Webmind from the Robert J Sawyer Wake-Watch-Wonder series, no question.
Mitch Rapp from Vince Flynn's books. He's a no nonsense character that kicks ass when dealing with terrorists. There's no civil courts, military tribunals, or political correctness.
Just a double tap to the head and it's done. PERFECT! It's the way we should be dealing with terrorist here and abroad.
I love the main character, "Mo" in How to Flirt with a Werewolf. Great fun and she is feisty.
Great question. I have a few candidates: smee, captain hook's first mate; the beagle boys, burglars from scrooge mcduck stories; and holden caulfield from catcher in the rye by j d salinger.
Hucckleberry Finn, he seemed like he had a lot of fun getting into trouble. There is always some river and boats and I just love that kind of thing. My brother is a fisherman so I can relate to the river and boat thing.
I would choose Odd Thomas, the 21-something character by Dean Koontz. Odd can see dead people. They don't speak, but somehow they have to each work to get their messages across to Odd so that he can help them.
Sometimes it's about justice. Sometimes it's about unfinished business. And sometimes, it's much bigger than even Odd has ever seen...This man is young but has such an awesome view of life and how to live.
I would have loved to spend time with such a character.
My favorite fictional book character is Ignatius J. Riley from A Confederacy of Dunces and I would NOT want to be friends with him! So, I'd have to go with the Little Prince.
:).
Tigger (from Winnie the Pooh)...because he's bouncyflouncyBIGTIME fun!
I enjoy the tales of 21 Baker St. , therefore it would be Sherlock Holmes. The stories contain some interesting pearls.
My favorite fictional book character of the moment is Lisbeth Salandar from The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo series. She's such an awesome, strong, smart, independent, amazing female protagonist. I would SO want to be friends with her, but I'm probably not nearly cool enough!
I also definitely wouldn't mind being friends with the kids at Hogwarts, especially if they could take me to some of their favorite hang outs...butterbeer and chocolate frogs, anyone?
It would be Peter Wiggin because he was able to start the space colonization program that led humanity to expand throughout the universe, which is something I hope can be done in the recent future.
I would pick Faythe Sanders from Rachel Vincent's Shifters Series. No nonsense, kick ass, take no prisoners sort of gal. The runner's up would be: Alex Cross (James Patterson), Mitch Rapp (Vince Flynn), Scot Harvath (Brad Thor).
These are all men who get it done damn the consequences!
Fred Weasley in "Harry Potter". I'm still mourning his death. Sophie, Lily, Minty Fresh and The Emperor in "A Dirty Job" by Christopher Moore.
They are just really wacky and interesting with a good heart.
Her friends ostracise her for writing brutally honest things about them. Harriet is curious, truthful, and a loner - all qualities a writer needs. My favourite literary character is a toad, the comically cantankerous half of Arnold Lobel's amphibian duo, Frog and Toad.
I love him because he embodies so many human foibles, such as laziness, fear, and attachment to routine. The character I most admire is the hero of Hugo van Hofmannsthal's social comedy The Difficult Man. Kari Buhl is an aristocrat who embodies his creator's ideal of decency, modesty, intelligence, and immense sensitivity to the feelings of others.
Chosen by Louisa Young (co-author with her daughter of Lionboy). Today's favourite literary character is Oskar Schell, aged 10, hero of Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, by Jonathan Safran Foer. My favourite fictional character is a judge who appears on just a few pages of Leo Tolstoy's Resurrection.
Awaiting him in the dock is the desperate Katya, a prostitute, whom he is about to send to her death by forced labour. He has other things on his mind, however.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.