If you could be any character in fiction,
whom would you be?
- Elephant's Child said...
- An Entwife.
- Tabor said...
- Boy, that is a hard one. So many good characters...but mostly
male due to our cultural gender bias. Maybe Pis-cine in Life of Pi. Or
Harry Potter. For females perhaps Charlotte in Charlotte's Web or Scout
in Too Kill a Mockingbird. There are many other secondary characters I
am forgetting, I am sure. Cannot possibly select just one!
- River said...
- I've no idea who I would be but now I have to google Entwife.
- Louvregirl said...
- 'Elinor' in Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen. She does
everything a (good) character should do in a movie....swoon, fall in
love, and 'almost' die. She is beautiful and young. (Plus) She 'gets'
the 'rich' AND kind Colonel Brandon, eventually! When she is on her
deathbed, I would switch to her sister, Marianne. :-)
[I absolutely adore the time period, costumes or clothing, hairstyles and life styles in Jane Austen's time period/novels. (They live in a small cottage on a lake.)] :-)
It was 'Elinor' in S & S, or 'Jo' in Little Women by Louisa May Alcott...(...she gets (from her Aunt) the looming, beautiful old house to teach school in...and, of course, the 'Professor.') ;-)
LOVE this question! Too much to choose from, actually! ;-D
- Kailani said...
- I can't say that your choice is a bad one! This is one I have to think on, though. hmmmm
Ok,Frances Mayes from 'Under the Tuscan Sun.' :)
- Arkansas Patti said...
- Scarlett O'Hara. It wouldn't hurt to be a knock out and you have
to love her resiliency. Also, I really don't think Rhett was actually
done with her. He'd be back.
An Entwife.
ReplyDeleteBoy, that is a hard one. So many good characters...but mostly male due to our cultural gender bias. Maybe Pis-cine in Life of Pi. Or Harry Potter. For females perhaps Charlotte in Charlotte's Web or Scout in Too Kill a Mockingbird. There are many other secondary characters I am forgetting, I am sure. Cannot possibly select just one!
ReplyDeleteI've no idea who I would be but now I have to google Entwife.
ReplyDelete'Elinor' in Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen. She does everything a (good) character should do in a movie....swoon, fall in love, and 'almost' die. She is beautiful and young. (Plus) She 'gets' the 'rich' AND kind Colonel Brandon, eventually! When she is on her deathbed, I would switch to her sister, Marianne. :-)
ReplyDelete[I absolutely adore the time period, costumes or clothing, hairstyles and life styles in Jane Austen's time period/novels. (They live in a small cottage on a lake.)] :-)
It was 'Elinor' in S & S, or 'Jo' in Little Women by Louisa May Alcott...(...she gets (from her Aunt) the looming, beautiful old house to teach school in...and, of course, the 'Professor.') ;-)
LOVE this question! Too much to choose from, actually! ;-D
I can't say that your choice is a bad one! This is one I have to think on, though. hmmmm
ReplyDeleteOk,Frances Mayes from 'Under the Tuscan Sun.' :)
Scarlett O'Hara. It wouldn't hurt to be a knock out and you have to love her resiliency. Also, I really don't think Rhett was actually done with her. He'd be back.
ReplyDeleteDagny Taggart from "Atlas Shrugged".
ReplyDeleteI really have no idea who I would choose. I would have to give it a lot of thought. I will say that I love that someone chose "entwife". That is a very original idea! (Rob)
ReplyDeleteScout from To Kill a Mockingbird, I think.
ReplyDeleteFun to read these answers.
ReplyDeleteIt is fun to read these answers Happy Whisk but we don't know your fictional character nor do we know Rob's or Rivers. I loved them so much especially the Entwife, ruler of all:-)
ReplyDelete