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have you met any interesting characters this year?
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janine
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Dec 31, 2010 05:59AM

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I read a really interesting book about a woman who was abducted by aliens (Witnessed by Budd Hopkins), but actually she was just a normal, average housewife. While admirable, she wasn't exactly interesting. What happened to her was.
I wasn't really bowled over by anything I read in 2010. Hope 2011 is better.


I really liked the girl in The Girl books, at least the first two. In the third she just writhed about in a hospital bed and plotted about a cane.
The best, though, was the girl in the Hunger Games. Katniss!
The best, though, was the girl in the Hunger Games. Katniss!

I thought Lisbeth was interesting, but then I read the rest of the book. Kathy from Never Let Me Go was really interesting.
I think my favourite of the year was Rose of Sharon from TGoW.
Oh I need to read Never Let Me Go. I requested it from the CSU library but I actually never had a reason to go pick it up.

Among fictional characters, Gustave von Aschenbach, George Smiley, Inspector Morse and Detective Lewis, a bunch of characters from The Grandmothers, the priests in Death Comes for the Archbishop. Nonfictional, Kenneth Clark, the diarist of The Worst Hard Time, Mark Whitacre in The Informant, Leopold and Loeb.
Jonathan wrote: "Which Leopold and Loeb book did you read LG?"
Leopold and Loeb: The Crime of the Century.
Leopold and Loeb: The Crime of the Century.

I thought you might have read For the Thrill of It: Leopold, Loeb, and the Murder That Shocked Chicago, which came out about two years ago. I met the author briefly at an event in New York and enjoyed chatting with him--very nice man.


Augie March was reasonably interesting, although Bellow's writing itself was more interesting than Augie's character. Netta from Hangover Square was fascinating, and revolting. (Never before has unidimensionality been so compelling.) Lucy Snowe from Villette. Barbra Streisand was, like Netta, fascinating and revolting, but not precisely in the same ways. Martin Preib was interesting, in his recounting of his time on the Chicago police force. Truman Capote was sort of interesting, in Conversations with Capote. Jim Burden, the narrator of My Antonia. Patty Berglund from Freedom was fairly fascinating. There were a couple interesting characters from Harlot's Ghost: Harry Hubbard, the narrator, and Hugh Montague, his mentor.

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Books mentioned in this topic
The Sisters Brothers (other topics)For the Thrill of It: Leopold, Loeb, and the Murder That Shocked Chicago (other topics)
Leopold and Loeb: The Crime of the Century (other topics)
Boneshaker (other topics)
The Imperfectionists (other topics)