Top Ten Favorite Kick-Ass Heroines

Favorite kick-ass heroines? Wow. When I read that topic, I was just lost. Don’t they belong in YA novels or in urban fantasy or something like that? I suddenly couldn’t remember having read a single book with kick-ass heroines in it. Or do I? Maybe a kick-ass heroine doesn’t have to be someone who kicks down bad guys and fight for her life day in and day out. Maybe kick-ass can mean something else – or someone else. I don’t know. I don’t think that I need to read certain genres to read books with kick-ass heroines in them – it is just that impression the term ‘kick-ass heroines’ gives me. Anyway, my list tries to incorporate some more unusual kick-ass heroines… I don’t know if I succeeded or not – we’ll see.

As usual, the Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

  1. Ronja from Ronia, the Robber’s Daughter by Astrid Lindgren. Yes, Ronja, the girl from the children’s book. Her father is strong and a leader of men. But he has no chance against Ronja. When he doesn’t want her to hang out with the son of his worst enemy, she packs up and leaves his castle and goes to live in a cave. She trains horses, she heals horses, she teaches her father about friendship. She’s tough and loving and she’s the literary character, I named my first child after.
  2. Offred from The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. Offred is a woman living in a dystopic world where women who can have babies, are valuable and are kept as a kind of breeding cows for wealthy men in power. Offred still remembers her life before, her life with her husband and daughter – and she does what she has to do to live.
  3. The mother from Room by Emma Donoghue. This mother has been kidnapped, kept in a single room for years, raped over and over. She has a son by her rapist – and she manages to bring her and her child away from the kidnapper and to safety. Even though things get complicated in the outside world, she’s still pretty amazing for doing what she had to to rescue her child.
  4. The mother, Eva, from We Need To Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver. Eva fights the worst kind of demons – her own self-doubts, her failure as a mother. And she really has some huge doubts to fight after her son turned out to be a high school killer. We get to know her through the letters she writes her husband, detailing her life and her thoughts as her son was born and grew up.
  5. Alexia Tarabotti from The Parasol Protectorate series by Gail Carriger. Alexia is special – she has an ability to turn werewolves and vampires human just by touching her. She has an even bigger ability to get into trouble. But whatever happens, she always comes out on top – although not always with her dignity intact. But give her a parasol and she’s ready for everything.
  6. Hermione Granger from The Harry Potter Series by J.K. Rowling. Hermione. Oh, nerdy geeky Hermione. She’s just a book nerd as first but she sure shows every desired kick-ass heroine ability in the later books.
  7. Lauralanthalasa (Laurana) from The DragonLance series by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman and others. Yes, I know I said I would avoid this kind of kick-ass heroines but I just couldn’t. I could have chosen a lot of different female characters from this shared world series – Tika or Goldmoon just to mention a few – but I chose Laurana, the Golden General. This beautiful and very spoiled princess who falls in love with a  half-elf and has to work extremely hard to make it through various challenges and hardships to win the man she loves. She goes on to fight as a general for what she believes in and to stand by the side of her son when he needs her the most – playing a huge part in several resistances, always fighting for her beloved Elven people.
  8. Katniss Everden from The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins. How could I not mention Katniss? She fights against unbeatable odds and comes out on top. She’s tough, she’s taking care of her family and the people she loves. She’s both clever and sneaky – and lucky! She fulfills every part of the kick-ass heroine job description!

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Koushun Takami: Battle Royale (review)

It’s impossible to write a review of this book without mentioning The Hunger Games. So let me start there and then I’ll return to it later. When I heard there was a Japanese novel with roughly the same plot line as The Hunger Games, I had to read it. I mean – a Japanese author writing about kids killing each other on an island? Have you seen Japanese tv-/reality-shows? There’s no way this is not going to be good. So I got it from the library and dove right in. I read it as quickly as I could and I really enjoyed it.

