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Five of the Best Reptilian Characters in SFF

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Five of the Best Reptilian Characters in SFF

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Five of the Best Reptilian Characters in SFF

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Published on January 8, 2024

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Reptiles often appear in legend and story as horrifying monsters or portents of doom; perhaps it’s a holdover from the prehistoric days when fearsome dinosaurs roamed the earth. I’m just as inclined to love a good rampaging lizard-beast as much as the next guy, but lately, I’ve been more fascinated by scaly, cold-blooded characters in SFF that break the mold and do something different

Fortunately, we SFF fans have a wealth of sentient lizards and lizard-like characters to appreciate. These five examples are my personal favorites. I apologize in advance to any Godzilla fans out there—I haven’t engaged with enough Godzilla media to write about it with any sort of expertise, but I want you to know I’m thinking of the big old monster lizard. Let’s say he’s above this list, the king of the SFF lizards, and leave some room in the comments for Godzilla fans to sound off!

Now, let’s find a nice warm rock to bask on and skitter into the world of SFF lizard-people…

 

Sissix Seshkethet, Wayfarers

Becky Chambers' Wayfarers series

Sissix pilots the Wayfarer in Becky Chambers’ series of the same name. She plays a key role in The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet. As an Aandrisk (a species of scaled, lizard-like beings, but don’t call her a lizard), she provides a nice window into a completely different culture.

In a way, Sissix is just my excuse on this list to laud Becky Chambers for her deeply imaginative depictions of alien cultures. Sissix takes her crew to her home planet of Hashkath during a particularly poignant passage of Angry Planet, where we get a peek into the Aandrisk culture. Aandrisks are incredibly affectionate in a way Rosemary, the human protagonist, doesn’t understand. Through their visit to Hashkath, Rosemary begins to recognize that Sissix may need more affection aboard the Wayfarer.

I’ve glossed over the many intriguing details about Aandrisk culture that Chambers includes in Wayfarers, and I encourage anyone who hasn’t read the series to jump right in. Chambers has a firm, nuanced grasp on how her species’ customs and traditions work, and Sissix easily tops my list of SFF lizards as a result.

 

Chet Gecko, Chet Gecko Series

The first three books in Bruce Hale's Chet Gecko series

We come now to a blast from the past. My memories of Chet Gecko are slightly hazy aside from a few key details. I read the first few books in the series alongside my friend Jose in elementary school. We both loved the playful and simple nature of Bruce Hale’s books, in which the eponymous Chet Gecko solves mysteries.

On Hale’s website, Chet Gecko’s business is listed as “Danger.” The series is full of hyperbolic noir elements, elevating Chet’s exploits at Emerson Hicky Elementary to high-stakes dramatic cases. Many of the books play on classic mystery novels (The Hamster of the Baskervilles always gives me a laugh).

Chet’s world is peopled with various anthropomorphic animals. The main character was always my favorite, though I’m willing to admit it’s probably because I had a golden gecko as a pet growing up (his name was not Chet, unfortunately. It was Sammy Sosa). Something about lizards—slinking, peeping, and skittering about—just works for a children’s detective series.

 

Dr. Curt Connors, Spider-Man

Curt Connors, you poor, poor thing.

I know the beginning of this article promised lizards that were more complicated than simple monsters. The Lizard may appear to break that trend, but I don’t think it’s true. While the Green Goblin and Doctor Octopus might loom a little larger in Spidey’s mythology (at least for the average fan), Connors has always stood out to me as a uniquely tragic character. Spider-man’s antagonists often tend to have sympathetic, morally complex backstories, and that’s especially true for Doctor Connors, who a geneticist who was working on a reptilian limb regeneration serum and tested it on himself, hoping to regrow his missing arm.

As a result of this experiment, he was transformed into the Lizard, a feral reptilian beast driven by instinct.

