Oct
24

Find your baby’s name in the pages of a book

Posted in Name my baby
by Lorain County Moms

nameberry.com

Cool baby names today may reference celebrities, sure, but more and more parents are looking to fictional characters for inspiration when naming their children.

Atticus

The names of author Harper Lee and all her characters in “To Kill a Mockingbird” Atticus, Scout, even Radley have been taken up by the baby-naming public. It doesn’t hurt that Atticus it’s an ancient Roman name meaning “from Athens” Finch was judged the No. 1 movie hero of all time by the American Film Institute.

Darcy

Darcy, as in Mr., may be the ultimate Jane Austen hero name, but these days it’s enjoying a new turn in the sun as a name for girls, following in Emma’s footsteps as an Austen-inspired favorite.

Eloise

The mischievous little girl who lives at The Plaza has been enjoying more widespread visibility since the death of author Kay Thompson, who had kept the books out of print. Eloise, along with many of its El sisters from Ella to Eleanor, is a newly-fashionable baby name combining the heroine’s worldliness and insouciance.

Esme

Esme enjoys not one but two literary fan clubs, those that remember it from the J.D. Salinger story “For Esme: With Love and Squalor” and a much larger more modern group of Twilight fans.

Gatsby

“The Great Gatsby” has a new generation of fans who are taking up the antihero’s last name Gatsby as a first, and attention to the name will only intensify when the new film version, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire, Carey Mulligan and Isla Fisher, premieres this December. The book’s Jay Gatsby gussied up his name from Gatz, whose meaning is given variously as left-handed, cat, God and person from Gat.

Holden

The name of the alienated young hero of Catcher in the Rye, a favorite of teenage readers, is being taken up by this generation of baby namers. Not coincidentally, it’s right in step with a trend for two-syllable boys’ names that end in n and have a surname feel. It’s Number 316 on the popularity list.

Kairi

Kairi, which means “sea” in Japanese, is the name of the main female character in the popular animated fantasy series, Kingdom Hearts. Voiced by Hayden Panettiere in the main series, Kairi is one of the seven Princesses of the Heart and a new sweetheart of baby namers.

Katniss

Katniss Everdeen is the heroine of the popular “Hunger Games” trilogy by Suzanne Collins, whose name comes from the (very real) edible aquatic plant of the genus Sagittaria. Katniss’s father tells her that if she “finds herself,” she’ll never go hungry, a sentiment modern parents may want to impart to their namesake babies.

Rhett

Where Scarlett goes, can Rhett be far behind? Scarlett Johansson breathed new life into the literary moniker of Scarlett O’Hara, and now we see a dramatic rise in interest in the name of her “Gone With the Wind” companion Rhett, a variation of the (also newly popular) Welsh name Rhys.

Zuzu

Today’s parents grew up watching “It’s A Wonderful Life” on television every Christmas, and the nickname of the little girl who tells dad Jimmy Stewart that every time a bell rings, an angel gets its wings, is finding new favor along with other double names such as Coco and Lulu.

Nameberry is a baby-naming site produced by Pamela Redmond Satran and Linda Rosenkrantz, co-authors of 10 bestselling baby name guides, including the newest, “Beyond Ave and Aiden: The Enlightened Guide to Naming Your Baby.” See more at http://nameberry.com.

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