Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by The Broke and The Bookish! This week’s theme is a Halloween-centered freebie! Since Halloween is all about ghosts and witches and supernatural beings, I figured I’d highlight ten of my favorite magical-type characters.
Hermione Granger (Harry Potter): It should probably come as no surprise that Harry Potter’s biggest nerd and most type-A personality is my own personal favorite witch/wizard in the series, right?
Serafina Pekkala (The Golden Compass): They don’t really do, like, spells, but the witches in the His Dark Materials series are powerful nonetheless (and ageless, and beautiful).
Mogget (Sabriel): In the magical universe of The Old Kingdom series, Mogget is a reluctantly tamed beast of pure magic who usually appears as a little white cat and is sarcastic af.
Daine Sarassri (Wild Magic): I loved Daine as a teenager who loved animals…her ability to commune with creatures great and small made me long to have the same ability (now that I’m a grown up I just try to cuddle my sometimes standoffish pug).
Galadriel (The Fellowship of the Ring): The beautiful, powerful elf queen doesn’t get a lot of pages devoted to her in The Lord of the Rings, but she’s memorable because she’s amazing.
Melisandre (A Dance With Dragons): Melisandre was an irritating character to me until we started getting her point of view perspective in the most recent book in the A Song of Ice and Fire saga…now I just want to know mooooooore.
Sookie Stackhouse (Dead Until Dark): We learn later in the series what Sookie actually is, but when we meet her, we just know she’s a waitress. And a telepath. And a delightful character, generally.
Viane Rocher (Chocolat): She rejects the label of “witch”, but she has real, albeit subtle powers that give this lovely novel a touch of magical realism.
Mr. Wednesday (American Gods): This book features a bunch of interesting gods and goddesses, but the dynamic Mr. Wednesday, with his rumpled elegance and faded glory, is my favorite.
The domovoi (The Bear and the Nightingale): This book is filled with creatures from Slavic folklore, but my favorite is the domovoi, the house-spirit, who does small household magic in exchange for offerings of bread and milk.