Why Pen Names??

You may find this information interesting and thought-provoking. Even if you question whether this will ever be relevant for you, it is information worth saving for the future.

For the next several weeks, I will be addressing the controversial topic of pen names. The internet has A LOT to say about pen names, but because it is from so many sources, I have condensed it HERE.

Anne Rice, Dr. Seuss, Mark Twain, C. S. Lewis, George Elliot, Lewis Carroll, George Orwell. These are just a fraction of the Pen Names used by authors over the years.

A pen name may be used to make the author’ name more distinctive, to separate the author from their other writings, to disguise the author’s gender, to protect the author from retribution for their writings (if their political or religious viewpoints may be seen as radical or unpopular), to allow an author to try writing in multiple unrelated genres, to conceal/protect family relationships, assure the author’s privacy, or for any of a number of reasons related to the marketing of their work.

There is nothing illegal about using a pen name. If you are self-publishing through Amazon, follow the directions I will be sharing. They assure that your privacy will be protected on Amazon; however, there are ways you can be “found.” (After all, the internet shared the names above, along with hundreds of others). Amazon just makes it more difficult for you to be “found.” 

The essential requirement is that your pen name be memorable ( more memorable than your real name). Try to come up with a name that suits your genre and writing style—a name that sounds like the age range you are targeting with your writing and represents your genre. (A fun exercise is to use one of several Pen Name Generators you can find online.)

At the time you setup your Author Central Account, KDP asks for an author name. Give your pen name under the ‘Primary Author’ section.

Once your book is published, your pen name will be shown on your Author Central account-Bookshelf page. Your real name will not be visible on your Amazon book page once your book is published. 

When using a pen name your real name stays anonymous. Your actual account is set up under your real name, so you will get payments in your real name. 

Note: Once your book is published, you CANNOT change your book’s primary author field. (You can create a new edition with the updated author name, but this may be a hassle.) Just be careful when filling out the information boxes.

I look forward to sharing more next week!

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