
Any piece of furniture can be wielded as her weapon. She resonates to young women as a strong willed female who gets things done on her own.

Alosa represents a niche which is very much still missing in our fictional worlds. Not all girls are helpless or too smart for their own good. Anyway, what I’m saying is, the character of Alosa was treated the way any fictional male character would. Which then they did, and admittedly it still didn’t change her stance on wasting her potential swabbing the ship deck. Even if they hang her off the ship with chains around her arm, she still won’t. If she doesn’t want to clean the deck, she won’t clean the deck. Which is in all fairness the smart thing to do. Usually when you have strong female characters placed in very “piratey” situations they are forced to succumb to their male captures by keeping their heads down in order to survive. I love her personality because you can easily see Alosa written as a man. This girl ain’t afraid to get her hands dirty! She is also stubborn. So much so, she repeatedly gets herself stabbed or punched to prove she’s right.

She is feisty, smart and carelessly brave. Meet Princess Alosa, the female Jack Sparrow of the Literature world.