Peter Parker knows and loves Dr. Connors, though, complicating matters; Spider-man can’t simply pummel the rampaging Lizard into oblivion. He has to de-escalate Lizards’ rampages without harming or killing the man beneath the scales. It’s this factor—Lizard’s underlying, tormented humanity—that earns him a spot on this list.

 

Randall Boggs, Monsters, Inc.

Is Randall Boggs a lizard? Sure, I know he’s technically a “monster,” but I’m giving myself some wiggle room because of his many lizard-esque features. He looks like a combo of a salamander and a chameleon, and certainly scuttles around and up walls like a lizard can.

Monsters, Inc. introduces us to a vindictive and malicious Randall intent on kidnapping children to capture more screams. Standard fare, in terms of the standard lizard-as-villain trope. In Monsters University, though, we see a different side of Randall. He’s meek and timid, only gaining a sense of self-worth when roommate Mike Wazowski pumps him up and praises Randall’s camouflage powers. He soon seeks out the attention of more popular monsters, though, and Randall ends up disgraced and cast out after he loses the Scare Games.

The one-two punch of Monsters University and Monsters, Inc. shows us a character whose choices and decisions led him down a dark path. It makes me believe there’s hope for the poor guy, though the end of Monsters, Inc. isn’t so bright and sunny for the lizard-y monster.

 

Pathka, Tess of the Road

I started Tess of the Road expecting a personal journey of growth and self-realization…I got that and so much more. Pathka is to thank for that “so much more.” The quigutl are a species related to dragons in the Tess and Seraphina books. They can change genders over time. They speak their own language (which few humans and dragons bother to learn) as well as being able to learn and speak human languages. They have unique skills, rituals, and cultural practices. As a species, the quigutl yearn to be understood and accepted, but are generally undervalued and scorned.

Pathka was a breath of fresh air. I thought I’d never encounter an SFF lizard as complex and layered as Wayfarer’s Sissix, but then I read Tess of the Road. Pathka’s relationship with Tess and innate drive to discover the (supposedly) mythical World Serpents offer the reader fascinating glimpses into a unique subculture within Tess’s vaguely medieval world. It adds some spice to the novel, helping to elevate what could have been a run-of-the-mill fantasy journey to a whole new level.

***

 

That’s a wrap on my favorite SFF lizards, but I want to hear from you! Who would you put on this list and why? Sound off in the comments.

Cole Rush writes words. A lot of them. For the most part, you can find those words at The Quill To Live. He voraciously reads epic fantasy and science fiction, seeking out stories of gargantuan proportions and devouring them with a bookwormish fervor. His favorite books are the Divine Cities Series by Robert Jackson Bennett, The Long Way To A Small, Angry Planet by Becky Chambers, and The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune.

About the Author

Cole Rush

Author

If you encounter Cole Rush on a normal day, he is the quintessential image of a writer hunched over a keyboard whiling away at his latest project. He reviews books for The Quill To Live, makes crossword puzzles for his newsletter The New Dork Times, and occasionally covers reality TV for various publications. Cole adores big beefy tomes—if they can be used as a doorstopper, he’s in. He also enjoys quiet, reflective stories about personal growth. Cole is working on his own novel, Zilzabo’s Seven Nevers, which he swears will be finished “someday.”
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jer
1 year ago

The Lizards from The Man who stepped into Yesterday, aka, Gamehenge from the band Phish https://youtu.be/dib8oNgevs0?si=CLOFZTjrf70VgKlF (I don’t know how good the quality of this version is, but it was the most recent and “produced” version, I’m in a place where my internet is not great and I can’t watch this version)

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1 year ago

How about E.E. “Doc” Smith’s Worsel the Velantian?

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o.m.
1 year ago

Well, there were Diana (Jane Badler) and Anna (Morena Baccarin) from V. Do they count as reptiles?

The first two series were so 80s, but then it was the 80s when I watched them at a young and impressionable age. The sequel series then struck a nostalgic chord when it came around.

