Hoot (novel) - Characters

Characters

  • Roy Andrew Eberhardt - the new kid at Trace Middle School, who quickly makes an enemy of the school bully, Dana Matherson, and makes two unusual friends, Beatrice Leep and her truant brother "Mullet Fingers."
  • Beatrice Leep - "a tall girl with curly blond hair and red-framed glasses." She is described as sinewy and tomboyish, and is a member of the soccer team. At Trace Middle School, she's known as "Beatrice The Bear" (except by Roy).
  • Napoleon Bridger "Mullet Fingers" Leep - Beatrice's step brother, initially known to Roy as the mysterious barefoot kid. His name is not given until the final chapter; the nickname "Mullet Fingers" refers to his ability to catch a mullet with his bare hands. He has a bad relationship with his mother, who had sent him to several military schools.
  • Officer David Delinko - an officer in the Coconut Grove police department, who is investigating the vandalism at the Mother Paula's All-American Pancake House construction site. Dutiful and ambitious, he develops sympathy for the owls and aids the kids.
  • Leroy "Curly" Branitt - the foreman on the Mother Paula's All-American Pancake House construction site, where all of the mysterious vandalism happens. Officer Delinko notes the irony of his nickname, as he is "bald as a beach ball." He is also "cranky," "unsmiling," and suspicious of everyone.
  • Dana Matherson torments underclassmen as the typical bully. Just like other bullies, he is an antagonist who finds inflicting pain on others quite pleasurable. His mother fights with and is a big bully just like him, and his father seems to try to discipline him.
  • Mr. and Mrs. Eberhardt - Roy's parents. They are sensible and supportive. Mr. Eberhardt works in the federal Department of Justice, and helps Roy by checking Mother Paula's building permits. Mrs. Eberhardt likes yoga and is protective of Roy.
  • Chuck E. Muckle - the "vice president of Corporate Relations" at Mother Paula's All-American Pancake House, and the novel's primary antagonist. He is portrayed as an arrogant, manipulative, ruthless, and corrupt executive, who pretends owls do not live on the site so he can bulldoze over their homes.
  • Leon and Lonna Leep contrast in personality. Mr Leep is Beatrice's decent but apathetic father, an ex-NBA player. He is remarried to a temperamental waitress, Lonna Leep.
  • Kimberly Lou Dixon - an actress who plays Mother Paula the mascot for Mother Paula's All-American Pancake House.
  • Garrett - Roy's best and only friend at Trace Middle School. A skateboarder, popular in school, the king of phony farts, and a D student. His mother is the school counselor.
  • Ms. Viola Hennepin - the vice-principal of Trace Middle School. She attempts to discipline Roy on several occasions, though she is perceptive enough to observe that he is being bullied. She is described as having one long jet-black hair protruding out of her upper lip; later it mysteriously becomes blond.

Read more about this topic:  Hoot (novel)

Famous quotes containing the word characters:

    White Pond and Walden are great crystals on the surface of the earth, Lakes of Light.... They are too pure to have a market value; they contain no muck. How much more beautiful than our lives, how much more transparent than our characters are they! We never learned meanness of them.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    I make it a kind of pious rule to go to every funeral to which I am invited, both as I wish to pay a proper respect to the dead, unless their characters have been bad, and as I would wish to have the funeral of my own near relations or of myself well attended.
    James Boswell (1740–1795)

    When the characters are really alive before their author, the latter does nothing but follow them in their action, in their words, in the situations which they suggest to him.
    Luigi Pirandello (1867–1936)