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BridgetJonescover The 9 literary heroines to love. Hard.

Bridget Jones’s Diary.

 

 

 

 

 

by REBECCA SPARROW

They change us.  Befriend us. Show us how to be fierce. Brave. Loyal.  Or conversely  show us the consequences of decisions we’ll never make ourselves.

We may be turning the pages of their stories but it is they who tuck us into their pockets and take us with them on their adventures; learning magic in a school for wizards, scrubbing the kitchen floor of a rich white woman in 1960s Mississippi, pushing back against the expectations placed on young women in 19th century England or navigating the minefield that is dating over the age of 30 while battling a cigarette addiction and a love of enormous underpants (thank you, Bridget Jones).

I did a rather horrible thing this month and asked nine of my  favourite female Australian novelists to each name their favourite literary heroine.  That’s right. Singular.  They all grumbled a bit (How can we choose just one?) but in the end their answers were as diverse and fascinating as the authors are themselves.

As for me, I’m choosing two. (Shut up. It’s my post.)  It’s hard to go past Pride and Prejudice‘s Elizabeth Bennett, right?  At a time when young ladies were appreciated for their aesthetics alone, Lizzie was there with her quick wit, her fierce loyalty, her gregarious nature and her free spirit. And when she said to Mr Darcy -  “I am no longer surprised at your knowing only six accomplished women. I rather wonder now at your knowing any.”  – I wanted to high-five her through the page.

My other favourite literary heroine is Liesel Meminger, the nine-year-old fearless, at times feisty and deeply compassionate protagonist from The Book Thief. I went on a journey with her through Nazi Germany and I felt changed by the end of her story.

And now that I’ve chosen Lizzie and Liesel, I’m feeling immense guilt over not naming my favourite red-head, the irresistible, loquacious, loose-cannon, Anne Shirley from Green Gables. Or the deliciously subversive Miss Jean Brodie.  Or Katniss Everdeen whose determination, courage and cunning in The Hunger Games makes you want to stand up and cheer.

I think we need a longer list.

1. Jessica Rudd: Charlotte from  Charlotte’s Web

Jessica Rudd The 9 literary heroines to love. Hard.

Jessica Rudd

For an arachnophobe, Charlotte A. Cavatica may seem a strange choice of literary heroine, but E.B. White’s character in Charlotte’s Web was the first to come to my mind. She was an earth mother, wordsmith and tireless activist who, with limited resources in the twilight of her life, made it her mission to save that sweet, doomed piglet, Wilbur, from his Christmas dinner fate. She was a source of comfort, company and camaraderie to Wilbur. She saved his bacon, soothed his woes and warmed his – and my – heart.

Jessica Rudd is a Canberra-born, Brisbane-raised ex-lawyer, ex-campaign worker and ex-PR consultant who lives with her husband in Beijing. She is the author of two novels: Campaign Ruby and Ruby Blues.

 

2. Dr Karen Brooks: The Handmaid from The Handmaid’s Tale

KarenBrookes 177x236 The 9 literary heroines to love. Hard.

Karen Brookes

Never given a name, the handmaid from this dystopian story comes to represent all those who have fought quietly and bravely against social, sexual and gender injustice. She passively and actively resists oppression and, by recording history for future generations, remains optimistic and gives voice to those who dare not and/or are powerless to speak for themselves. Reading this book was literally a life-changing experience for me.

Dr Karen Brooks is a university professor,  newspaper columnist with The Courier-Mail and the author of 10 novels. Her most recent, Illumination, was released in July.

3. Louise Limerick: Jo March from Little Women

LouiseLimerick 177x236 The 9 literary heroines to love. Hard.

Louise Limerick

I fell in love with Jo March from ‘Little Women’ when I was about eleven years old. I loved Jo’s passionate nature – she had the confidence that I lacked and a temper (which Marmee was always trying to reign in). But most of all I loved the way that Jo always knew, in her heart, that she was destined to be a writer. Skip forward twenty-six years and I found myself in Concord visiting Orchard House where Louisa May Alcott (Jo’s creator) once lived. Stooping over Alcott’s own writing desk I found myself gazing out the window and across the yellowed summer fields. Time collapsed, and I was once again seeing through the eyes of Jo March, fellow ‘scribbler’ and the very first of my fictional friends.

