Owl! at the Library 😴🧙‍♀️ Profile picture
May 20 28 tweets 11 min read Read on X
We fall in love with reading because we love the characters in stories. Today I bring you a thread of the BEST characters in literature: Image
Jim, from Huckleberry Finn. The moral center of Mark Twain’s best novel, he becomes a surrogate father for the orphaned Huck, who decides he would rather go to hell than betray Jim to slavery. Jim is also the hero of a recent novel, “James,” by Percival Everett. Image
Mr Collins, from Pride & Prejudice. Everyone’s favorite slightly awkward vicar has a special fondness for Fordyce’s Sermons, shelves in the closet and the esteemed patronage of the Lady Catherine de Bourgh. He deserved a happily ever after with Mary Bennet.
Rex Mottram, from Brideshead Revisited. Destined for a career in politics, Rex loves women and money. When he becomes Catholic to win the hand of Julia Flyte, her sister convinces him that you can bribe a priest to send an enemy of your choosing to hell. A glorious chump. Image
Tom Bombadil, from The Lord of the Rings. He wears yellow boats and sings silly songs. He makes the hobbits frolic in the nude. He’s an unsolvable mystery, and his inclusion bolsters the story’s sense of “measureless depth.” Old Tom, he is the master. Image
Alfred Jingle, from The Pickwick Papers. Jingle turns up in the second chapter of Dickens’s first novel to seduce ladies, start duels and spread mayhem. His sentences peppered with dashes, he’s the first in a long line of scoundrels that includes the Artful Dodger and Uriah Heep. Image
Cassandra Mortmain, from I Capture the Castle. She begins keeping a journal after her once-famous father moves the family into a rented castle. There she conspires to imprison him in a tower to cure his writer’s block. The book she narrates might be the best journal in fiction. Image
Puddleglum the Marsh-Wiggle, from The Silver Chair. When Eustace Scrubb and Jill Pole must travel north, Aslan sends them Puddleglum, amphibious and incurably pessimistic. Yet when the three are facing down the Green Lady, it’s Puddleglum’s heroism that saves the day. Image
Scheherazade, from the Arabian Nights. Married to a sultan with a habit of murdering his wives on the morning after the wedding, Scheherazade keeps death at bay by telling stories with cliffhanger endings—and becomes the model for all storytellers, then and now. Image
The Cucumber-Throwing Gentleman, from Nicholas Nickleby. The widowed Mrs. Nickleby finds herself pursued by an amorous neighbor who throws cucumbers into the garden to signal his affections. He claims to possess estates, jewels, whaleries, which seems unlikely. Image
Queequeg, from Moby-Dick. A cannibal harpooner with whom Ishmael is obliged to share a bed on his first night in New Bedford. Ishmael finds himself smitten with the brawny young man, and the two forge a friendship that only death can end. Image
Boy Reading Tacitus, from “The Garden of Forking Paths” by Borges. While boarding a train on his way to kill Stephen Albert, a man he loves and reveres, Yu Tsun sees a child on the platform reading the Annals of Tacitus, in what is probably the last happy moment of his life. Image
Catherine Morland, from Northanger Abbey. Bookish, inquisitive, romantic, and just a touch naïve, Catherine is all of us who read stories and wish ourselves into their pages. Jane Austen nails that feeling of being young and not yet knowing how the world works. Image
The Cheshire Cat, from Alice in Wonderland. One of the more enigmatic creatures our girl Alice encounters. His habit of partially disappearing causes trouble for the King of Hearts, who attempts to behead him—but how do you behead a cat with a head but no body? Image
Pierre Bezukhov, from War & Peace. He’s rich but hopelessly awkward. He drinks and reads too much. He becomes obsessed with prophecy and tries to kill Napoleon. The women all pity him because he’s married but not in love. There’s even a song about him! Image
Krishna. The most mysterious character in the Mahabharata, Krishna assists the Pandava brothers because he hopes to start a war in which millions die. When questioned about this at the end of his life, he says, “I fought against terrible powers, and I did what I could.” Image
Circe, from the Odyssey. Possibly the only character on this list to have turned a boat full of sailors into pigs, she seduces Odysseus and then acts as his GPS into the underworld. Her influence can be seen in everything from Morgan le Fay to “Hotel California.” Image
Madame Zeroni, from Holes. Listen: if Madame Zeroni tells you to carry a pig up the mountain every day and you don’t follow through, I don’t want to hear you complaining when a curse is laid on you and all your descendants forever. Image
José Arcadio Buendía, from One Hundred Years of Solitude. A good illustration of the dangers of becoming obsessed with magical instruments, obliging your loved ones to drag you from the house and chain you to a tree in your back yard. Image
Mr Dark, from Something Wicked This Way Comes. A mysterious gentleman who turns up every few decades, tempting folk with their hearts’ deepest desires. He makes people feel bad about getting older and, worst of all, rips up a library book. Truly wicked! Image
Behemoth, from The Master & Margarita. A sort of dark version of the Cheshire Cat, Behemoth is a wise-cracking associate of the devil. He can transform his appearance at will, he gets into gun battles with the police, and has a special fondness for vodka and pineapple. Image
The Dog Who Annoyed Samuel Pepys. In his diary for February 12, 1660, Pepys writes that he had some “high words” with his wife, threatening to “fling the dog which her brother gave her out at the window if he pissed the house any more.” Team Dog! Image
Sir Gawain. Gawain tends to have the weirdest adventures of all the knights at Camelot. In one story, he finds himself having to marry a loathly lady. In another, he must allow himself to be beheaded by a green man. He’s the Arya Stark of the Middle Ages. Image
Mrs Danvers, from Rebecca. One can’t help wondering why Mr. de Winter doesn’t simply find a new housekeeper, when this one hangs about attempting to embarrass his second wife and nudging her into throwing herself out of a window. Image
Bergotte, from In Search of Lost Time. The novelist Bergotte appears for maybe ten pages in volume two of Proust’s masterpiece, but in those ten pages Marcel compares him to (a) the devil and (b) a magician who fires a gun out of which a flock of pigeons emerges. Pretty cool! Image
Turtle Wexler, from The Westing Game. A direct descendant of the precocious teen Josephine in Agatha Christie’s Crooked House, Turtle has formidable intelligence and a habit of kicking people in the shins. She’s an inspiration for more recent sleuths like Flavia de Luce. Image
Jane Eyre, from Jane Eyre. Possibly the best female character in literature? Jane is smart, sassy, doesn’t care whom she offends, and shows a remarkable tolerance for Rochester and his many tricks and disguises. She’s also complex and developed in a way no one has ever equaled. Image
If you enjoyed this list, kindly check out my previous list of the weirdest classics. And follow me on patreon @ sketchesbyboze, where I’m constantly posting bookish joy!

