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Best literary character

96 replies

cupcaske123 · 13/08/2024 19:06

I was having this debate with someone the other day, who is the best literary character?

Dracula, Mrs Haversham, Elizabeth Bennett, Frankenstein's monster...

Who do you think?

OP posts:
bellocchild · 18/08/2024 21:09

Ilikegreenshoes · 15/08/2024 11:24

So many absolutely brilliant characters already mentioned, but none from Georgette Heyer yet. She has some of my all time favourites. Sophy from The Grand Sophy is my top pick, though I know some people really don't like her. Gil, Ferdy and George from Friday's Child, Freddy from Cotillion, Neville Fletcher from A Blunt Instrument, Randall from Behold, Here's Poison, Abby and Miles from Black Sheep... I could go on and on.

Don't forget Justin Avon.

AdaColeman · 18/08/2024 21:45

A couple not yet mentioned....

James Marwood from Andrew Taylor's Ashes of London series

Bernard Cornwell's Uhtred from The Last Kingdom

Cicero from the Robert Harris trilogy.

Overthebay · 18/08/2024 22:04

StoatofDisarray · 13/08/2024 21:17

Stephen Maturin and Jack Aubrey!

Yes!

DeanElderberry · 19/08/2024 09:12

Dr John Watson

Reginald Jeeves

Miss Maud Silver

Bouncer (from The Reluctant Widow)

Lord Ivan Xav Vorpatril

though in all fairness, Ivan's mother, Lady Alys, should really be on the list too

MabelMaybe · 19/08/2024 09:23

Miss Read, the narrator in the Fairacre novels. I love the ascerbic humour and warm descriptions of the villagers around her.

everywhichway · 19/08/2024 09:25

Winnie the Pooh

MrsCobbit · 19/08/2024 09:43

Another for Dorothea and Maggie

FuckThePoPo · 19/08/2024 16:20

Adrian Mole!

Rose of Sharon (grapes of wrath)

Mrs Weasley (not my daughter you bitch)

eli (let the right one in)

Jack Torrance (shining)

maybe not quite all 'literary' but it's all
subjective right?

pigalow27 · 19/08/2024 16:28

Fanciable detectives - Jackson Brodie and Comoran Strike

Romantic heroes- Mr Darcy, Sydney Carton

Women to admire - Scarlett O'Hara, the narrator of How to Kill Your Family and Lady Bertram first lying on a sofa all day with pug.

Debrathom · 19/08/2024 21:52

cromwell44 · 18/08/2024 20:06

First choice, Hilary Mantel’s Cromwell. I was a bit in love with him, whilst still aware he ahem, had his flaws.
Second, Olive Kitteridge, complex, flawed and yet sympathetically drawn.

Oh yes, Olive Kitteridge is a brilliant character- so spiky and unlikeable and yet I loved her and always rooted for her.
My favourite male character is probably George Smiley from the John Le Carre series. Intelligent, cultured, mostly ethical in an unethical world a desperately in love with his faithless wife...

cupcaske123 · 19/08/2024 22:32

Debrathom · 19/08/2024 21:52

Oh yes, Olive Kitteridge is a brilliant character- so spiky and unlikeable and yet I loved her and always rooted for her.
My favourite male character is probably George Smiley from the John Le Carre series. Intelligent, cultured, mostly ethical in an unethical world a desperately in love with his faithless wife...

My favourite male character is probably George Smiley from the John Le Carre series. Intelligent, cultured, mostly ethical in an unethical world a desperately in love with his faithless wife...

I haven't read the book, but that's one of my favourite BBC series. He's a great character.

OP posts:
spaceshooter · 19/08/2024 22:40

Place marking.

Welshwabbit · 19/08/2024 22:54

Jean Brodie (from The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie). The archetypal anti-hero. You know she's wrong, but you see exactly how she got there and how she roots herself in her girls forever.

HoppingPavlova · 19/08/2024 22:55

Sherlock

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 19/08/2024 23:00

Another vote for Marian Halcombe from 'The Woman in White' and Count Fosco from the same book.

SerafinasGoose · 19/08/2024 23:00

Jean Padgett
Kezia Burnell
Rosamund Redding, AKA Rose Red
Merricat Blackwood
Lucy Snowe
Hannibal Lecter
Cordelia Gray
Lauren Olamina
Leopold Bloom
The Man (Cormac McCarthy)
Rose the Hat
Mr Toad
Bill Smugs

WithIcePlease · 19/08/2024 23:31

DeanElderberry · 19/08/2024 09:12

Dr John Watson

Reginald Jeeves

Miss Maud Silver

Bouncer (from The Reluctant Widow)

Lord Ivan Xav Vorpatril

though in all fairness, Ivan's mother, Lady Alys, should really be on the list too

When listening to Sherlock Holmes stories, I often think that Dr Watson would be really nice to be married to.

