Tropedia

  • Before making a single edit, Tropedia EXPECTS our site policy and manual of style to be followed. Failure to do so may result in deletion of contributions and blocks of users who refuse to learn to do so. Our policies can be reviewed here.
  • All images MUST now have proper attribution, those who neglect to assign at least the "fair use" licensing to an image may have it deleted. All new pages should use the preloadable templates feature on the edit page to add the appropriate basic page markup. Pages that don't do this will be subject to deletion, with or without explanation.
  • All new trope pages will be made with the "Trope Workshop" found on the "Troper Tools" menu and worked on until they have at least three examples. The Trope workshop specific templates can then be removed and it will be regarded as a regular trope page after being moved to the Main namespace. THIS SHOULD BE WORKING NOW, REPORT ANY ISSUES TO Janna2000, SelfCloak or RRabbit42. DON'T MAKE PAGES MANUALLY UNLESS A TEMPLATE IS BROKEN, AND REPORT IT THAT IS THE CASE. PAGES WILL BE DELETED OTHERWISE IF THEY ARE MISSING BASIC MARKUP.

READ MORE

Tropedia
Advertisement
Farm-Fresh balanceYMMVTransmit blueRadarWikEd fancyquotesQuotes • (Emoticon happyFunnyHeartHeartwarmingSilk award star gold 3Awesome) • RefridgeratorFridgeGroupCharactersScript editFanfic RecsSkull0Nightmare FuelRsz 1rsz 2rsz 1shout-out iconShout OutMagnifierPlotGota iconoTear JerkerBug-silkHeadscratchersHelpTriviaWMGFilmRoll-smallRecapRainbowHo YayPhoto linkImage LinksNyan-Cat-OriginalMemesHaiku-wide-iconHaikuLaconicLibrary science symbol SourceSetting

If there was ever a book in need of a Character Sheet, it would be Otherland. As this page is a work in progress, assistance is appreciated.

Spoiler alert! Major plot points spoilers ahead — read at your own risk!



Sellars' "volunteers"[]

The Ragtag Bunch of Misfits that Mr. Sellars puts together to invade Otherland. Some of them never actually meet.

Mr. Sellars[]

Ex-military test pilot and participant in a secret government project to outfit subjects for near-light speed interstellar travel, which was later turned into a Super Soldier project and destroyed by a Psycho Prototype.

  • Attending Your Own Funeral
  • Cyborg: Adapted to connect with his starship. Too bad the project got blown up, making him a cripple with burn scars all over his body.
  • The Chessmaster: He has lots of free time now. Another of his hobbies is Creating Life out of his top-notch internal antivirus software.
  • I Did What I Had to Do: His justification for all his actions, except the Creating Life bit - that was from boredom.
  • Mission Control: For the entire Otherland expedition.
  • Mysterious Informant: His recruitment scheme for his "volunteers" is designed to preserve his anonymity as much as possible; justified given the people he's working against. He's the thread that ends up connecting all the other protagonists, many of whom don't even know it.
  • The Obi-Wan: Getting cut off from Sellars' guidance is an important plot point for the Otherland party at the end of the first novel, forcing them to decipher its mysteries on their own. Sellars goes on to subvert part of the trope later, since although his physical body dies, he survives thanks to Brain Uploading.
  • Trickster Mentor: A mild example, he tantalizes hundreds, if not thousands, of people with hints and riddles and clues to lead them to the Otherland, and only a small fraction make it, with people dying in the process. This is justified in that he's an imprisoned cripple capable of accessing the outside world only after he turned his body into a living antenna and he's fighting an organization that owns, at a guess, roughly two-thirds of everything. Everyone he tried to talk to legitimately was quietly murdered.
  • Voice with an Internet Connection
  • What the Hell, Hero?: His recruitment of the six-year old Christabel to aid his schemes gets this reaction from her parents.

Inside Otherland[]

Irene "Renie" Sulaweyo[]

The primary viewpoint character. A college professor of network programming at Durban University in South Africa, Renie enters Otherland to search for her younger brother, Stephen, whom she believes to be trapped there. Her force of will drives the party to continue even when all hope appears lost.

  • Gender Bender: Given her temperament, Martine chooses for Renie to take on the character of a male hero when the group enters the Trojan war. If she were a woman, she'd have considerably less mobility. Renie finds the sensation of having a penis very disturbing.
  • The Hero: It is her quest to rescue Stephen that focuses the motivations of the Otherland group and drives them to make most of their progress.
  • Hot-Blooded: It makes her life considerably more difficult.
  • Mama Bear: To Stephen.
  • Promotion to Parent: For Stephen, thanks to her mother's death and her father's descent into ennui.
  • Team Mom: Albeit against the wishes of several other members of the group.

!Xabbu[]

An African Bushman and Renie's student, justifies much of her Exposition through his ignorance (at first) of the 'Net. His unique perspective on life gives him unusual capabilities in Otherland.

Martine Desroubins[]

A blind French researcher who lives in an underground facility. She is recruited by Renie to aid in the search for Otherland and becomes trapped along with the rest of the party. Frequently the viewpoint character when focus shifts from Renie.

