Just as certain
books leave an indelible mark on our lives, so do particular literary
characters, and in some cases these characters leave more of an impression than
the book itself. Heroes, villains, mischievous scallawags, action men, and
romantic protagonists, are just some of the traditional male fictional
character profiles that endear us and enrich our reading experience. Putting a
list together of my own top ten male fictional characters was difficult. At
first, my list looked like that of a lovelorn romantic, but after some further
thought and rationalisation, I’m really happy with the final result. Though the
dashing heart throb is well represented, so are the evil villains, the father
figures, the lost boys, and the heroes. In no particular order, I’ll get
started.
Owen
Meany (of A Prayer for Owen Meany by
John Irving)
A Prayer for Owen Meany by
John Irving is one of my favourite books of all time. The fact that I fell in
love with little Owen Meany probably has a lot to do with it. Owen Meany is anything
but your typical teenage boy. He’s puny, undersized and has a weird pale
luminescent skin. Whilst other boys his age, including his best friend John,
are struggling to find themselves, Owen is sure of his destiny in life and
intends to follow it. He has a powerful religious faith and believes himself to
be god’s instrument. What I remember most about Owen Meany is his weird high pitched
nasal voice, which John Irving represents in capitals whenever Owen speaks. His
voice may only be words on paper, but to this day I swear I can hear Owen Meany
in my head. Owens’ unwavering faith is what I admire most about him as a
character. I envy his belief, bravery and conviction. Owen Meany is a unique
character, dwarf-like in size, but big in heart.
Captain
Frederick Wentworth (of Persuasion by
Jane Austen)
When we first
meet Captain Wentworth he is a man slighted by love several years earlier who
is now determined to settle down and find a wife. However, he soon finds that
despite his best efforts to suppress his former love for Anne Elliott, it is
slowly rekindled. Wentworth is a gentleman wrapped up in a sailor’s uniform. He
is distinguished and his person demands respect. Not surprisingly, he is the
target of many a young woman, but in the end it is the steady character of Anne
that once again wins his heart. I love Wentworth because he represents the
constancy of love and the beauty of second chances. Wentworth’s letter to Anne at the end of the
novel always brings a tear to my eye. It’s a love letter that effuses such passion
for, and devotion to, Anne that you can’t help but wish the letter was written
for you.
Kevin
Khatchadourian (of We Need to Talk About
Kevin by Lionel Shriver)
Let’s get one
thing straight. When I declare that Kevin is in my top ten fictional characters
of all time it’s not because I love him, it’s because I hate the very idea of
him. So why put him in my list? We don’t have to love a character for them to
impact upon us, and Kevin certainly made an impression on me. The mere thought
of him frightens me. Unlike the imagined monsters of horror novels, Kevin is
the human manifestation of evil incarnate, and thus is infinitely scarier. In
truth, it is not the character of Kevin himself that has stayed with me, but
what he represents. Kevin’s existence gives weight to the theory that evil is
born, not bred, and that’s not a very comforting thought. I don’t want to spoil
the ending of the book for anyone who hasn’t read it, but I do want to say that
the last scenes are some of the most chilling I have read. For me, Kevin is one
of the most confronting villains in literature. He could be any young troubled boy
and he is society’s worst nightmare – a cold blooded killer.
Gilbert Blythe (of Anne
of Green Gables by L M Montgomery)
I apologise
sincerely to my husband, but Gilbert Blythe was my first love. He was charming,
gallant, intelligent, handsome, and the desire of all the teenage girls on
Prince Edward Island. He was perfect husband material - steady, kind and
constant. Back when I still believed that boys who teased you actually really
liked you, Gilbert gave me hope that the popular guy in school would one day
turn around and realise that you were the love of his life. It’s completely
ridiculous, believe me I know, but I was only 13. Having said all of that, I
think the real reason I admired Gilbert so much was because despite her carrot
top, fiery temper and ability to find herself in scrapes, Gilbert loved Anne. I
loved Anne, therefore I loved Gilbert.
Samwise Gamgee (of The
Lord of the Rings trilogy by J R R Tolkien)
While everyone usual
pats whinging Frodo Baggins on the back for destroying the ring, I prefer to give
Samwise Gamgee a big hug. In my eyes, Samwise is the chief hero of J R R
Tolkiens masterpiece. Frodo is the chosen one, he bears the weight of the ring
for most of the journey, and he does eventually destroy the cursed thing, but
it’s Samwise that gives Frodo the strength to do it. Tolkien once wrote that he
modelled Samwise on the English soldiers he knew in 1914, and you can
definitely see the resemblance. Samwise is courageous. He is willing to die for
the cause and above all protect Frodo from harm, displaying the kind of brave
loyalty that all covet, but few have the strength to follow through with. Samwise
represents the most important qualities in a best friend. For me, Samwise is
the good mate that we’d all choose to have by our sides in a spot of bother.
Atticus Finch (of To
Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee)
Atticus Finch is
one of the most admirable characters in literary history. He is a man of high
morals who walks the path of reason in a society gone crazy with hatred. As a
father figure, he tries his best to set a good example for his two children and
instils in them the importance of living without racial hatred or prejudice. Atticus is all about strong character, dignity
and goodness. His most famous line in the novel, spoken to Scout, probably sums
his personality up best – “You never
really understand a person until you consider things from his point of
view…until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.” Some may argue
that if there is any fault to be found with Atticus Finch it’s that he is
almost too perfect and is not a realistic portrayal of the average father. This
may be true, but I look at it differently. I see Atticus as the shining example
of what we all should aspire to be.