Most people by now have either read or seen The Hunger Games – or at least it feels that way. At least everyone know what it’s about. Battle Royale is like The Hunger Games – but with more serious weapons, more violence and more deaths.

In Battle Royale, one class of 40 students is chosen to go to an island and fight it out until death. They’re drugged while driving in a bus, supposedly going on a school trip. Instead, they’re taken to a school on an island and here, they are informed that they are going to participate in the Program.

To convince them that this is real, they are shown their dead teacher who tried to stand up for them and when a couple of students either protest or whisper to each other, they’re killed by the soldiers. So now, everyone grasp that this is reality. Each student has had a collar put on and are told that if they enter a forbidden zone or if there has been no killings in 24 hours, the collars will explode, killing them. They are all given a random backpack with a weapon in – weapons goes from uzis and machine guns to rusty knives and binoculars. And then the games begin.

Some of the students don’t want to play the game and try to stay out of it while other immediately embrace it and go all in. Others still are so scared and panicked that they just act when they meet another student on the island. What Takami does very well is to show why these students act like they do. When reading books like this, I often wonder what makes people do what they do but then again, they are put in situations so extreme and are bombarded with impressions that are constructed to force a certain reaction out of them. And that is what happens in this book too. Some students react violently, some heroically, some rise above and some fall so far down…

When reading this, you get to experience every death. Whenever a student dies, you are right there with them. Some students are main characters – others are just featured for a few pages before they’re killed off by one of their class mates. It’s a bloody mess, frankly, and it’s so very good.

So did Suzanne Collins rip off Battle Royale when she wrote her hugely popular The Hunger Games series? There is no question about there being a lot of similarities between the two. But just because the basic idea is the same with teenagers killing each other off in order to win, and just because there are other similarities as well with some having to play the game more than once as well as some similarities in the endings, I don’t think Suzanne Collins did rip Battle Royale off. The Hunger Games is not Collins’ first book so she know how to write a novel. And I read one of her rare interviews where she talks about the inspiration for The Hunger Games. According to this, she was flipping through channels one night and saw young people competing for money on one channel and images from the Iraq war on another and these things merged in her mind and from that, she got the idea for The Hunger Games. This makes sense to me. Maybe she did know of Battle Royale when she wrote her books, maybe she didn’t. According to her, she didn’t. Either way, she certainly made the idea of teenagers fighting it out to the end her very own. She created something unique with her story and her characters and even if some of the themes are similar, the stories are different.

And maybe both Suzanne Collins and Koushun Takami owe something to William Golding’s Lord of the Flies where a group of boys get stranded on an island, tries to self-govern but everything breaks down and they end up forming two groups, fighting each other. Not many deaths in this novel though. But Collins and Takami step that part way up as well as change the reason for the children being there – from it being an accident to it being a planned situation, created to cause casualties.

I think both books – all three, in fact – have their own merits and I highly recommend them all. I can’t quite say if I prefer The Hunger Games or Battle Royale. I think they both have their strengths. Battle Royale is probably not suited for The Hunger Games intended readers but it’s a great, thrilling read that I thoroughly enjoyed.

And finally – here’s what Stephen King had to say about it back in 2007 on Entertainment Weekly:

Recommended to me by novelist Kelly Braffet (Josie and Jack), Battle Royale is an insanely entertaining pulp riff that combines Survivor with World Wrestling Entertainment. Or maybe Royale is just insane. Forty-two Japanese high school kids who think they’re going on a class trip are instead dropped on an island, issued weapons ranging from machine guns to kitchen forks, and forced to fight it out until only one is left alive. Royale bears some resemblance to Richard Bachman’s The Long Walk. You probably won’t find it at your local bookstore, but you can order it online. ”No prob,” as Takami’s Springsteen-quoting teenagers are fond of saying.

  • Title: Battle Royale
  • Author: Koushun Takami
  • Publisher: VIZ Media
  • Year: 2003 (original 1999)
  • Pages: 624 pages
  • Source: Library
  • Stars:  stars out of 5

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