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43 pages 1 hour read

Never Never

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2023

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Character Analysis

Charlize “Charlie” Wynwood

Seventeen-year-old Charlize “Charlie” Wynwood, one of the protagonists of Never Never, is a cautious, detached girl—largely due to the trauma of her father Brett’s arrest and imprisonment for fraud. After her father’s imprisonment and the loss of her original home, Jamais Jamais (French for “Never Never”), she pushes people away so as to not get hurt. She is forced to mother her younger sister Janette, as their mother struggles with Brett’s infidelity and her own alcoholism. This added responsibility transforms Charlie into a stubborn person, someone who refuses to acknowledge her soul mate Silas’s love and eventually breaks up with him in favor of a casual relationship with athletic student Brian. The amnesia loops showcase both Silas’s sincerity and Charlie’s refusal to play along despite craving love. Overall, Charlie’s redemption as a soul mate hinges on fighting for herself and seeing her father for the manipulator he is. When she is abducted by Brett’s former mistress Janice, she exhibits courage and self-reliance—traits that carry over to her romantic relationship. Like Silas, her memory is permanently restored upon being honest with her feelings.

Silas Nash

Seventeen-year-old Silas Nash, one of the protagonists of Never Never, is a lover at heart, not a fighter. His bedroom is decorated with framed photos, this hobby revealing his creativity and sensitivity. His father Clark, a disciplinarian who lauds a specific ideal of masculinity, forces Silas to play football—but even amid amnesia loops, he questions his love of the sport. Once Silas understands the nature of the loops, he becomes determined to court Charlie. In the past, their breakup led him to become involved with school counselor Avril, but he never stopped loving his soul mate. He is framed as the remedy for the cautious, detached Charlie, as he is playful and spontaneous; however, this sometimes leads to trouble, such being the case when he threw a punch at Brian’s father. Overall, Silas proves constant in his love for his soul mate, unerring in his protection of her, and in the end, sees his memory permanently restored.

Cora Delacroix/“The Shrimp”

Cora Delacroix, colloquially known as “The Shrimp” at Charlie and Silas’s high school, is isolated and described as having “beady” eyes and pimples. Her mother, tarot reader Janice, uses her to kidnap Charlie as she felt abandoned by Charlie’s father Brett; in truth, Cora and Charlie are half sisters. Cora, too, feels the impact of Brett’s abandonment. She is emotionally distant and uninterested in forming connections. During Charlie’s abduction by Janice, Cora is rendered anonymous, known only as a substitute “nurse” for her mother. The reader is also left ignorant of her identity until late in the novel when Charlie pieces it together. Despite her lack of presence, Cora seems to quietly resent Charlie for having a father—though he proves a manipulator unworthy of either daughter’s trust. In a novel focused on the redemptive power of love, Cora embodies the danger of fixating on hate, as she struggles to make something of herself due to her vindictive mother.

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