  • Apocalyptic Log: Her viewpoint segments are all narrated retrospectively in the form of her subvocalized journals, which she later recovers from Otherland with Sellars' help.
  • Blind Seer: Lampshaded by herself.
  • Chekhov's Gun: The odd circumstances of her childhood blindness are key to the revelations about the Other's nature.
  • The Faceless: Until entering Otherland, all her sims are featureless blocks. This is because she is blind, so she doesn't feel the need to provide visual feedback to others.
  • Genre Savvy: More so than the others, particularly in her journals.
  • Ineffectual Loner: She lives in a bunker under a mountain, talking to machines.
  • Adults Are Useless: Her Backstory details an upbringing at the hands of drugged-out, social-phobic parents whose ennui enables the events leading up to her blinding.

Florimel Kurnemann[]

A reclusive German doctor who was born inside a cult, she goes to Otherland to rescue her daughter from a coma.

Javier "T4b" Rogers[]

A born-again street kid who was recruited by the Circle to enter Otherland and be an agent among Sellars' recruits.

Sweet William[]

An American man who, in his waning years, started an online relationship with a girl whom he later discovered to be underage. He enters Otherland out of guilt when she enters a coma, feeling responsible for her.

Quan Li[]

A Chinese woman who's in Otherland because of her granddaughter's coma.

  • Grand Theft Me
  • The Mole: The "real" Quan Li is killed in the beginning of the journey and her sim is used by Dulcinea Anwin and Dread.

Orlando Gardiner[]

A teenage boy who suffers from progeria, a rapid aging disease, and spends most of his time online as a result. He enters Otherland in the search for Sellars' "golden city", unaware of the risks involved. He is frequently accompanied by an AI companion named Beezle that acts as an Exposition Fairy.

Salome "Sam" Fredericks[]

A teenage girl, Orlando's best friend and his constant companion throughout the story.

  • Captain Obvious: Partially intentional. It drives Orlando insane.
  • The Chick: Despite her efforts to avoid being treated this way, she fulfills the role rather well, with a few notable exceptions.
  • GIRL: Inverted. Her online persona is male, to avoid being picked on, and she "forgets" to tell Orlando when they become friends. He is quite shocked when he finds out. But, considering he didn't tell her about his illness...
  • The Lancer: She tries this in the Trojan War simulation when Orlando is too ill to fight. It doesn't go very well when she runs into Hector; ironically echoing the actual Achilles/Patroclus story.
  • Sweet Polly Oliver: It's virtual reality, after all.
  • Sidekick: To Orlando, promoted to Love Interest by the end of the story.
  • Tomboyish Name: She intentionally chose "Sam" as her nickname for the gender ambiguity.

Outside[]

Decatur "Catur" Ramsey[]

A lawyer who is hired by Orlando's parents to solve the mystery of his coma. He ends up being recruited by Sellars to help rescue the latter from captivity.

Olga Pirofsky[]

A grandmotherly lady who works as an actor for Uncle Jingle's Jungle, a popular online kids' program. Her mysterious headaches lead her on a path of discovery that takes her all the way to J Corp's headquarters.

  • Chekhov's Gunman
  • Cool Old Lady: She successfully infiltrates a highly fortified building and manages to do what she came for, all while keeping her cool even when the plan seems to go sour.

Christabel Sorensen[]

A kindergarden-age girl who lives on the same military base as Mr. Sellars, and whom he recruits to help him escape. Her parents end up finding out about the relationship and, coming to the logical (but incorrect) conclusion, force Sellars to take them into his confidence.

  • Children Are Innocent
  • Irony: Christabel's father is the man charged with ensuring Sellars remains imprisoned, incommunicado with the rest of the world. Naturally, it's his daughter Sellars recruits to aid him, which ultimately results in his defection to Sellars' side.

Carlos "Cho-Cho" Izabal[]

A street urchin who accidentally stumbles across Christabel's secret meetings with Sellars and joins his party under duress.

  • Slap Slap Kiss: Well, clearly not the "kiss" part, but his relationship with Christabel fits the trope remarkably well in other ways.
  • Street Urchin

Susan van Bleeck[]

A white South African woman and Renie's college mentor; she helps Renie and !Xabbu in the search for Otherland but is beaten to death by Jongleur's goons.

Jeremiah Dako[]

Susan's butler, he joins Long Joseph in watching over Renie and !Xabbu while they're immersed in VR within the decommissioned military base.

Long Joseph Sulaweyo[]

Renie and Stephen's father. Emotionally crippled by the death of his wife in a fire, he copes by drinking.

The Grail Brotherhood and affiliates[]

Felix Jongleur[]

The head of the Brotherhood, and the oldest living man on Earth, even more so than most people realize. He lives inside a custom-built life support tank atop J Corp's tower, but spends his time as a fearsome online executive. Goes by "Osiris" in Otherland.

