Hi! This is my first post here, so I hope I'm doing everything right!
I have a favourite type of character. I like heroes who were imprisoned, enslaved or brutally punished for a minor crime, or for no crime at all. I like it when they escape (or are released) and just want to live a good life, but their past still haunts them (either as a real-life threat or psychological trauma). I want them to remain a good person. I don't want a revenge-focused plot. I adore The Count of Monte Cristo, but that's not what I'm looking for here. (Although if we're just talking about 'origin stories', Edmond Dantès is the perfect example of this trope). Also, I don't mind a cynic as long as he's fundamentally good. I don't mind an antihero; I just don't want a villain.
Basically, the description may be convoluted, but I want Jean Valjean from Les Misérables. He's my absolutely perfect book hero, especially because he cares about the world (especially Cosette) and his conflict with Javert.
There was a character like this in The Shadow of the Wind. I read it years ago, but I still remember that he was a great character. I think he wasn't imprisoned, but he was interrogated very brutally. The idea is the same.
Another great example from the mainstream is Sirius Black from Harry Potter (mostly because after the Prisoner of Azkaban, his life's mission changed from 'kill Peter Pettigrew' to 'take care of Harry as much as possible given his circumstances').
I heard about someone in Joe Abercrombie's books, but having read a description, I don't think he is 'still good inside' because he is basically an executioner.
I prefer fantasy or historical fiction, but it doesn't have to be one of those genres. It could be a grand adventure or a slice-of-life story. Bonus points if the hero is psychologically accurate and still has some trauma from imprisonment.
by IllSwordfish2346
7 Comments
Maybe *The Sparrow* if sci-fi is okay (it’s not very sci-fi and is as much about religious faith as anything else — the tormented character is a Jesuit).
Thornton Wilder „The eighth day“.
The Count of Monte Cristo
You’d love the superhero Luke Cage.
Have you read “The Passage” by Justin Cronin? The character I’m thinking of is not imprisoned, but goes through a terrible experience and makes a big change. Then he does as much good as he can.
Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix – Girls are sent to a maternity home for the “crime” of being pregnant and unwed in the 1970s America. There’s a bit of revenge but mostly the girls just want to protect each other, themselves, and their babies.
A few I’ve read that come to mind which feature ex-enslaved or otherwise traumatized characters –
Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson
Red Rising by Pierce Brown
The Gentlemen Bastards by Scott Lynch
Throne of Glass by Sarah J Maas (YA)
The Hunger Games (YA)