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Antiheroes book cover
Antiheroes
Heroes, Villains, and the Fine Line Between
2011
First Published
3.20
Average Rating
138
Number of Pages
The most interesting characters are almost never the good guys. Doing the right thing is great and all, but a little bit of darkness—or a lot of it—often makes for a more engaging story. Heroes, Villains, and the Fine Line Between is dedicated to the dark heroes and sympathetic villains we love.Find out why William McKinley High's agonist Sue Sylvester is essential to Glee. Discover where your favorite comic book character falls on the continuum of good and evil. Weigh in on Twilight's very dangerous boy Edward romantic, sparkly hero, or sociopath suffering from Antisocial Personality Disorder? Plus other essays • The Vampire Diaries' most antiheroic antihero, Damon Salvatore• America's favorite serial killer, Dexter Morgan, and the nature (and nurture) of evil• The curious appeal of Alias' Arvin Sloane• Supernatural's vampire hunter-cum-vampire Gordon Walker• The shared monstrosity of Spider-Man, Doc Ock, and the Green Goblin• Gun-slinging necromancer Anita Blake, and the benefits (and pitfalls) of embracing the monster withinThis brand new, e-book only collection of essays-"remixed" from previous Smart Pop series titles-gives a funny and thought-provoking in-depth look at the antihero, from the villains just a little too good to be unequivocal bad guys, and the heroes just a bit too bad to be truly good.
Avg Rating
3.20
Number of Ratings
5
5 STARS
20%
4 STARS
0%
3 STARS
60%
2 STARS
20%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Jennifer Crusie
Jennifer Crusie
Author · 43 books

Jennifer Crusie is the New York Times, USA Today, and Publisher's Weekly bestselling author of twenty-three novels, one book of literary criticism, miscellaneous articles, essays, novellas, and short stories, and the editor of three essay anthologies. She was born in Wapakoneta, a small town in Ohio, and then went on to live in a succession of other small towns in Ohio and New Jersey until her last move to a small town in Pennsylvania. This may have had an impact on her work. She has a BS in Art Education, an MA in literature, an MFA in fiction, and was ABD on her PhD when she started reading romances as part of her research into the differences between the ways men and women tell stories. Writing a romance sounded like more fun than writing a dissertation, so she switched to fiction and never looked back. Her collaborations with Bob Mayer have pretty much proved everything she was going to say in her dissertation anyway, so really, no need to finish that. For more information, see JenniferCrusie.com and her blog, Argh Ink.

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