Bbq1 · 20/08/2024 00:34

Heathcliff

Bbq1 · 20/08/2024 00:35

ihaveanaughtydog · 15/08/2024 02:31

Marion Halcombe in A Woman in White.

I like Marion too, really ahead of her time and quite feminist really.

KnickerlessParsons · 20/08/2024 01:57

I fell in love with Ross Poldark. The one in the books, not the tv series.

Aria999 · 20/08/2024 02:09

Best is very hard but I do like lord Peter wimsey

Prrambulate · 23/08/2024 23:18

The twisted, ruthless, merciless torturer Inquisitor Glokta. Also absolutely hilarious and compelling in equal measure. This is a passage from the very start of the The First Law trilogy. Highly recommended.

*

Why do I do this? Inquisitor Glokta asked himself for the thousandth time as he limped down the corridor. The walls were rendered and whitewashed, though none too recently. There was a seedy feel to the place and a smell of damp. There were no windows, as the hallway was deep beneath the ground, and the lanterns cast slow flowing shadows into every corner. Why would anyone want to do this?

Glokta’s walking made a steady rhythm on the grimy tiles of the floor. First the confident click of his right heel, then the tap of his cane, then the endless sliding of his left foot, with the familiar stabbing pains in the ankle, knee, arse and back. Click, tap, pain. That was the rhythm of his walking. The dirty monotony of the corridor was broken from time to time by a heavy door, bound and studded with pitted iron. On one occasion, Glokta thought he heard a muffled cry of pain from behind one. I wonder what poor fool is being questioned in there? What crime they are guilty, or innocent of? What secrets are being picked at, what lies cut through, what treasons laid bare?

He didn’t wonder long though. He was interrupted by the steps. If Glokta had been given the opportunity to torture any one man, any one at all, he would surely have chosen the inventor of steps. When he was young and widely admired, before his misfortunes, he had never really noticed them. He had sprung down them two at a time and gone blithely on his way. No more. They’re everywhere. You really can’t change floors without them. And down is worse than up, that’s the thing people never realise. Going up, you usually don’t fall that far.

He knew this flight well. Sixteen steps, cut from smooth stone, a little worn towards the centre, slightly damp, like everything down here. There was no banister, nothing to cling to. Sixteen enemies. A challenge indeed. It had taken Glokta a long time to develop the least painful method of descending stairs. He went sideways like a crab. Cane first, then left foot, then right, with more than the usual agony as his left leg took his weight, joined by a persistent stabbing in the neck. Why should it hurt in my neck when I go down stairs? Does my neck take my weight? Does it? Yet the pain could not be denied.

Glokta paused four steps from the bottom. He had nearly beaten them. His hand was trembling on the handle of his cane, his left leg aching like fury. He tongued his gums where his front teeth used to be, took a deep breath and stepped forward. His ankle gave way with a horrifying wrench and he plunged into space, twisting, lurching, his mind a cauldron of horror and despair. He stumbled onto the next step like a drunkard, fingernails scratching at the smooth wall, giving a squeal of terror. You stupid, stupid bastard! His cane clattered to the floor, his clumsy feet wrestled with the stones and he found himself at the bottom, by some miracle still standing. And here it is. That horrible, beautiful, stretched out moment between stubbing your toe and feeling the hurt. How long do I have before the pain comes? How bad will it be when it does? Gasping, slack-jawed at the foot of the steps, Glokta felt a tingling of anticipation. Here it comes… The agony was unspeakable, a searing spasm up his left side from foot to jaw. He squeezed his watering eyes tight shut, clamped his right hand over his mouth so hard that the knuckles clicked. His remaining teeth grated against each other as he locked his jaws together, but a high-pitched, jagged moan still whistled from him.

Am I screaming or laughing? How do I tell the difference?

He breathed in heaving gasps, through his nose, snot bubbling out onto his hand, his twisted body shaking with the effort of staying upright. The spasm passed. Glokta moved his limbs cautiously, one by one, testing the damage. His leg was on fire, his foot numb, his neck clicked with every movement, sending vicious little stings down his spine. Pretty good, considering.

He bent down with an effort and snatched up his cane between two fingers, drew himself up once more, wiped the snot and tears on the back of his hand. Truly a thrill. Did I enjoy it? For most people stairs are a mundane affair. For me, an adventure! He limped off down the corridor, giggling quietly to himself. He was still smiling ever so faintly when he reached his own door and shuffled inside.

CorWotcha · 23/08/2024 23:26

Cathy Earnshaw

CorWotcha · 23/08/2024 23:26

Welshwabbit · 19/08/2024 22:54

Jean Brodie (from The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie). The archetypal anti-hero. You know she's wrong, but you see exactly how she got there and how she roots herself in her girls forever.

Great shout

Meadowwild · 23/08/2024 23:27

HarpQuartet · 13/08/2024 19:37

I've never rooted for a character as hard as I rooted for Demon Copperhead.

I was just going to say the same thing. So lovable.

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