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Fannish Friday (early): Favorite Non-human characters
Who are your favorite characters that aren't human? For the purposes of this discussion, this rules out ghosts, too, and also characters who were once human but became something human adjacent (say, vampires or angels or werewolves) or were something else but became human (Anya from BtVS).
Let's talk about cool characters who were never human in the first place! With an emphasis on those that feel actually other or whose lack of humanity is a central characteristic.
There are characters I love that aren't technically human but that pretty much are at least in how they act (Vulcans and Bajorans from ST and Lorne from AtS all come to mind). But
Here are some of mine:
+ Data is my favorite ST: TNG character. I know he acts very human, but his otherness is built into his story--I really think that all the most moving moments, especially from the first few seasons, were built around him and his attempts to understand his own humanity or lack thereof. We love an android!
+ And speaking of ST, everyone's weird boyfriend Doug Jones does a fantastic job of making Saru on DSC feel like something other than a human. Frankly, any Doug Jones character feels otherworldly!
+ I won't spoil it by going into detail, but I really love the alien character in Some Desperate Glory
+ The faerie characters in Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell feel super other to me
+ All of the animal characters in Robin McKinley's books are very lovable
+ Selver from The Word for World Is Forest is totally emotionally understandable and yet still feels very alien to me
What about y'all?
Let's talk about cool characters who were never human in the first place! With an emphasis on those that feel actually other or whose lack of humanity is a central characteristic.
There are characters I love that aren't technically human but that pretty much are at least in how they act (Vulcans and Bajorans from ST and Lorne from AtS all come to mind). But
Here are some of mine:
+ Data is my favorite ST: TNG character. I know he acts very human, but his otherness is built into his story--I really think that all the most moving moments, especially from the first few seasons, were built around him and his attempts to understand his own humanity or lack thereof. We love an android!
+ And speaking of ST, everyone's weird boyfriend Doug Jones does a fantastic job of making Saru on DSC feel like something other than a human. Frankly, any Doug Jones character feels otherworldly!
+ I won't spoil it by going into detail, but I really love the alien character in Some Desperate Glory
+ The faerie characters in Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell feel super other to me
+ All of the animal characters in Robin McKinley's books are very lovable
+ Selver from The Word for World Is Forest is totally emotionally understandable and yet still feels very alien to me
What about y'all?
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Also: Cheddar the dog from B99. A legend forever!
This post reminded me of how I deeply want to do a Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell reread, but will I ever find the time and focus? That is the question! Someday ...
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+ I love the griffins in Diana Wynne Jones' The Dark Lord of Derkholm. They're so charming and realistic and specific.
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I'm not sure I'd agree with you that vampires should be excluded from this category due to having previously been human — I think sometimes you get vampires that were turned so long ago that they've become something other by virtue of the distance of time from their human lives.
Some other non-human characters I enjoy:
The sentient spaceship 'mindships' in Aliette de Bodard's far-future Vietnamese history/mythology-inspired Xuya space opera universe;
The terminator Cameron Phillips in Terminator: the Sarah Connor Chronicles;
Pretty much every supernatural being in Susan Cooper's The Dark Is Rising sequence — they're similar in a lot of ways to the faeries in JS&MN;
All the pagan gods and supernatural beings in Katherine Arden's Winternight trilogy (Morozko in particular is just my ideal fictional non-human character in terms of how he's written);
(Spoilers for a fifteen-year-old book) Nick Ryves from Sarah Rees Brennan's Demon's Lexicon trilogy — he's just such a great deconstruction of the 'my dark, mysterious, demon boyfriend' YA character, written by someone who obviously has a lot of affection for all the clichés in relation to this type of character;
I could go on — I have such a long list of answers to this question!
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The aliens in The Color of Distance -- the novel is all about the first contact between them and a human who comes to live with them for a time (and has to be biochemically altered to survive it), and it's fascinating and really compelling.
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Sapphire:
Sapphire senses and sees things.
Steel:
(Steel does not: eat, sleep, drink.)
Silver:
(He makes things sparkle and glow. It comes naturally.)
There's also Lead, but I haven't made gifs of Lead. Assignment 1 is very green and brown, lol. I must tho.
Lead:
Steel is not allowed to take his temperature to below freezing without Lead around to warm him up after!
I'm also very fond of D84 from the Doctor Who serial "The Robots of Death" who is Best Robot. ("Please do not throw hands at me!")
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As with his cetaceans from Children of Ruin, they have a split consciousness. In the birds' case, one bird in a pair has something like the executive function, while the other has the power of noticing. They can only function by working together. In the case of the cetaceans, the brain/head does the emotions and executive stuff. The tentacles have mechanical intelligence and follow through on the wishes of the being at their centre.
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