Mr
Fitzwilliam Darcy (of Pride and Prejudice
by Jane Austen)
Do I even need
to explain? Fitzwilliam Darcy, of Pride
and Prejudice fame, might be a too obvious choice, but I couldn’t seriously
compile a list without him in it. I tried very hard not to put two Jane Austen
heroes into the same list, but to quote Darcy himself, “In vain I have struggled. It will not do.” Yes he’s hot, in a 19th
century kind of way, but what I love most about Darcy is his recognition of his
flaws and his determination to become a better man. This comment probably
reflects the nature of all women to want to change a man, but it’s definitely
what hooked me. Darcy’s passion for Elizabeth despite his pride and internal
struggles endears him to the reader and I, for one, came away just as in love
with him as Elizabeth herself. Darcy in all his manifestations, on screen and
off, and even as a vampire, has certainly endured the greatest test of all –
time. His popularity is booming and as a leading heroic protagonist he is only
rivalled today by a bespectacled youth who I think you’ll find next on the
list.
Harry
Potter (of the Harry Potter novels by J K Rowling)
In my
estimation, there is something extra special about Harry Potter. He is one of
only a handful of fictional literary characters that have managed to capture
the hearts of both children and adults alike. For this reason, I have a real
soft spot for the boy wizard. Harry is a reluctant hero who has expectation
thrust upon him, but bears it with a courage and determination beyond his
years. Many dismiss the importance of Potter in a literary sense, because he’s
just a kid who does magic in some young adult novels, but that’s the beauty of
Harry and fantasy in general. Harry is consumable for children and teenagers. He
is warm, emotional, tough, forgiving, brave, and honest. In terms of role
models for the youth of today, he outshines most. There is one last thing that
makes Harry Potter stand out for me and it has nothing to do with the character
himself, but rather the revolution he caused. Quite simply, Harry Potter
charmed a world of young boys and girls into actually becoming readers, and as
a bookseller I will always thank him for that.
The
Man (of The Road by Cormac McCarthy)
Picking a
character that doesn’t have a name may seem a little curious, but his anonymity
is the main reason I included him in this list. The man in Cormac McCarthy’s
post-apocalyptic novel is a father, but because we don’t know his name McCarthy
enables us to see him as everyone’s father – yours and mine. The man is the
ultimate protector of his son and embodies the notion that parents would do
anything to keep their children from harm, including forsaking their own moral
code. He is a man of action, not words, who in a bleak world where death seems inevitable
represents the fierceness of a father’s love. At one stage, the man thinks the
best thing he can do is kill his son and put him out of his misery, but his
love is so intense that he knows he can’t bring himself to do it. What I find
most touching about the man is that throughout the whole novel he knows he is
destined to leave the world very soon, but he’s determined not only that his
son will survive, but that his son still understands the importance of hope and
belief.
Rhett
Butler (of Gone With the Wind by
Margaret Mitchell)
Swoon. Rhett Butler
is the classic anti-hero, the bad boy of the American civil war, the very
definition of a dashing scoundrel, and the only man to put Katie Scarlett
O’Hara in her place. This is all true, but what I love about Rhett Butler the
most is the soft underbelly he shows in his devotion to his children, his
kindness to Mammy, and his all-consuming passion for a woman that is seemingly
unrequited. I like the action hero Rhett Butler as he rescues Scarlett from the
Yankees, but I simply adore the broken man who is eaten away by love and who
eventually finds the strength to let it go. Now, I love Scarlett dearly, but
she was a twit to pine away for boring Ashley Wilkes when she could have had
Rhett Butler. What was the girl thinking? In a love story that for once doesn’t
have a happy ending, Rhett eventually sets Scarlett straight just like we all
wanted him to, and as a result scores the best line in the novel, “My dear, I don’t give a damn.” Clark Gable
added the ‘frankly’ for the movie, and I admit that for me it’s hard to
separate the on paper Rhett Butler from Clark Gable’s on screen version. I will
never forget Gable standing at the bottom of that sweeping staircase, elbow
resting on the banister, with eyes glinting dangerously at Scarlett under a
furrowed brow. Swoon again.
People always
want to know who just missed out, so I apologise to Alexander Portnoy (of Portnoy’s Complaint by Philip Roth) who
made me roll on the floor laughing out loud, Peter Pan (of Peter Pan by J M Barrie) who embodies the human desire to hold onto
youth, Mr John Thorntorn (of North and
South by Elizabeth Gaskell) who made me swoon just as much as Rhett Butler,
Mr Edward Rochester (of Jane Eyre by
Charlotte Bronte) whose disfigured person I’d fight Jane for, Hannibal Lector
(of The Silence of the Lambs by
Thomas Harris) who would give Kevin a run for his money, and Huck Finn (of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by
Mark Twain) whose grand adventure down the Mississippi brightened my otherwise
dull high school reading experience.
I’d love to know
what you think of the list. Who do you think is missing and who do you think
shouldn’t be there? Lists are designed to divide, so comment away!!