A short article about naming the characters in The Mice
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The two lead humans are called Mulligatawny and Diana. Subsequent characters I have tried to name after obvious contemporary celebrities, although with mixed success (problems with readers making the link.) Diana is named after Princess Diana, Harry after Harry Potter (or Prince Harry). I have considered a 'Becks'—David Beckham, or the beer?—and one of the children is named after Paris Hilton. The most overt reference to date is to Barack Obama as readers of Culture Shock will know. Unfortunately, if someone asks me what 'Mulligatawny' has to do with any of this I cannot say, as the name came to me while I was staring at a spreadsheet of soup cans heading to Tesco. He was previously called Fob... The woman called 'Scooter' also bucks the trend, but I could not resist it, and 'Bailey' is another name for a woman which I like and may use one day.
As for the aliens, I am extremely proud of the simplicity of 'Cota' and I like also the 'Black Chargehand' although the latter has not been printed in the book so readers are unaware and probably wondering what his name is. A nod to Judge Dredd is that we never see his eyes, although this was making him too expressionless and so they are creeping in.
Roger Mason 2013
Diana attempts to rescue Rowling from the soup vat in The Mice: The Factory Menace |
The two lead humans are called Mulligatawny and Diana. Subsequent characters I have tried to name after obvious contemporary celebrities, although with mixed success (problems with readers making the link.) Diana is named after Princess Diana, Harry after Harry Potter (or Prince Harry). I have considered a 'Becks'—David Beckham, or the beer?—and one of the children is named after Paris Hilton. The most overt reference to date is to Barack Obama as readers of Culture Shock will know. Unfortunately, if someone asks me what 'Mulligatawny' has to do with any of this I cannot say, as the name came to me while I was staring at a spreadsheet of soup cans heading to Tesco. He was previously called Fob... The woman called 'Scooter' also bucks the trend, but I could not resist it, and 'Bailey' is another name for a woman which I like and may use one day.
Cota extracts a badly-burned Barack out of an alien human-carrier. From The Mice: Culture Shock |
As for the aliens, I am extremely proud of the simplicity of 'Cota' and I like also the 'Black Chargehand' although the latter has not been printed in the book so readers are unaware and probably wondering what his name is. A nod to Judge Dredd is that we never see his eyes, although this was making him too expressionless and so they are creeping in.
Roger Mason 2013