Was it
Anne Rice, or another book? And, was the character born with a tail? Heterochromic irises? Magic powers? lol
The first time I heard the name
Merrick as a first name was in about 1987 when I met a girl (about my age - 16?) who called herself that (I doubt it was her real name - not much about her was real). So the original girl
Merrick wasn't
Anne Rice's character - I'm not sure who it was. Maybe one of Rice's early books had one in it? Anyway I immediately felt that the name was really a guy name, and this girl called herself that as an affectation, because she wanted to seem edgy and gothy. I just thought it was really appealing as a boy name.
Deliberately using names unconventionally on girls, has always been an affectation. (It's becoming that way for boys too?) So personally I think the name
Merrick on a girl sounds embarrassingly characterish, though I see its appeal. I think
Merrick comes off witchy and "edgy" on a woman because of the Mer- being familiar as a piece of a feminine name, and the -rick so familiar as masculine. So it worked for Rice's witch, and I'm sure for other female characters. To me personally, the -rick part makes it manly and the Mer-part makes it sound happy ... it's cheerful-tough like
Nicholas or
Jack. But, I can also see how people perceive the Mer- part as making it femme, and the -rick adding an "edge" or whatever. *raspberry*
So I predict (and have secretly predicted since forever) that if
Merrick ever does take off in popularity as a baby name, it'll be as a girl name. At best, it'll do this sort of thing:
http://www.behindthename.com/top/name/kelsey,mackenzie,lindsay,aubrey,londonAnd I'll be exasperated, but I won't think it's as bad as some other names people give to girls.
- mirfak