Louise Limerick is the author of the award-winning novel Dying For Cake  and the recently released Lucinda’s Whirlwind.

4. Kate Forsyth: Emily Byrd Starr from Emily of New Moon

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Kate Forsyth

‘Emily of New Moon, in the book by L.M. Montgomery, was the first girl I ever read about who wanted to be a writer. Most people love the Anne books best, but for me, Emily Byrd Starr of New Moon was the one who spoke most clearly to me.  Even her name was magical! I felt I shared with her an intense love of the beauty of the world, a sensitive soul with a streak of strangeness or sadness in it, and, most of all, a passionate yearning to write and to “climb the Alpine Path and write my name on the scroll of fame.” Her struggles to be true to herself, to find the strength to keep on writing in the face of criticism and scorn, and to find true love resonated with me in a very deep and profound way.

Kate Forsyth is the bestselling and award-winning author of more than twenty books. Her most recent novel, Bitter Greens, is a retelling of the Rapunzel fairytale interwoven with the dramatic, true life story of the woman who first told the tale, the 17th century French writer, Charlotte-Rose de la Force.

 

5. Kate Hunter: Scarlett O’Hara from Gone With The Wind

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Kate Hunter

Scarlett O’Hara had looks, husbands and money, but in the end, nothing mattered more than guts.

Apart from being a Contributing Editor at Mamamia, Kate Hunter is the author of the Mosquito Advertising series of books for young adults. She is currently working on a scandalous novel about school fetes.

6. Nerida Newton:  Sybylla Melvyn from My Brilliant Career

nerida newton1 The 9 literary heroines to love. Hard.

Nerida Newton

The lessons Sybylla taught me?  Stay true to yourself. Ask questions. Don’t settle for an ordinary life, whatever your circumstances. And, most importantly: write novels.

Nerida Newton is the award-winning author of  two works of historical fiction:  The Lambing Flats and Death of a Whaler.

7. Kim Wilkins: Jane Eyre from Jane Eyre.

Kim Wilkins 177x236 The 9 literary heroines to love. Hard.

Kim Wilkins

I admire Jane Eyre, because she is both principled and spirited. Far from being a weakling or an emotional pushover, she uses intellect and a strong moral compass to make decisions and stick by them.

Kim Wilkins is the internationally published, award-winning author of more than 20 novels. Her latest novel is Lighthouse Bay which she wrote under the pen name Kimberley Freeman.

8. Kylie Ladd:  The unnamed narrator from Go Ask Alice

Kylie Ladd 177x236 The 9 literary heroines to love. Hard.

Kylie Ladd

My choice is a little grungier. It’s the unnamed narrator from the anonymously-published 70′s novel Go Ask Alice, purported to be the diary of a 15-year-old high school student who got involved with LSD, then heroin and eventually died of an overdose. My mother gave me the book when I was about 14, no doubt intending to scare me off drugs forever, and I DEVOURED it. I read it in a day, then read it again, and cried my eyes out at the end both times. Yes, the book warned me about drugs (I’ve never inhaled), but more than that I think the narrator was the first literary character I’d truly engaged with. She was young and a bit unsure of her place in life and worried about her body and boys and school and she could have been me. She taught me that yes, growing up is scary and that life isn’t always fair, but it’s also precious and not to waste it. Thirty years on, I still find myself thinking about her some days.

Kylie is a novelist, freelance writer and neuropsychologist. Her first novel, After The Fall, was published in the US and Turkey , her second, Last Summer, was highly commended in the Federation of Australian Writers 2011 award for fiction, and her third, Into My Arms, will be released early next year.

9. Wendy Squires: Lolita from Lolita

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Wendy Squires

I had the pleasure of reading Nabakov’s masterpiece as I was coming to grips with my sexuality post-puberty. Through the eyes of protagonist Humbert Humbert I discovered the power a young woman wields, the affect it has on men and the great price paid for using said power as a bargaining chip. I have read the novel many times as I have aged and passed it on to my god daughters when they too have reached that delicate stage when their bodies say women but their minds are still very much that of a girl.

