So many of the world's great books include main characters who are missing one or both parents. This is a place to list some of the best books with orphaned or abandoned characters.
Tags:
abandoned, absent, child, children, father, foster-children, foster-kids, mother, orphan, orphaned, orphans, quasi-orphaned
Ruby
2684 books
49 friends
49 friends
Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large)
546 books
365 friends
365 friends
Mir
15044 books
448 friends
448 friends
Lobstergirl
5775 books
157 friends
157 friends
Ashleigh
771 books
190 friends
190 friends
PurplyCookie
11861 books
461 friends
461 friends
Amy
481 books
48 friends
48 friends
Bookworm007
1861 books
2 friends
2 friends
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Ruby
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Jun 06, 2010 10:43AM
Maybe Scarlet toward the end?
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But she was grown. Is a grown person an orphan? Webster's Concise dictionary says a CHILD whose parents are both dead. Last October my hubby said when his father died that he was now an orphan which struck me as very strange. I think he meant he was bereft.
I have never thought of an adult as an orphan. Is this just me?
I have never thought of an adult as an orphan. Is this just me?
I don't know. That's a good question. I mean most people in the general population outlive their parents so if we were to define "orphan" only as someone who has lost their parents, then that would include almost everyone.I think being considered an "orphan" depends more on where the child is in their life emotionally. Maybe the more dependent the child is on their parent the more "orphaned" they are by the loss?
I thought a list with "orphaned" characters was interesting because so many books begin that way. It's sort of an opening through which interesting plotlines can take place. I guess a complete nuclear family provides less fodder for interesting plot?
I agree it is more interesting. I hope that people will hold to the old definition and not start including everyone who has lost their parents as an adult. I think a child who loses its parents really suffers and is in a whole different category.
deleted user wrote: "But she was grown. Is a grown person an orphan? Webster's Concise dictionary says a CHILD whose parents are both dead. Last October my hubby said when his father died that he was now an orphan whic..."It's not just you. I always considered "orphan" to refer specifically to children. In fact, the dictionary defines it this way. Once a person reaches adulthood, if they lose their parents, they aren't orphans.
I think you qualify as an orphan if both your parents are dead by the time you're of age. Let's say, 19 or 20 or 21. However, if an adult child is disabled (rather severely) and subsequently her parents die, she might qualify as an orphan. Maybe it depends on the circumstances.The list description is not really even accurate - you have to lose both parents to be orphaned. If you lose one parent, then you belong to a single-parent family.
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