I used it in my novel, "A Bridge To Cross", "Dollar To Doughnut" and "The Flying Phaeton".
This is how I introduced her in "A Bridge To Cross":
Phryne extinguished her cigarette. “I guess Caroline isn’t the only one with a difficult name … mine is Greek. My grandmother, my mother’s mother, was from Athens, and I am named after some lady in ancient Greece. It is: P-H-R-Y-N-E and it is pronounced ‘fry-nee’.”
I used it in my novel, "A Bridge To Cross", "Dollar To Doughnut" and "The Flying Phaeton".
This is how I introduced her in "A Bridge To Cross":
Phryne extinguished her cigarette. “I guess Caroline isn’t the only one with a difficult name … mine is Greek. My grandmother, my mother’s mother, was from Athens, and I am named after some lady in ancient Greece. It is: P-H-R-Y-N-E and it is pronounced ‘fry-nee’.”