Wendy Squires has been a journalist for more than 20 years and is currently a columnist for The Age. She is the author of the novel The Boys’ Club, based on her brief experience as a television publicist.

Click through the gallery to see what books we reckon feature inspiring female characters… 

Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

Who are YOUR literary heroines? 

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140 Comments so far

  1. JacH

    All the good literary heroines have been named and as a crime reader, i’m going non-literary and naming heroines from crime novels. Who else is going to teach to get yourself out of a tight spot?

    Angela Gennaro from Dennis Lehane’s Kenzie and Gennaro books
    Simone Kirsch from Leigh Redhead’s books
    Carole Jordan from Val McDermid’s Tony Hill / Carole Jordan books
    V I Warshawski from the Sara Paretski books

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    • Shaezy

      I love V.I. as well! And I adore Kinsey Millhone too.

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  2. Kris2040

    As a kid (and often continuing now)
    Anne of Green Gables (just please not the execrable continuing saga tv series. Only the books)
    George from The Famous Five
    Ramona The Brave and Beezus
    Penny Pollard
    Frances from People Might Hear You
    Trixie Belden

    As a more grown up person:
    Elizabeth Bennett
    Hermione Granger
    Molly and Ginny Weasley
    Luna Lovegood
    Prof McGonagall
    Katharina from the Taming of The Shrew
    Beatrice from Much Ado About Nothing
    Most of Marian Keyes’ main characters
    Ummm, there are probably more – there are some that I quite like the book, like Bridget Jones, but wouldn’t call Bridget a “heroine”.

    I just read an interesting Pride and Prejudice spin-off based on Charlotte and Mr Collins – it was quite enjoyable – interesting and funny to see Mr Collins and Lady Catherine fleshed out more!

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    • JamandCream

      Love your list! You should try ‘The Independence of Miss Mary Bennet’ by Colleen McCullough if you enjoyed that spinoff.

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      • Kris2040

        I got it free (if not free then very cheap) via Pixel of Ink, which a number of people recommended here. A bunch have come up as suggestions now. I also have “P & P and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls” going. And “A Dangerous Inheritance”.
        The one I read mentions Mary being courted by someone in Meryton. Charlotte has a little affair with Col Fitzwilliam in it too! Bring me my salts!

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      • lauren91

        I read that and was so disappointed I couldn’t finish it!

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    • Katie Dee

      Trixie Belden!!! Collected them all. I wonder where they went . . . . loved those books!

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  3. Trace

    Jo March for me – brave enough to be herself in a time when that wasn’t really encouraged. Love her. Every time I read it (or watch the movie which is also fantastic) I hope Beth won’t die…even though I know it’s coming… it makes me bawl, every time!

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    • Beckala

      It’s like that episode from Friends:

      Joey: Beth is very sick. Jo’s there, but I don’t know if there’s anything she can do…
      Rachel: Joey, do you want to put the book in the freezer?
      Joey: Yes…

      Cracks me up every time!

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  4. SamGW

    My eldest daughters are Charlotte and Josephine – guess who they’re named after?

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  5. Simone

    Viewing the movie ‘Bridget Jones’ Diary’ made me want to take to her face with a cheesegrater.

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  6. Cinnamon

    Over time it’s been Josephine Alibrandi from Looking for Alibrandi, Scout from To Kill a Mockingbird, Bridget from Bridget Jones’ Diary ummmm that’s all I can think of right now….

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  7. zepgirl

    One of the many whom I admire is Lisbeth Salander from ‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’ series. Very tough, hella smart, wins despite extraordinary odds against her. Go, Sally!

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    • Trace

      Yes! Smart and uncompromising!

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  8. carlie

    Argh!! So many to choose from!! OK, let’s do this:

    Anne Shirley- I have literally grown up with Anne and every time I re-read them, I relate to her more at a different time in her life. I’m just waiting for my Gilbert Blythe!

    Elizabeth Bennet- I love Lizzie! Enough said. Does anyone else watch the Lizzie Bennet Diaries on YouTube? I recommend them to all P&P fans!!
    Jo March- again, a character I relate so much to and have grown with. Actually, there’s been times I’ve related to all the March girls- except for Amy, for some reason.

