: When two authors write a book, what order should I put them in? Me and my friend are currently writing a Sci-fi novel. When we publish it, we want both of our names to be on the cover.
Me and my friend are currently writing a Sci-fi novel. When we publish it, we want both of our names to be on the cover. Do I have to put our names in alphabetically, or some order?
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Use a pseudonym
When writing Red Dwarf, Rob Grant and Doug Naylor used the pseudonym of Grant Naylor for their work. This avoids the problem of whose name comes first, by using a single arbitrary name as author.
Neal Stephenson took the same approach when he collaborated with his uncle George Jewsbury to write Interface, using the pseudonym Stephen Bury.
It's complicated
Usually, on novels, names go in order of importance or popularity. It's good to be honest about this - if James Patterson and a small author co-author a book, you know that James Patterson's name will go first and appear largest on the cover. It won't be marketed as "[other author] and James Patterson's book" - it will be marketed as "James Patterson's book with [other author]."
In your situation, however, I'm guessing that you are both unpublished and/or small authors, and therefore both of you would be viewed as equally "famous" when it comes to who gets placed on the book cover. As a result, you have a different, but related problem to worry about: whoever's name appears first will seem more important and be cited more as the author. They will likely be the one to appear in search results, in articles, etc. if your book happens to get popular. That's unfortunately just a fact of co-authorship, despite your best efforts to avoid this.
So, what do you do? How do you decide who goes first?
Here are some approaches:
Alphabetically. We had the "naming problem" when I was writing some biochemistry research papers with some coworkers, and we had to decide what order our last names would appear on the paper. We eventually decided that our names would just go alphabetically, to avoid favoritism or implying that one person was more important than the others. One person still had to go first, obviously, but at least we felt it had been fairly decided.
Flip a coin. Obviously you could just decide at random, again to avoid favoritism or looking at it subjectively and possibly hurting feelings.
Who contributed more? This is going to be tough to discuss depending on how good of friends you are, but if you feel you are brave enough to discuss it and it won't hurt anyone's feelings, talk about who objectively contributed more words, chapters, etc. to the book and therefore should appear first.
Whatever you decide, keep in mind that you want both of you to agree to whatever you decide! Don't let somebody stew or resent the decision - talk about it thoroughly beforehand and make sure both parties accept the choice.
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