Minor Characters
Swimmer
A young Cherokee child who befriends Inman when Inman is also a boy. Swimmer teaches Inman spells and incantations, some of which Inman chants to himself during his long walk home to Black Cove.
Lucinda
The slave with whom Odell fell in love, later shipped off to Mississippi by Odell’s spiteful father.
Birch
A young member of the Home Guard, who kills Inman at the end of the novel.
The captive
A Southern soldier who’s arrested by the Home Guard for deserting.
Byron
A member of the Home Guard.
Balis
A Southern soldier and fellow invalid who’s in the hospital with Inman.
Lee
One of Inman’s fellow soldiers.
Mrs. McKennet
An old, talkative resident of Black Cove.
Ayron
A member of the Home Guard.
Lula / Chastity
Junior’s daughter—or at least the child of Junior’s wife, Lila.
Lila
Junior’s wife, who tries to seduce Inman.
Sally Swanger
One of Ada Monroe’s neighbors in Black Cove, and the woman who sends Ruby Thewes to live with Ada.
Esco Swanger
The husband of Sally Swanger.
Tip Benson
A young piano tutor who tries and fails to seduce Ada Monroe.
Lucy
Ada Monroe’s cousin, who lives in Charleston.
Potts
A traveler who points Inman toward Sara’s house.
Pangle
A big, dimwitted deserter who’s highly talented at playing the banjo.
Tildy
A black prostitute with whom Solomon Veasey tries to have sex.
The Blind Man
An old man who talks to Inman while Inman is staying in the hospital, and asks Inman to describe his experiences during the Civil War.
Laura
A young woman whom Solomon Veasey seduces and impregnates.
Blount
A rich, foolish man who flirts with Ada Monroe.