    Hermione Granger- to a 10 year old girl with buck teeth and who loved reading and school and never really had any friends, Hermione became my best friend. I loved watching her grow into this brilliant, confident young woman and witch!

    The heroine from Rebecca- although she’s never named and we learn so little about her, I could easily relate to her insecure nature and low self-esteem and my heart went out to her as she struggled to find her feet and taking Rebecca’s place.

    Also- (maybe crossing a line here!) I’m going to add my #1 heroine- Elphaba Thropp. But I want to go with the musical version of Elphaba, not the book! But I’m claiming her! LOL.

    And last but not least (until I think of more and kick myself for forgetting them earlier)- Trixie Belden. I read and loved both Trixie and Nancy Drew, but preferred Trixie just because Nancy was always so perfect! Trixie hated maths, had a temper, fought with her siblings and had a not-so-secret crush on her best friend’s brother. LOL

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    • Kate Hunter

      Carlie – I’m so glad you mentioned Rebecca! But I’m fascinated by Rebecca herself. Although she was dead throughout the book, in my opinion she’s very much the main character. I found her far more interesting than that mealy-mouthed Mrs deWinter :-)

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      • carlie

        Yes, Rebecca was a book I picked up out at 14 from my school library when looking for books and LOVED it. Re-read it so many times now!

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      • j-l

        You might enjoy Wide Sargasso Sea then, Kate. It’s the story of Rebecca before/during her courtship with Mr Rochester. Obviously it’s not by Daphne Du Maurier but it’s not one of those horrendous, $9.99 sappy pre/se-quels that people write which, quite frankly, ruin the original (Cosette, the sequel to Les Miserables, anyone??). It’s by Jean Rhys and IMHO it’s really quite good.

        Plus if it adds credibility, it was reviewed on First Tuesday Book Club about a year ago and from memory all the “clubbers” liked it.

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        • Lulu

          That would be the prequel to Jane Eyre – I think you got your ‘first wives’ confused.

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          • PhoenixBlue

            That’s right – Wide Sargasso Sea is about Mr Rochester’s first wife during the early years of the marriage – before she went crazy. It’s wonderful and haunting and sad and showed a wild and wistful side to what eventually became the deranged wretch locked in the tower in “Jane Eyre.”

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            • Edwina

              Bertha!

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      • j-l

        Gah! I mean to post that comment as a reply to the Jane Eyre quote below (wide sargasso sea is the ‘prequel’ to that) and then got distracted by Kate’s comment about Rebecca. It must be Friday :)

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    • becsparrow

      You (and Kate Hunter) have just inspired me to pull out my copy of Rebecca. God that book is such a wonderful read.

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    • curmudgeon

      Sally Beauman gives Rebecca a voice in ‘Rebecca’s Tale’ – a great read. I was so intrigued by Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca character and always wished she was given a proper hearing, a ‘fair go’! Perhaps I might not have had the ‘narrator’ character not annoyed me so much!

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      • Kate Hunter

        I’m a big fan of Sally Beauman! Such thoughtful analysis of DuMaurier, who was often dismissed as a ‘ladies’ writer’. I recently bought ‘The Rebecca Notebook’ from Amazon – it’s the raw material for ‘Rebecca’ – for a writer it’s so amazing to see how ROUGH the first draft of such a fabulously plotted novel could be before it became a best-seller.

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  9. Anonymous

    Ellie Linton from the Tomorrow When the War Began series by John Marsden.

    She showed such determination in the face of adversity, an excellent message for me as a young adult.

    I loved the books, and remember getting them as presents at various Christmases and dying to read it straight away but having to wait until the extended family had left.

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    • carlie

      Ah, I forgot Ellie! I love her!!

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      • Kylie L

        Ellie is the prototype for Katniss :)

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  10. Lisa Jensen

    Lol – I loved Anne of Green Gables so much as a kid – so much so my grandpa used to call me that. I thought it was because my middle name was also Anne (with an E) and as a result spent a good 15 years spelling my name wrong until I had occasion to pull out my birth certificate……(no E for me!)
    !!

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  11. Anonymous

    Lots of great suggestions here ladies. I’d like to add Amelia Peabody Emerson from the Amelia Peabdy series.

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  12. Angela Mollard

    Not literary and not PC, but George from The Famous Five.