NomadUK
1 year ago

My first SF lizard was the Gorn commander in the Star Trek episode,  ‘Arena’, one of my absolute favourite episodes (despite the unlikelihood of finding powdered sulphur and potassium nitrate just handily lying about). I understand they’ve upgraded the Gorn somewhat in Strange New Worlds, but I haven’t watched that yet.

Thulsa Doom becomes a serpent temporarily in Conan the Barbarian; probably doesn’t really count, but …

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cjlasky
1 year ago

Madame Vastra from Doctor Who, and the Silurians in general. (It’s their planet–we just live here.)

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1 year ago

Apropos of Chet Gecko, I  enjoyed the Dragonbreath series by Ursula Vernon with Danny the Dragon (also a detective) and his primarily lizard friends. Middle school but funny for adults as well.

In a more serious vein, my favorite would have to be Kai, the dragon from Genevieve Cogman’s Invisible Library series.

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Shrike58
1 year ago

Does G’Kar from “Babylon 5” count?

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1 year ago

One also thinks of the Ghayrogs, from Silverberg’s Lord Valentine’s Castle.

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Alan Braggins
1 year ago

the chemicals aren’t so much “just handily lying about” as “planted by the Metrons to see if competitors will use them”.

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Charlie
1 year ago

The reptile civilization in Harry Harrison’s “West Of Eden” trilogy.

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1 year ago

There’s Zinga the Zacathan from Andre Norton’s Star Rangers.

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1 year ago

Loiosh, of course; Vlad Taltos’s jhereg familiar in Steven Brust’s series, who always knows the right thing to say. (So maybe it’s sometimes just as well that only Vlad can hear him say it.)

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Bookwyrm
1 year ago

The Aaan, from Alan Dean Foster’s Commonwealth novels.  Typical bad guys, until you reach the artist’s colony …

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1 year ago

There’s a red-scaled gentleman by the name of Smaug who’d like a word with the author…

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Jim Janney
1 year ago

Rango, the chameleon from the movie of the same name.

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1 year ago

Grog from The Last Starfighter 

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Jason Ipswitch
1 year ago

@2 How about E.E. “Doc” Smith’s Worsel the Velantian?

I came here to see if Worsel made the list. (As he ought to have, by Klono’s Tugnsten Tusks!) At least he made the comments.

(Kids these days… get off my sunbeam array.)

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1 year ago

@12 – I’m glad to see Dragaera getting a mention. I would not want to get on Loiosh’s bad side …

Several of the Dragaeran Houses have a reptile or reptiloid animal as their totem, so to speak. Supposedly the Jenoine inserted actual genetic material from the animals in question into some of human inhabitants to create the various Dragaeran tribes (with the unaltered remnant becoming the Easterners). That would include dragon, yendi, iorich, and possibly vallista and jhegaala.

(The Jhereg, fittingly enough, started as a breakaway outlaw House; IIRC, the first Jhereg chief was actually a renegade Dragon.)

(He sort of blurs the line with some of them. I think the chreotha is a mammal (it has fur) that weaves webs, for example.)

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1 year ago

“The dragon-like creature uses the name of Sir Isaac Newton when speaking to Terrans, and the two exchange pleasantries in the whistling speech of Venus. Sir Isaac Newton is a delightful character, eccentric and charming from his first appearance.” Alan Brown on Between Planets now being forgotten?

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1 year ago

There were three very odd mysteries published in the late 90s/early 00s by Eric Garcia. The protagonist is Vincent Rubio, a California PI who’s down on his luck…and also a velociraptor, because dinosaurs did not go thoroughly extinct and have been living among us in increasingly complex disguises. They are weird as hell (basil is the saurian drug of choice), and I have remembered them for their weirdness for 20 years. Book one is Anonymous Rex.

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1 year ago

Harry Turtledove’s Worldwar series had the Earth invaded by lizardy interstellar imperialists during WWII. It didn’t go so well for them.

