Literary characters that remind you of yourself thread? For me, it's the narrator in Notes from Underground: intelligent, nihilistic, and with a wicked sense of humor.
Ignatius J. Reilly from A Conferacy of Dunces: intelligent, nihilistic, and with a wicked sense of humor.
Raskolnikov from Crime & Punishment: intelligent, nihilistic, and with a wicked sense of humor.
Humbert Humbert form Lolita, intelligent, a paedophile and with a wicked sense of humour.
The narrator in The Ego and Its Own: intelligent, nihilist, and with a wicked sense of spooks.
Alex from A Clockwork Orange: intelligent, psychotic, and with a wicked sense of humor.
George Orwell in 1984: intelligent, nihilistic and with a wicked sense of humor.
DFW in Infinite Jest: intelligent, an hero, and with a wicked sense of humor.
Lenny in Of Mice and Men: stupid, unwanted, and better off dead.
Santiago from The Alchemist: intelligent, nihilistic, and with a wicked sense of humor.
John Green in his latest masterpiece: the cancer in our stars: intelligent, nihilistic and cancerous
>>7432706
shit joke senpai
>>7432712
but my wicked sense of humour
For me it's Mario Incandenza: intelligent, nihilistic and a WICKED sense of humor.
>>7432783
wicked -> wickedness
For me, it's the naive consciousness in the epic Phenomenology of Spirit: intelligent, nihilistic, and with a wicked sense of humor.
>>7432450
>intelligent
kek, you have 1 min to prove it
>>7432679
Hahaha what?
>>7432783
>mfw the emphasis of the psychological aspect of the Underground Man over-against the ethical has taken on a life outside of me
>mfw the imminent defeat of the Pevear/Volokhonsky fraud is at hand
>>7432450
Asciltos from Satyricon. Intelligent, nihilistic, with a wicked sense of humour.
>>7433469
also homosexual