Novelists, Playwrights, and Poets surnames

  1. Irving
    • Origin:

      Scottish
    • Meaning:

      "green river, sea friend"
    • Description:

      It might be surprising to know that this name originated as a Scottish place and surname name, as in Washington Irving. It became a popular choice for first-generation Jewish-American boys, such as best-selling authors Irving Stone and Irving Wallace, whose parents looked to surnames from the British Isles to confer a measure of assimilation and class. Irving Berlin changed his name from Israel; actor Ving Rhames streamlined and coolized it. Irving was a Top 100 name during World War I, and though we don't envision it reaching those heights again, we can see some hipster parents having their own little Ving.
  2. Keats
    • Origin:

      English literary name
    • Meaning:

      "kite"
    • Description:

      Poetic and easier to pronounce (it's keets) than Yeats (which is yates). This one of many poets' names to consider, such as Auden, Eliot, Frost, Byron, Lorca, Marlowe, Blake, Emerson and Tennyson, which was used by Russell Crowe.
  3. Kipling
    • Larkin
      • Origin:

        Irish
      • Meaning:

        "rough, fierce"
      • Description:

        The additional syllable makes Lark a masculine surname name.
    • Lee
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "pasture, meadow"
      • Description:

        A name that has a bit of a shouldn't-I-be-a-middle-name sound, though still in use as a first for both genders. Lee might be a good choice if you want something that sounds at once traditional yet modern, unisex but not newly-minted.
    • Lewis
      • Origin:

        English variation of Louis
      • Meaning:

        "renowned warrior"
      • Description:

        Lewis is the best spelling to choose if you want this pronounced with the S. Lewis has been in the Top 5 in Scotland since 2000, and is one that parents in the U.S. are just beginning to rethink.
    • London
      • Origin:

        Place-name
      • Description:

        In the US, London is popular for both sexes, though as the name rises for girls, it's levelled off for boys. Of course, London is far less popular in the UK and other English-speaking countries.
    • Millay
      • Origin:

        English literary name
      • Description:

        Pretty and distinctive choice for poetry lovers.
    • Nash
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "by the ash tree"
      • Description:

        Nash is an English surname whose sound puts it right in step with currently trendy names like Cash, Dash and Ash. It first came to prominence via TV character Nash Bridges, portrayed by Don Johnson in the late nineties, and also via mathematician John Nash, played by Russell Crowe in the acclaimed film A Beautiful Mind.
    • Paz
      • Origin:

        Hebrew; Spanish
      • Meaning:

        "gold; peace"
      • Description:

        Paz is an appealing Spanish name meaning "peace", derived from the Latin "pax". It's usually feminine in Spanish, but could also make an interesting literary choice for a boy, honoring the writer Octavio Paz.
    • Poe
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "peacock"
      • Description:

        An evocative unisex one-syllable name, Poe is most distinguished by its literary reference. Edgar Allan Poe was an influential American author and poet, credited with inventing the genres of detective and science fiction, which might provide inspiration for parents who are fans. And now its choice as the name of the hero played by Oscar Isaac in the new Star Wars movie is sure to catapult it from literary choice to major favorite.
    • Pope
      • Shakespeare
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "brandish spear"
        • Description:

          No: no Picasso, no Beethoven, and no Shakespeare.
      • Shelley
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "clearing on a bank"
        • Description:

          Despite its poetic associations, almost as dated as Sheldon, and more feminine.
      • Stowe
        • Origin:

          Place-name or surname
        • Meaning:

          "meeting place"
        • Description:

          Stowe, the name of a beautiful mountain town in Vermont as well as the surname of the great author Harriet Beecher, is one of the oldest last names on record. The meeting place the name Stowe refers to is part of a church. Stowe might make a distinctive and meaningful middle name for skiers or Uncle Tom's Cabin fans.
      • Silverstein
        • Swift
          • Tennyson
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "son of Dennis"
            • Description:

              Few people would have considered the surname of this famous Victorian poet as a first name until Russell Crowe chose it for his son in 2006. But, as a rhythmic three-syllable patronymic, Tennyson has a lot going for it, not least of all the appealing nickname Tenny; it would make a novel choice for the son of a Dennis.
          • Thoreau
            • Origin:

              French
            • Meaning:

              "strength of a bull"
            • Description:

              A dashing French surname name most famously borne by Henry David Thoreau, an American naturalist, writer and philosopher who influenced such notable figures as Leo Tolstoy, Mahatma Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr. The most common modern American pronunciation is "thor-OH", with emphasis on the final syllable, although Thoreau himself pronounced it "THOR-oh".
          • Twain
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "divided in two"
            • Description:

              Twain can be thought of as a modernization (and possible namesake) of the dated Wayne, seasoned with the humor of Mark Twain, who adopted it from a river term.