Books on the Nightstand discussion
NPR's In Character series
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My inner life tended to hold onto a number of Louisa May Alcott characters:
Jo, Beth, Amy, Meg, Marmee, and the rest of the cast from Little Women
Rose and Mac from Eight Cousins and Rose In Bloom
Polly from An-Old-Fashioned Girl
My very favorite from early childhood has to be Slappy the Duck from the book of that title.
Huck Finn from Twain's works
I loved Jane and Rochester the first time I met them.
Hmmmm -- too many I think.
Oh my God -- FAGIN! And Oliver.
And David Copperfield and well, Dickens alone is a goldmine of great ones.
Certainly Scout from to Kill a Mockingbird ... Harriet the Spy and Trixie Belden were other favorite characters from childhood.
I have a much harder time thinking of characters that have stuck with me when I "met" them as an adult. I'm sure there are some, but I'm coming up empty right now. Even the characters in my favorite books kind of fade away.
I have a much harder time thinking of characters that have stuck with me when I "met" them as an adult. I'm sure there are some, but I'm coming up empty right now. Even the characters in my favorite books kind of fade away.

Adult picks would have to include the one and only Bertie Wooster! How I wish that I had an English country estate where he could come steal my cow creamer while playing the banjolele....

Two sets of boys from two books are adult reading characters who have stayed very vividly in my mind.
Jim and Doyler in James O'Neil's At Swim, Two Boys are one set.
The other and earlier set are Anton and David in On the Water by H. M. van den Brink, Paul Vincent.
Mrs. Dalloway

As an adult I found Robinton, the Masterharper in Anne McCaffrey's Pern books felt like a favorite uncle to me. Belgarath in David Eddings series The Belgariad and The Mallorean was a more irreverent Merlin.

As a kid, I was addicted to Ramona (Beverly Cleary). She was such a twit!!! I was also a huge fan of Claudia from the Babysitter's Club. Neither is perhaps a literary hero, but they were characters who sung to me as a young reader. Their existence kept me plowing through book after book after book.
Perhaps the character that has stuck the longest- I discovered him as a child and still LOVE to read about him to my daughter- is not a person at all. I love FERDINAND the bull. He marches to the beat of his own drummer. Accepted by his mother, and misunderstood by his peers. He does what feels right.
FERDINAND!!!
Yes! thanks for reminding me about him Leah! I need to get a copy of that to read to the kid!
Glad you found us here on Goodreads!
mgk
Yes! thanks for reminding me about him Leah! I need to get a copy of that to read to the kid!
Glad you found us here on Goodreads!
mgk


Summer,
En Famille (well, Nobody's Girl) sounds like something that my daughter would like. I will definitely check it out. Thanks!
En Famille (well, Nobody's Girl) sounds like something that my daughter would like. I will definitely check it out. Thanks!

Adventures of Perrine was my grandmother's book. My mother and grandmother are the only folks I know who have read it. Well, I guess my father read it, but he only read it to me when I was too small to read, so I won't count him. Before I discovered it on the web, I thought we were a little odd for spending so much time with a book no one knew.
My first copy of Little Women was a movie tie in with the movie in which Jo is played by Kate Hepburn. It was also handed down from my grandmother. My first Polly books were given to me by an elderly neighbor lady whos lawn I cut when I was twelve. Maybe there's something with this pattern I developed of being introduced to a character by loved one.

But the first that popped to mind was Inigo Montoya in PRINCESS BRIDE (I loved this story!)
He is a noble minded reformed (sort of) drunk who lives to avenge the death of his father by a six-fingered swordsman.
He practices what he will say when he finds the man...over and over again...
"Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father prepare to die!"
And, eventually, he does find his man.
Susanne
Susanne,
I'm laughing here.
I loved The Princess Bride, but I have a foggy memory about movies. I somehow thought that my daughter would love the movie, so I ordered it from Netflix. Oops. Not appropriate for an 8 year old.
I did the same with Ghost Busters.
Why I think these are kids movies, I have no idea. I'm definitely no candidate for Parent of the Year award. I'd better just stick to the book.
I'm laughing here.
I loved The Princess Bride, but I have a foggy memory about movies. I somehow thought that my daughter would love the movie, so I ordered it from Netflix. Oops. Not appropriate for an 8 year old.
I did the same with Ghost Busters.
Why I think these are kids movies, I have no idea. I'm definitely no candidate for Parent of the Year award. I'd better just stick to the book.


