Friday, July 15, 2011

Secret Book Hero Crushes

Oh goody. Another topic that points out what an odd child I may have been. I seem to have missed out on the crushing over book heros thing. I suspect I can blame George Lucas. At the point in my life where most other girls were falling for heros in books, I was a complete and unrepentent Star Wars Geek. I was all about Luke Skywalker and Han Solo.

And flying X-Wing fighters! I would have been GOOD at that. I suspect I might even have had a talent for bull's-eying womp rats in a T-16.

What I was bad at was reading books with markedly alpha heros and happily-ever-after romantic endings. I was reading authors who gave me female protagonists, Andre Norton, notable among them. I desperately needed those strong, smart, determined women at that point in my life. She delivered. Ordeal in Otherwhere has to be one of my favorites. A heroine driving her own fate on a world ruled by women? What's not to love?

That said, a few of her heros do stand out in my memory. Kethan in the Jargoon Pard. Prince Michael in The Prince Commands. Not because either story was much of a romance - the Jargoon Pard did have a bit of a romance in it, but both heros were good, admirable guys in tough circumstances. Prince Michael had the smart mouth and wit to make me appreciate him. I admit to being a sucker for a sense of humor. Kethan had the heart, brains, and determination to walk into the fire for a woman who barely knew he was alive until she, too, saw those things in him.

The heros all of my English teachers seemed to hold in such high regard? I thought they all needed a swift kick in the -- shins. The heros. Not my teachers. Okay. There was that *one*... 

4 comments:

  1. I liked the female protagonists, too. But I loved 'em to have a great guy to team with!

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  2. Han Solo all the way! I've been in love with Harrison Ford ever since that day --

    But I have also always had book heroes. I need to save them for the blog post. Which I suppose I should be writing. Or at least thinking about writing.

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  3. The prequel to Jargoon Pard...now I'm blanking on the name and will have to look it up. AH, Year of the Unicorn! The hero had a name with all sorts of consonants. He was one of my favorite Norton heroes, as was Simon Tregarth. Both of them had to subdue their alpha-ness and let the woman shine.

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