What's the most unusual occupation you've read in a novel?

Bookish Question #317 | What’s the most unusual occupation you’ve read in a novel?

Christian fiction genres seem to focus on similar occupations depending on the genre. Just like in real life, lots of characters (especially heroines) work in diners or restaurants, or own their own small business selling ice cream or cup cakes or books (I’m sure there are more fictional bookshops than there are real-life counterparts). There are also plenty of teachers, B&B owners, farmers, and ranchers.

Romantic suspense novels inevitably feature characters employed in law enforcement, either local police or one of the USA’s many three-letter agencies (CIA, FBI, NSA etc.) The heroes will often be ex-military. Other characters are lawyers, a necessary part of the legal process.

Sub-genres will have their own familiar occupations. Rock star romances feature rock stars (or country music stars or similar). Billionaire romances usually feature IT geeks (or some other occupation where it feels reasonable that a young person—usually male—has achieved billionaire status before they reach marriageable age, and didn’t inherit that stack of cash). Sports romances feature pro sportspeople (again, there are more pro footballers and hockey players in fiction than in real life). Cowboy romances feature (wait for it!) cowboys, with the occasional cowgirl (although the heroines are more often the ranch cook or nanny).

What we don’t see as often are more mundane occupations such as accountant (and when I do read novels with accountants, they tend not to be the hero or heroine). But that’s not really an unusual occupation in real life. It’s just not one we see in fiction.

So what is unusual?

One that springs to mind is the Bug Man series of novels by Tim Downs.

These feature a forensic entomologist—someone who helps solve crimes by looking at the insect and bug life (for example, using the size of the maggots to determine how long since the victim was murdered). It’s fascinating, if somewhat creepy. The character makes The Big Bang Theory’s Sheldon Cooper look like a well-rounded person, which makes for interesting reading and some embarrassing moments. In hindsight, he is probably neuro-divergent.

The other author I think of who often features less common occupations is Elizabeth Camden, who writes Christian historical romance.

The Gilded Lady featured Caroline Delacroix as the secretary to the First Lady. A Daring Venture features Dr Rosalind Werner as a biochemist (in 1908). Kate Livingston is a government statistician (In Every Breath). Natalia Blackstone is a financial analyst (Written on the Wind). Some of these occupations aren’t so unusual today, but they were very unusual occupations for women a century ago.

What about you? What’s the most unusual occupation you’ve read in a novel?

 

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