Works of Fiction Where the Villain is the (or a) Main Character

You, like Jack, caught the part about ‘allowing that mutineer to land and refuel’, as spelled out maybe 25% of the way into the book. No offense, but you apparently missed Jack catching something else much later: well after he’d disabled the defenses, and maybe 90% of the way through to the end.

[QUOTE=ARMOR]
“But Borglyn…” I began and stopped, suddenly, seeing it all at last. “Borglyn was never just coming for fuel. He’s coming to stay, isn’t he? He’s coming to take over.”

Wice’s mouth was open. “You didn’t know? You really didn’t know?”
[/QUOTE]

Luke Skywalker, OTOH, needs hanging.

The Lodger
Hangover Square

Both played by the same actor, too (Laird Cregar).

The short stories and novels of Luff Imbry by Matthew Hughes

two pages, and no mention of The Godfather?

Michael is easily the worst villain in the first two movies.

But, he renounced Satan and all his works!

A Clockwork Orange. The protagonist is a murderer and rapist.

You’re only half way through. I know how people hate spoilers about the series on this board, so I’ll only say that by the end of the 5th book, there are plenty of chapters from the POV of people who could be considered villains. I suppose there could be debate about which characters count as main, but since there are so many characters in ASOIF, I think a larger than average number of characters could be considered main characters.

Keep reading.