of the relationship between protagonist and ghost, The Two Heiresses might fit the bill. This seems like the kind of novel that might be better taking its title from a line of the story itself, though, and only you would know what that might be.
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