John "Dread" Wulgaru[]

Aka Johnny Dark, aka John "More Dread", aka Dread. A sociopathic killer hired by Jongleur for his unique psychic power. His ambition goes beyond even what his boss is capable of predicting, resulting in near-total disaster. In Jongleur's Egypt simulation, he goes by "Anubis".

David Wells[]

American corporate executive and Yacoubian's companion outside the Brotherhood. He's second in command to Jongleur thanks to supplying of the majority of the technology behind Otherland. Creator of the Nemesis program. Goes by "Ptah" in Otherland.

Daniel Yacoubian[]

American four-star general who provides military resources "under the table" to the Brotherhood. He acts as a foil to Jongleur and is a constant irritant because of his bickering. Goes by "Horus" in Otherland.

Ymona Dedoblanco[]

African dictator. Goes by "Sekhmet" in Otherland.

  • The Watson: Her ignorance prompts Jongleur to re-explain the Grail Project for the readers, despite having participated it it for years.

Ricardo Klement[]

South American drug lord; the Nemesis program winds up inhabiting his virtual clone. Goes by "Kephera" in Otherland.

  • Even Evil Has Standards: The rest of the Brotherhood seem to despise Klement for dealing in drugs, but they need his money.
  • Meaningful Name: "Kephera", Klement's sim in Otherland, is a dung beetle. Jongleur picked it deliberately due to his disdain for Klement's occupation.
  • Yes-Man: To Jongleur.

Jiun Bhao[]

Chinese industrialist and major financial backer of the Brotherhood.

  • Enigmatic Minion: He plays a deeper game with Jongleur than Wells and Yacoubian, taking advantage of Jongleur's apparent weakness to negotiate for a privileged position in the Brotherhood. It doesn't do him any good, though, as he dies shortly after Dread takes over the system.

Finney and Mudd[]

Jongleur's chief minions; they supervised the Avialle project but messed it up so badly that he had them imprisoned in Otherland.

Dulcinea Anwin[]

A black-hat hacker who is recruited by Dread and falls into his charismatic web, until she discovers his dark secret.

Kunohara[]

A wealthy entomologist who supports the Brotherhood but is not a part of their inner circle; he runs a simulation in Otherland where researchers can pay to study insects in a very up-close and personal way. He ends up playing a minor supporting role to the protagonists and is one of the few Grail-related characters to survive to the end.

  • True Neutral: He remains resolutely neutral in the conflict between the heroes and the Brotherhood, reasoning that he sees no value in helping them considering how easily it could jeopardize his position...
    • Neutral No Longer: ...At least until Dread takes over, when the escalating confrontation forces his hand.

Others[]

The Circle[]

A multireligious group whose goal is to stop The Grail Brotherhood from interfering with God's will.

  • We ARE Struggling Together!: Many of the Circle wouldn't tolerate each other for more than a second if it weren't for their higher cause.

Bonnie Mae Simpkins[]

American Baptist who befriends Orlando and Sam.

  • Apron Matron: She incessantly "mothers" everyone she meets, even the adults.

Nandi Paradivash[]

Indian mystic who acts as a temporary mentor to Paul Jonas.

  • The Fundamentalist: He's a true believer in one of the most extreme Hindu sects and barely tolerates the rest of the Circle.

Online Characters[]

The Other[]

Mysterious and dangerous sentient operating system of Otherland.

Paul Jonas[]

Amnesiac resident of Otherland, who discovers his connection to the plot through his gradually recovered memories. He was hired by Jongleur as a tutor to Avialle but fell in love with her and tried to "rescue" her, resulting indirectly in her accidental death. Jongleur imprisoned him in Otherland as punishment.

Avialle[]

There are two Avialles. One is Jongleur's "daughter", designed to be a part of one of his immortality schemes (before the Other started to show promise), but tragically killed due to the bungling of his assistants. The other is the avatars of Avialle created by the Other and captured within the system, living out a shadow life but all strangely attracted to Paul Jonas, whom the real Avialle fell in love with.

Beezle[]

Orlando's AI companion, originally a kids' toy but upgraded many times until it's almost as sentient as a real person. It ends up locating Catur Ramsey and acting as a vital surrogate Mission Control when Sellars goes incommunicado.

Gally[]

A virtual orphan whom Paul Jonas befriends.

  • Sidekick: To Jonas, through a great many virtual worlds.

Azador[]

A "gypsy" adventurer that the protagonists encounter throughout Otherland; he seems to be a devil-may-care opportunist strolling at will through the network thanks to an access device he stole from Yacoubian.

  • Cloning Blues: He's an "imperfect" virtual copy of Jongleur, but doesn't realize it.
  • Jerkass
  • The Mole: It's eventually revealed that Kunohara manipulated him into spying on the protagonists.

Nemesis[]

An advanced AI search program deployed into Otherland by David Wells to search for Paul Jonas; it works at the code level rather than the surface level of the simulation, but in the course of its travels becomes something much more than was originally intended.

Australian Police[]

Detectives who investigate one of Dread's murders and play an important role in his defeat.

Calliope Skouros[]

Stan Chan[]

Advertisement