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    • becsparrow

      Yes! I loved George!!!

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      • Esther

        Me too! Always loved their high tea too, made me hungry reading famous five.

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  13. ALL the female characters who don’t need a man (or partner) or a romance to complete them!

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  14. Laws for Clouds

    I loved Anne but I wanted to be Emily! Actually one of my children came very close to being named Emily Anne (with an e!).

    I am inspired by Snip from Nikki Gemmell’s Cleave, Dulour from the Harp in the South by Ruth Park and many of Judy Blume’s characters.

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  15. gypsy

    Eugenia “Skeeter” Phelan – from The Help. She was kind, passionate, stood her ground in what she believed was right and fair. Loved her.

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  16. Katie Dee

    I’ve always been found of Charlotte, but I do admire all the women characters in some Australian books as well – Looking for Alibrandi, Playing Beattie Bow and The Harp in the South.

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  17. Beckala

    So many I don’t know if I can choose! (but I’m an English teacher – its a hazard of the job!)

    Apart from the ones mentioned which are all great (Jo from Little Women being a particular favourite!):

    Scout from To Kill A Mockingbird
    Skeeter from The Help (the modern day version of Mockingbird I know!!)
    Katniss from The Hunger Games
    The mother from The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas – probably moreso from the film because it is a little more explicit about her journey which is just utterly heartbreaking
    Rachel from Rachel’s Holiday (not one I’d recommend to kids, but the way she completely transforms her life with humour and honesty – I love it!)

    Dammit – recess is over so I’ll have another think and come back because I know I have more!!

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    • SuperLadyjuliet

      Do you mean the Nazi wife??? What the hell.

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      • Beckala

        The strength she showed in trying to keep her family together and to protect her children from the war. And just agreeing with her husband’s decision to move to hell. The author has stated in a number of interviews how important the character of the mother was, because she represented all of the family members of the Nazis who had absolutely no idea what was happening but suffered in silence. Her goal the entire time was to make her kids feel safe and loved. She showed compassion to the Jews through her interactions with Pavel, the Jewish waiter, but realises the need to hide her actions from her husband.

        The reason I admire her is her complexities. Her role in life was wife and mother. She had to achieve that all alone – her husband was a general first – that came before anything in their home life. She had suspicions about her husband but knew if she said anything the consequences were dire – shown through the death of a worker in the house. I don’t agree with the nazism in any way shape or form – my husbamd’s grandmother was in a concentration camp during the war. But that character is so complex, confusing yet maternal and loving to her children and personally struggles with the life she is forced to leave.

        That’s also why I said I felt for her more in the movie – they make a definite decision to show her awareness of the situation she is in and her refusal to blindly agree with her husband and to insist her children leave – as a matter of pure survival – reflects her courage.

        She is in no way a “perfect” heroine like Jo March or Scout. I like to see a heroine that isn’t clear cut – on some pages I hate her, on others I feel desperately sorry for her. It’s this continual shift in opinion that fascinates me. She’s not someone I aspire to be like – but in a post modern way, it’s interesting to assess her morals and guilt – I use her as an example in my classes to discuss the hidden side of genocide and the way the women at home dealt with it. Did something similar with the film “Sometimes in April” about the Rwandan genocide where a woman takes in a group of school girls who were Tutsi for a day – her husband was a Hutu rebel and we discuss the risk she takes taking care of them – same as the mum in “Boy” takes a major risk in refusing to dob on the Jewish worker…

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  18. Karen

    Makedde Vanderwall from the Tara Moss’ books (Fetish, Split, Covert, Hit, Siren, Assassin). I remember first reading Fetish and thinking “Finally a character who is smart, strong and can hold her own in a man’s world”

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  19. Deb

    What a lovely idea to ponder on a Friday. Jennifer Cavilleri in Love Story might be mine (or maybe second after Lizzie) – brilliant, beautiful and tragic. She still makes me cry.

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  20. Debbie

    You know Bridget Jones /is/ Elizabeth Bennett right?

    My pick would be Rosie Little from ‘Rosie Little’s Cautionary Tales for Girls’ by Danielle Wood. This book came to me right when I needed it and has been the comfort book I reach for whenever I need a pick me up.