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Owl! at the Library 😴🧙‍♀️

Owl! at the Library 😴🧙‍♀️ Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @SketchesbyBoze

May 13
There’s nothing like the joy of reading a book so strange you wonder how it could ever be filmed.

Today I’m sharing some of my favorite WEIRD CLASSICS: Image
Cane, by Jean Toomer. A novel in prose-poetry depicting the lives of ordinary African-Americans in a series of striking vignettes. One of the best books of the Harlem Renaissance, and a masterpiece of modernism to rival Woolf and Eliot. Image
Carmilla, by Sheridan Le Fanu. The Victorian era’s OTHER great vampire story, centering on a young woman named Laura who finds herself sharing a castle with a mysterious lesbian lady who sleeps all day and shuns prayer. Absorbing, funny and weirdly sexy. Image
Read 23 tweets
May 8
If ever you’re feeling embarrassed about your rough drafts, know that in Tolkien’s early plans for Lord of the Rings the character of Strider is replaced by a hobbit named Trotter with a wooden leg, whom Tolkien thought might have been Bilbo in disguise. (1/5) Image
When Tolkien began plotting the novel in 1937, the Riders of Rohan were baddies, the Ring of Power “wasn’t very dangerous,” Treebeard was a wicked creature who imprisoned Gandalf, and Tolkien toyed, briefly, with making Tom Bombadil the main character.
None of which is meant to disparage Tolkien, but to note that he was meticulous in his planning, polishing his ideas until they shone. “Unlike Lewis, who composed with consummate ease, Tolkien scribbled and erased, cut and rewrote, and reworked again.”
Read 5 tweets
May 7
Quick thread of my favorite weird bookshops

First, the Boekhandel Dominicanen in Maastricht, housed in a cathedral deconsecrated in 1794.
Image
Image
Scrivener's Books & Bookbinding in Buxton, housing over 40,000 books and acclaimed by the Guardian as one of the ten best bookshops in the UK. Image
The Libreria Alta Acqua (Bookshop of High Water) in Venice. Until recently the books were stored in boats & bathtubs to prevent damage during the occasional floods.
Image
Image
Read 9 tweets
May 6
Many people yearn to read the great books, but struggle with finding the time.

Let me introduce you to my favorite SHORT classics—all of which you can easily finish in a few hours! Thread: Image
If Beale Street Could Talk, by James Baldwin. The romance between young lovers Fonny & Trish is tested when Fonny is wrongly jailed for a crime, just as Trish learns she’s expecting. You can feel Baldwin’s passion and joy and rage on every page of this book. Image
The Hound of the Baskervilles, by Arthur Conan Doyle. “They were the footprints of a gigantic hound!” With these words, Holmes & Watson are off on their most memorable adventure, one that sees them battling the titular dog and the family curse that haunts the Baskervilles. Image
Read 18 tweets
May 1
Agatha Christie is the most beloved novelist in history, having sold over two billion books in a hundred languages.

Where does one begin? Today I’m counting down my ten FAVORITE Christie whodunits. Image
10. PERIL AT END HOUSE. Whilst on holiday in Cornwall, Poirot and Hastings are drawn into the orbit of the enigmatic Nick Buckley. When her friend Maggie is murdered, Poirot realizes that the killer had intended to kill Nick. Classic Poirot novel with an all-time great baddie. Image
09. EVIL UNDER THE SUN. Poirot investigates the murder of Arlena Marshall, who had absconded to Pixy Cove for a secret noonday tryst. The misdirection in this one is fiendishly intricate and clever, and allows Poirot some sobering reflections on the darkness in the human heart. Image
Read 12 tweets
Apr 22
People tend to think of classics as being “boring,” but we wouldn’t keep reading them for hundreds of years if we didn’t love them.

Let me introduce you to some FUN classics: Image
INVISIBLE MAN, by Ralph Ellison. An unnamed Black man embarks on a psychedelic odyssey of battle royales, mob violence, mental asylums and sleet-rimed streets, all narrated in an experimental literary style reminiscent of mid-century jazz. Image
NORTHANGER ABBEY, by Jane Austen. Catherine Morland, a young woman whose head has been turned by reading too many Gothic novels, begins to suspect that she might be living in one. Jane’s funniest, and strangest, book. Image
Read 17 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(