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Writing, Reading, and Rural Life With a Border Collie

6 Literary Scene Stealers & Kimber’s New Best Bud

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Dontcha just love scene stealers? That person or critter that outshines the rest of the cast, especially unexpectedly? You know. Like me?

 

All modesty aside, Mom and I have been keeping a running tally of literary scene stealers in recently read books.

Some of the books they appear in are great. Some are awful. Not a main character, a scene stealer outshines everyone else, including a bad script.

Here’s a brief list of our top 6 scene stealers from recently read historical non-fiction and fiction fiction (that’s not a typo). A brief synopsis of each book is included:

1. The Blood of Gods: A Novel of Rome (Delacorte Press, 2013)

By Conn Iggulden

Historical Fiction

Setting: Ancient Rome

Octavian, adopted son and chosen heir of Julius Caesar, forms an uneasy alliance to avenge the assassination of Caesar and reunite all that Caesar’s fall has torn apart. There’s also the matter of justice for Caesar’s killers, including the famed general Marcus Brutus and a powerful cohort of traitorous senators.

High adventure and historical detail mixed with generous doses of greed, graft, corruption, cunning, and courage ensue as Rome’s destiny hangs in the balance.

Scene stealer:

Irascible but loyal Maecenas, Octavian’s comrade-in-arms.

2. The Forbidden Garden: A Novel (Harper Collins, 2017)

By Ellen Herrick

Whatever

Setting: England, present and past

Newly arrived from America, “little gardener” Sorrel Sparrow joins forces with a lovelorn parish priest recently loosed from the local looney bin. They dig up the menacing secret of a long-dead Shakespearean garden and set it to rights, in between rolls in the hay and potty-mouthed rants from the relatives. “Game on,” my trowel!

Shambolic and obtuse, this ridiculous soap opera de snail makes The Flintstones look snappy.

Scene stealer:

Wags the dog. The only character with even a wisp of common sense.

3. The Guardians (Doubleday/Penguin Random House, 2019)

By John Grisham

Crime thriller

Setting: Mostly Florida, present day

A young black man and former client of a Florida lawyer is fingered for the murder when counsel is found dead in his office. Quincy Miller has spent 22 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit. He’s steadfastly maintained his innocence. But no one’s listening. Until Miller writes a letter to Guardian Ministries, a small nonprofit run by Cullen Post. He’s an “innocence lawyer” and an Episcopal minister.

In taking on Miller’s case, Post gets more than he bargained for. Much more. An electrifying ride through not only a “perfect crime,” but also the criminal justice system.

Scene stealer:

Frankie Tatum, ex-con and Post’s investigator extraordinaire.

4. Long Walk Home

By Ellyn Oaksmith

Chick Lit/Gentle Romance

Setting: Chelan, Washington, present day

Lola Alvarez has a dream.  She wants to “make her mark on the family business” and step out of the shadow of her older sister, Carmen. Lola wants to add tiny cabins to the family’s Blue Hills Winery and restaurant. Throw true love into the mix, an insufferable restaurant chef, a tangled past, and a complicated love triangle in which current and former flames butt heads, aaaand we’re off!

Scene stealer:

Daisy, Lola’s faithful Australian Shepherd mix. Kimber’s new best bud!

5. The Wonder: A Novel (Little, Brown and Company, 2016)

By Emma Donoghue

Historical novel

Setting: The Irish Midlands, 1859.

A young widow who served as a nurse in the Crimea with Florence Nightingale is hired to watch a little girl for two weeks.

A devout Catholic, eleven year-old Anna O’Donnell (aka: “The Wonder”) has stopped eating. For four months. She says she’s been kept alive by “manna from heaven.” A skeptic and a lapsed Protestant, Elizabeth “Lib” is hired to determine if the child has truly stopped eating altogether, as her family claims, or if she is surreptitiously scrounging food to keep herself alive.

Hoax? Miracle? Or is something more sinister in play?  

A taut psychological thriller.

Scene stealer:

William Byrne, reporter for The Dublin Times.

6. Fourth Sister

By M.L. Farb

YA Fiction/Fairytales & Folklore

Setting: Japan

Shisei is said to be the cursed twin—bringer of death—plagued by a kitsune only she can see. Feeling unwanted, she flees her home, finding solace within an isolated mask maker’s hut.

Yet some secrets cannot remain hidden. Fate may find her still.

When her youngest sister is accused of murder, Shisei must lead her sisters in a deception that will either save the youngest or condemn them all.

Scene stealer:

Okami, mask-maker Takumi’s wolf-dog.

 

Who’s your favorite literary “scene stealer”?

 

 

 

Scene stealer image credit: An Aussie Goes to Hollywood

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