    And just because I don’t want to leave the guys out – Arthur Dent, because I fully understand how frustrating it is when all you want is a decent up of tea and no matter what you do you can’t get one.

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    • becsparrow

      Of course! Helen Fielding openly admits to using the P&P narrative for Bridget Jones’ Diary but the characters of Bridget and Elizabeth, I think, are quite different in personality.

      For starters, Bridget is a crap public speaker! :)

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  21. Jac

    excellent choices of women here :)

    One book and heroine that needs to be added though is Tally Youngblood from the ‘Uglies’ series. Excellent series about rebelling against conformity and staying true to what you truly believe in. Also has a lot of interesting commentary on our society, body image & the like. such an underrated series, have been my favourites since i was about 12/13.

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    • Beckala

      my students are all obsessed with the Uglies series at the moment! They finished Hunger Games and they asked for suggestions so I put together a list based on a few website suggestions and that was on it – they are now taking turns to read the library copy! I will have to put myself in the list I guess!

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      • Jac

        they’re seriously awesome! more for the content and ideas rather than the writing style/quality but it’s worth it!

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    • Flowers in the Spring

      Love that series! I’m an English teacher who’s done a stint as a school librarian and the kids I work with are all into the Uglies series too.

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  22. Mary

    Emily….was also my favourite! I always loved her more than Anne. I actually just re-read them again and I it really took me back to my young teenage self. There is a moment in that book when Teddy tells her that she is “the sweetest girl in the world”. And LM goes on saying that all women always remember the first time they are told this.
    I was 18 years old when my now partner uttered those words to me. I actually remember thinking “wow it just happened, just like it did to Emily” and yes, that moment in my life is one of the lovliest memories I have.

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  23. Charlie

    Bec, what a wonderful post. Makes me smile to think about my favourite characters and you’re right that they change us somehow, and feel like fierce friends.

    I have to have three. Elizabeth Bennett, Anne Shirely (adore everything about Green Gables) and Jo March from Little Women.

    But the list doesn’t stop there!

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  24. Laura

    So glad Jane Eyre made it onto the list :) A strong, principled woman who refused to let anyone interfere with what she knows is right.
    Also- Hermione Granger! Smart, strong willed, courageous, powerful, she saves the day and kicks butt in all the books, but she is also real- her character develops constantly whilst staying true to who she is. Reading the books through primary and high school, she was an amazing role model.

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    • becsparrow

      How could I have missed Hermione Granger?!

      GAH!

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    • girly

      I was disappointed not to see her included :(

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    • Neeks

      I was just trying to pick my favourite Jane Eyre quote and realised I could end up quoting half the book. This is one of my favourites:

      “It is in vain to say human beings ought to be satisfied with tranquillity: they must have action; and they will make it if they cannot find it. Millions are condemned to a stiller doom than mine, and millions are in silent revolt against their lot. Nobody knows how many rebellions besides political rebellions ferment in the masses of life which people earth. Women are supposed to be very calm generally: but women feel just as men feel; they need exercise for their faculties, and a field for their efforts, as much as their brothers do; they suffer from too rigid a restraint, to absolute a stagnation, precisely as men would suffer; and it is narrow-minded in their more privileged fellow-creatures to say that they ought to confine themselves to making puddings and knitting stockings, to playing on the piano and embroidering bags. It is thoughtless to condemn them, or laugh at them, if they seek to do more or learn more than custom has pronounced necessary for their sex.”

      I just love her character and I think I would have loved Charlotte Bronte. She would be at my fantasy dinner party.

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  25. Lulu

    Jo March: always.

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  26. Boo

    I just can’t go past Anne Shirley. The ‘Anne’ books were the first books I ever devoured and read over and over again. My slightly battered copies of the entire series are still some of my most prized things…real, if I was preparing to evacuate the house I’d save them kind of stuff. My young adult life was better for having Anne in it and one day I will go to Prince Edward Island and pretend I’m coming home to Green Gables…probably with my husband tagging along in the background rolling his eyes because he just doesn’t get it.

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    • Lucy Ormonde

      + 1 on Anne Shirley!

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    • SamGW

      I’ve been to Prince Edward Island and it is the most beautiful place – definitely a place to be inspired (and pretend to be Anne).

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