Redhead wrote:Hello everyone, long-time lurker here, finally decided to post.
I must say that as Polish I'm delighted with this one.
The name of the planet - Włocławek - is just hilarious The real Włocławek is a modest town on Vistula river, some 113 thousand inhabitants, long history (first mentioned in 12th century) but not very special in any other way. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W%C5%82oc%C5%82awek
To imagine a whole planet named after it, and then Siły Zbrojne Włocławka - Włocławek Armed Forces - it is so funny
Oh, and you really don't want to try to pronounce it correctly, trust me, you don't
[...]
I wonder what the town of Włocławek will think of it when they find out...
I want to very strongly endorse Redhead's point here. As a Pole, I am of course delighted to see a planet that seems to have a Polish culture in the story, but I hope there is still time to change the name.
First, yes, I acknowledge that historically, weirder names have been given to various objects, so it is not impossible a planet would have that name. Still, naming a planet after a minor town - unless it is explained in text with a rationale such as "named because the captain of the first colony ship came from that town" etc. - will make most Polish people laugh and be mildly annoyed that "our" contribution to Honorverse is so... backwards, for a lack of a better term.
If you look at the list of planets of Honorverse (http://honorverse.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Planets), their names can be divided into several types: first, mundane - usually first names or common words (Monica, Boniface, Jeremiah, Hope, Forge, Torch, Furnace), second, "cool" (mythical beasts, literary, cultural or historical references - Manticore, Canaan, Cecitiel, Beowulf, Damocles, Everest, Ghatotkacha, Merlin, Ndebele, Rembrand, Osiris, Socrates, Titan, Xbalanque, Zadkiel, etc.) third, references to major landmarks (Debrecen, Dresden, Kilimanjaro, Montana, Nagasaki, New Brazil, New Corsica, New Geneva, New Ghuanzou, Nouveau Dijon, Potsdam, Prague, Toulon, Zanzibar), fourth, tongue-in-cheek names (Darwin's Joke, Smoking Frog) and fifth, well, things I cannot easily identify because they can have multiple possible origins (Chosan, Creswell, Zelda, Zulu). Now, there are also planets named after relatively small settlements (ex. Danville), and I have also considered that some of them may be related to tuckerization, but after the (rather enjoyable, I learned about some cool stuff :>) analysis of the names, it seems to me that as a general rule, planets in Honorverse that are related to modern (IRL) cultures can point to either cool historical/literary/cultural names ("we got a planet named after a mythical figure/beast/god/scientist/philosopher/other major historical figure) or a landmark that is a major town/province/famous mountain/etc.
Poles seem to be stuck with a minor town of no particular significance to Polish history or culture (where most other cultures, if they get a town, get a large and recognizable one), and while again, I do appreciate seeing a Polish name in the book, I can't help feeling a bit sad that we didn't get anything cool. It is almost as if our name was picked from a random generator, with no thought given to its coolness. There are plenty of major, noncontroversial landmarks, some of which have international recognizably (Wisla/Vistula - major river, Tatry - major mountain range, Warsaw/Warszawa - capital, Cracow/Krakow - second capital of Poland, Gniezno - Polish first capital), mythical references (Svetovid, Svarog, Perun, see Witcher games or Wikipedia for more on that), historical (Mieszko - first king of Poland, alternative names for Poland such as Polania or Lechia, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_of_Poland), or figures such as Chopin, Curie, Paderewski, Copernicus) that would be more memorable. Heck, I'd even think that going with Niebieska (blue) or Nowa Ziemia (New Earth) would work better, too. If Włocławek was chosen because of tuckerization, I will add that it makes a perfectly acceptable surname too (might be a tad better as Włocławski, but either will pass), so it does not need to be list from the story.
On a final note, the first and only other time I recall seeing a Polish planet in a work of a non-Polish sci-fi author was in Peter H. Hamiltion space opara, where there was a passing mention of a planet named Pilsudski (a major historical figure that any Polish person would recognize). I still fondly remember that series for this, and again, I am very happy that Honorverse will join that short list - but I'd be much happier if we got a cooler name, rather than a tiny town that will raise eyebrows, make Polish readers laugh and/or assume that the author cares not about Polish culture. Pretty pretty please?