Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by The Broke and The Bookish! This week’s topic: ten characters from childhood that you’d love to revisit as adults. This was a trip down memory lane, as I spent time thinking about the books I loved growing up, which was a lot of them. Here are the characters I’d most like to connect with:
The Babysitters Club: I read what feels like it was probably close to 100 of these books as a kid. Of course I desperately wanted to start a club of my own, and of course I didn’t, but I lived vicariously though the girls’ adventures. I wanted to think I was a Claudia, but I was totally a Mary Ann. I’d love to see an adult novel that followed up on their lives…maybe a mystery set at their 10 year reunion?
Meg Murry (A Wrinkle In Time): After being the main character of the first two novels of the Time Quartet, the focus shifts off of Meg and onto her brothers. We see a little bit of her, but we don’t really get to focus on her and her life. We know that she ends up married to Calvin and the mother of a large family, but I want to see a follow up with Meg from her own perspective. It looks like such a novel was in the works when Madeline L’Engle had a stroke and stopped writing, which bums me out.
Georgia Nicholson (Angus, Thongs, and Full Frontal Snogging): I loved this silly series and in my head, Georgia grows up to be more-or-less Bridget Jones, but I have a feeling she’d even put Bridget to shame sometimes in terms of getting herself into messes. I’m going to have to keep on with my own ideas, though, because Louise Rennison sadly passed away earlier this year.
Harry Potter: And the rest of the Potter gang, obviously. We’ve gotten little glimpses through Rowling’s ending of the final book and updates on Pottermore, and I’m hoping Harry Potter and the Cursed Child shows us even more of who Harry, Hermione, and Ron have become as adults.
Ella (Ella Enchanted): Cinderella may be a classic, but the Disney movie was never a favorite of mine because Cinderella is so boring (I quite liked Drew Barrymore’s Ever After, though). This retelling makes our girl a much stronger and more interesting character, and I’d love to see what happens in her happily ever after…I have a feeling it’s much more complicated than that.
Matilda Wormwood (Matilda): I loved this book so much as a kid…probably because I identified hard with its smart, book-loving heroine. I have a whole rant about the movie and how much I hated it, but that’s neither here nor there. After a childhood full of abusive parenting and magical powers, I really want to know what a grown-up Matilda is like after her telekinesis vanishes and she gets to live with Miss Honey. You have to think those early experiences would leave some pretty significant scars…
Jess Aarons (Bridge to Terabithia): This book made me ugly-cry as a kid, and after the death of his best friend, I wonder what happened to Jess. Thinking back on it as an adult, imaginative and artistic Jess seems to be written as potentially quietly gay, and I want to read about him going back home to visit small-town Virginia after moving to New York or Chicago or LA and becoming an artist.
Karana (Island of the Blue Dolphins): I’m pretty sure everyone read this in elementary or middle school, right? What we don’t think about is what happens when a young woman who has lived alone on an island for years not only re-encounters humanity, but finds herself in a completely different culture. What does she do? How does she live her life? I’d love to read about Karana’s post-Island life.
Miyax (Julie of the Wolves): I remember reading the sequel, which presents Miyax/Julie’s life when she leaves her wolf pack and struggles to readjust to a world that’s changed in her absence. But she’s still just a teenager in Julie, and I’d love to see her continue to learn and grow and see what she decides to make of her life and continue to deal with culture clash
April and Melanie (The Egypt Game): I know, there are other characters, but these two unlikely friends were my favorite. After a childhood of imagination games, I picture the girls going to college and growing apart, but reuniting in a chance encounter and slowly reconnecting. Anyone else want to read that or just me?