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Russell H
1 year ago

@11 Also the Zacathan archaeologist (can’t remember his name) who is rescued by Murdock Jern in Uncharted Stars.

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Heather
1 year ago

General Zerd is only half-serpent, but I feel he ought to count.  This sexy, scaly, blue-skinned warlord is a recurring character in Jane Gaskell’s epic barbarian fantasy saga, the  Atlan series (1963-67).  I can’t remember everything about the plot, which was bonkers.  However, he definitely invades the heroine’s country, kidnaps her, and then (by book 2, I think?) is besotted with her, and they eventually have a 1/4 serpent daughter.  

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Robert V
1 year ago

I’d suggest the Raksura, from Martha Wells’ matrilineal shapeshifter series, are lizard-adjacent, or at least some of them are.  Moon is my favorite from when I read the books.

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Xyon921
1 year ago

@22. Turtledove’s World War: In the Balance series features The Race, as they refer to themselves. Particularly, POWs Ulhass and Ristin, one of which survives in relative comfort while the other meets an unhappy end in a Russian gulag. I forgot which. 

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RGold
1 year ago

I am pretty sure there is a reptilian character in Max Gladstone’s Ruin of Angels (and a nice guy), but his name escapes me.

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vivnichols
1 year ago

I really liked the reptilians in “People of Earth,” Wyatt Cenac’s short comedy series. 

 

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1 year ago

I can’t believe nobody has mentioned Aahz. It must have been a Mythtake.

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Neil B4 Zod
1 year ago

The main character of Breaker of Horizons, a LitRPG by NoDragons (Aethon Books) is reincarnated as a humanoid axolotl. I quite enjoyed the wackiness of that choice and following his progression to a mighty warrior.

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dm
1 year ago

How about the race of serpents in James Blish’s A case of conscience?

A prelapsarian serpent society.

 

 

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Steve Morrison
1 year ago

There’s also Mamvish from Diane Duane’s Young Wizards series.

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1 year ago

There’s Robert Sawyer’s Quintaglio Ascension trilogy, where dinosaurs have been transported by aliens to a moon orbiting a gas giant planet, and some of the tyrannosaurs evolve into an intelligent species, the Quintaglios.

The Voth in the Star Trek: Voyager episode “Distant Origin” have a similar origin, including the Galileo comparisons in the respective plots. Although there are no references citing comparisons, I can’t help but think that Sawyer’s novels were part of the inspiration for this episode.

Brian Aldiss’s The Malacia Tapestry takes place in an alternate history version of a Renaissance city-state that resembles Venice. The (human) inhabitants believe they are descended from noble “ancestral animals” (dinosaurs) rather than apes. There are surviving ancestral animals, both in captivity and in the wild on the mainland near Malacia; the aristocracy periodically organize elaborate hunts for these creatures.

I’m surprised nobody’s mentioned James Gurney’s Dinotopia.

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Trish
1 year ago

The Drac’s Jeriba and Zammis from Barry Longyear’s Hugo/Nebula winning novella Enemy Mine. I’m also oddly partial to the Gannite Meoraq from R. Lee Smith’s The Last Hour of Gann.

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Vasco
1 year ago

Sir Isaac Newton in Heinlein’s “Between Worlds” yes, World War II series with The Race yes and, and… Robert J Sawyer’s Golden Fleece series! 

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1 year ago

@29 Well, nobody here’s pervect.

I’ve seen mention of the A’an, but nobody’s mentioned Pip? Pip is definitely a character too!

I’d have thought that Kault the Thennannin from David Brin’s Uplift books might have made the list too,

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1 year ago

A fantasy (light novel, manga, and anime) example: Gaganpo and his lizardman tribe from Isekai Shokudou (Restaurant to Another World).

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1 year ago

The Xindi-Reptilians from Star Trek Enterprise should definitely be included.

The Tzen race from The Bug Wars (1979) by Robert Asprin, looks very reptilian to me, as seen on the cover : https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bug_Wars