Here’s what I got:
Juliet. Waves at Jimmy Chitwood
How is’t, my soul?
Romeo
Not crazy about quizzes that make you specify gender, but I’m either Hermione or Sherlock, depending on which gender I choose.
Given the choice, I think I’ll take Hermione since she can do real magic!
I got Hermione as well.
Obviously that’s wrong. 
I got Peter Pan.
Sherlock.
#5 was ambiguous, but I took it to ask “what is the most important quality for other people to have?”
Karen Blixen? She’s not a literary figure, she’s an author.
Apart from that, call me Sherlock.
Another Gandalf!
gandalf
Yet another Hermione.
Another Galadriel. Though I never got the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
I got Sherlock Holmes, which strikes me as better than I deserve.
It looks like they just have six character-pairs (one of each gender), and the six answer choices for each question correspond to those character-pairs on a one-to-one basis. Add up the total for each character, and whichever one has the most is your character-pair.
Oh, and nobody will be surprised to hear that I’m another Sherlock.
I only answered two or three questions but that was enough to allow the website’s superior powers of deduction to discover which character I am.
Elementary!
Let’s see if we can list them:
Female:
Lucy (Narnia)
Galadrial (LotR)
Karen Blixen (Out of Africa)
Eowyn (LotR)
Hermione (HP)
Juliet (R and J)
Male:
Gandalf (LotR)
Voldemort (HP)
Sherlock (Sherlock)
Romeo (RJ)
Superman (Superman)
Dirk Pitt (Dirk Pitt)
Other:
Tigger (Winnie Ther Pooh)
Did I miss anyone?
Dirk Pitt here… The irony is that years ago Clive Cussler, the creator of Pitt, came into the bookstore I was working at in Denver and autographed one of his books to me writing, “To TV time, my inspiration for Dirk Pitt!” and signed his name.
Up until now I thought that was how he signed all of his books. Now by taking this test, I find out he was being honest.
No shit. Sherlock.
Hermione, hurrah!