Saturday, July 20, 2013

The 10 Best Underdogs in Books

By Gavin Extence | PW - July 19, 2013


Photo Credit: Alex Extence

In Gavin Extence's The Universe Versus Alex Woods, teenager Alex is hit by a meteorite, an epileptic, and a victim of bullying. The reader never stops rooting for him. Here are 10 underdogs in literature, picked by Extence.


The opening shot of Star Wars: a small rebel spaceship passes overhead, pursued, a few moments later, by Darth Vader’s ‘Star Destroyer’, and – famously – the latter ship just keeps coming and coming. No words are spoken, but that first thirty-second shot gives us everything we need to know about the situation: the rebels are small and ill-equipped; the Empire is huge and terrifying. What’s more, this vast disparity in scale humanises what could otherwise be a rather cold and mechanical spectacle, and before a single character appears on screen, we already know which side we’re on.

The point, of course, is that everyone loves an underdog – and the archetypal underdog story goes right back to David versus Goliath and beyond. Nevertheless, this is one well-worn narrative device that has produced, and continues to produce, a wealth of unique and wonderful characters. So – from the obvious to the obscure, taking in the quirky, the unlikely and the morally questionable – here is my list of ten great literary underdogs.

1. Owen Meany, A Prayer for Owen Meany – Barely five foot tall, with a permanent high-pitched scream for a voice (rendered ENTIRELY IN CAPITALS), Owen Meany is my favorite underdog of all time – and possibly the unlikeliest hero in all of literature. Funny, tragic and completely adorable. If you’re not crying by the end of his story, you’re probably a psychopath.


2. Vernon Little, Vernon God Little – Little by name, and metaphorically little by circumstance. After being wrongly implicated in a shooting at his high school, and hounded by the media, Vernon does what any sane fifteen-year-old would do: heads for Mexico, gets drunk with the locals, and embarks upon a roadtrip in search of a Hollywood beach-hut paradise. As plans go, it’s not the best . .
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3. Frodo Baggins, The Lord of the Rings – Despite his short stride, the indomitable Mr Baggins agrees to walk several thousand miles to throw a ring into a volcano (the cheerily named ‘Mount Doom’). Along the way he encounters blood-thirsty orcs, murderous wraiths and a giant spider. This is not a story that resonates closely with most of our day-to-day lives; it’s just a fantastic story with a fantastic underdog. To quote The Simpsons: "A noble spirit embiggens the smallest man." Or, in this case, hobbit.


4. Ron Weasley, The Harry Potter books – Originally, I had Harry Potter on the list – but bad glasses and erratic hormones aside, the Boy Who Lived actually has quite a lot going for him: he’s great at sports, magically gifted, generally revered in his community, and has a bank vault full of gold. Weasley, in contrast, has a shock of ginger hair, a hand-me-down rat, and a face (I imagine) that only a mother could love. He also has to grow up in the shadow of his famous best friend and five older brothers (Percy the prefect, Fred and George the class comedians, Bill the Banker and Charlie the dragon-tamer). Those are some tough acts to follow.

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