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What character would you become?
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Lennie
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Apr 28, 2009 10:56AM

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I would properly like to be Stephanie Plum. Regardless of all the dirt and many other things that she gets covered in, the number of cars she send to car heaven and the number of crazy people she attracts, all that would go away when two people arrive Ranger and Morelli!

[:"
Me too! Oh, I would love that. :)

I agree :)


I'm a fan of Nancy Drew books as well and I loved reading them when I was a kid. I remember they were all the rage in elementary school. Around the same time (mid to late 70's) a Nancy Drew tv series started (Pamela Sue Martin was the actress) and it only increased her popularity. I think they made a movie in the last couple of years but I haven't seen it.
Lauren wrote: "Sophie wrote: "I would properly like to be Stephanie Plum. Regardless of all the dirt and many other things that she gets covered in, the number of cars she send to car heaven and the number of cra..."
YAY! I have a fellow Stephanie follower!
YAY! I have a fellow Stephanie follower!

I have thought and thought about this, and can not come up with one person. HELP!! I am too indecisive.




That's right I forgot Pamela Martin in the TV series. Thanks Lennie for the great memory.



If I could be a fictional character I would like to be
Elizabeth Bennett or a leading lady from a Cathy Marie Hake story.


**Gotta read Hunger Games. Everyone I know has raved about it. hmmmm



**Gotta read Hunger Games. Everyone I know..."
I am tempted to read Hunger Games next even though the next shelf down for me is Vampires. :)

She is a very strong woman who has many talents and has possibly the hottest husband ever. I partly want to be Claire because I want to have Jamie (her husband).
I highly recommend the series. Just don't be scared by their size.
- Jessica

Sure, he does end up having an incestuous affair with his mother after using said time-travel, and that's not something I'm really down with, but living forever due to genetic quirk could be handy.
He does age, so he's not quiet as eternally youthful as the characters in The Boat of a Million Years by Poul Anderson, but before he could ever die of old age technology came along to mend things, and -- as I said -- he has the technology to visit any other fictional universes I may think of later.

So of course I gave Stranger in a Strange Land to my eldest when he was looking for a classic SF tale that was a genre influencing book a couple of years ago. He thought it was pretty good and we had some good discussions over this one.
I can see the draw to Lazarus Long. Rich, with vast experiences that have colored his remarkable life. And yet at the same time the dangers he seems to face are almost inconsequential as you know he will overcome any difficulty. When I first read this thread, that was the first name that popped into my head as well. And then I thought, 'Would I really want to be an old guy with unlimited resources, an endless supply of beautiful woman that want to bed me, and the ability to do anything I wanted?' The answer is no. So I have not yet picked my character whose existence I will take over if wish becomes reality.

He did some really good stories with some essential plot elements other people have never managed to get right at all. (For instance, The Puppet Masters is actually a good book about parasitic mind-controlling aliens.)
I think Asimov and Herbert were, overall, preferred to Heinlein. Two of my favorites of Herbert's are The White Plague and The Green Brain, neither really present worlds I'd be comfortable with. (Though the world of The Green Brain promises great things in its future.)
Ultimately, I think I wouldn't mind a character on par with Wedderburn from The Strange Orchid. He lived a remarkably quiet and contented life, however on one day something happened to him.
The last thing you'd want would be to pick someone, think everything was all sorted out and your happy ending was all set, then find there was another book in the series (for instance, with the Hitchhiker's Guide series, you liked the end of #4, then #5 comes along), or you were content with the ending the original author provided, but in the minds of the media and some fans some horrible piece of fan-fiction was elevated to the place of official sequel (as I've heard some describe Scarlett).

Agreed on The Puppet Masters although Stephen King did OK with the one about the alien spacecraft being buried (*brain not yet working at 5:30 AM or I'd have the title for you).



Otherwise I see no harm in rereading it once, as then you could at least give it a review. Once you'd reviewed it on GR it would be easy for you to remember why you didn't like it in the future. :)

Books mentioned in this topic
Destination: Void (other topics)The Puppet Masters (other topics)
Destination: Void (other topics)
The Jesus Incident (other topics)
The Lazarus Effect (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Diana Gabaldon (other topics)Julie Kenner (other topics)