Ever since I was a kid, I've been a serious Agatha Christie-phile and Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple are two characters I never get tired of.
Edmond Dantes from Count of Monte Christo
Stevens from Remans of the Day continues to fascinate me.

As an adult, like most everyone here, I also find it difficult to pin down one that has stuck with me. But I would say that Morrie from Tuesdays with Morrie is one. Also Maggie from Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. And lastly, Ishmael from the book of the same name. Oddly I can't remember if I liked the actual book but the character (he was an ape) has stuck in my mind. And I suppose that counts.
From my childhood, I would have to say Francie Nolan from A Tree Grows in Brooklyn . I revisit that book every couple of years and I still love her! I also find that the more I read this book, the more I sympathize with her father.
Anne Shirley was definitely another character who holds a special place in my heart. I also loved Ramona (her sister Beezus and her doll Chevrolet)--- she had gumption.
As an adult, I have read a ton of books with great characters but none of them stay with me like those of my childhood. Working at Random House and now Macmillan --- I have met too many characters to list here!
Anne Shirley was definitely another character who holds a special place in my heart. I also loved Ramona (her sister Beezus and her doll Chevrolet)--- she had gumption.
As an adult, I have read a ton of books with great characters but none of them stay with me like those of my childhood. Working at Random House and now Macmillan --- I have met too many characters to list here!

Carla
oh, yes, Ralph from the mouse and the motorcycle.
All of the Oz characters from the Baum books. The Shaggy Man stands out.
Tarzan
John Carter of Mars
Doc Savage
Ben Grimm
Jim Casy from The Grapes of Wrath
Dr. Dolittle
Tarzan
John Carter of Mars
Doc Savage
Ben Grimm
Jim Casy from The Grapes of Wrath
Dr. Dolittle

george and lennie from of mice and men
charlotte from charlotte's web
ferdinand (i love him)

Also, Anne Frank (although unfortunately not literary) still sticks with me and haunts me as an adult.



Jane Eyre
Remus Lupin and Hermione Granger from the Harry Potter series
Elphaba from Wicked
And I'm currently finishing up Les Miserables, so I'm going to have to add Jean Valjean to the list.

I'm in love with Lin from Shantaram (by Gregory David Roberts);
My heart is still on a hill in Vietnam with Bravo Company (Matterhorn (by Karl Marlantes)) and;
I'm in awe of Atticus Finch from To Kill a Mockingbird (by Lee Harper.)
All of these people are so "real" to me that they have a stronger presence in my memory than many IRL people I know!
My heart is still on a hill in Vietnam with Bravo Company (Matterhorn (by Karl Marlantes)) and;
I'm in awe of Atticus Finch from To Kill a Mockingbird (by Lee Harper.)
All of these people are so "real" to me that they have a stronger presence in my memory than many IRL people I know!

Francie Nolan from A Tree Grows in Brooklyn will always be in my heart.
Flavia de Luce from Alan Bradley's series sticks with me as well, I often imagine her snarky remarks and scientific musings as I go through my day.
Renee from Elegance of the Hedgehog.
Tub the Horse from The Sisters Brothers.
I could go on and on.....I am so thankful for my literary friends!

Anne Shirley
Laura Ingalls Wilder
Jane Eyre
Elizabeth Bennet
Sherlock Holmes
Scout
Macbeth
Othello
Henry V
Bertie Wooster and Jeeves
Spock
Tarzan
Batman
Spiderman
Frodo and Bilbo
Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy

"Nine Stories" might be a good short story challenge book.
Books mentioned in this topic
Little Women (other topics)The Five Chinese Brothers (other topics)
The Velveteen Rabbit (other topics)
To Kill a Mockingbird (other topics)
Along those lines, let's start a similar conversation here. Old, new, loved or loathed, which literary character stuck with you?
Check out the above post to see my favorite(s)!