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* ''Literature/TheLotterysPlusOne'': Diamond, the Lottery family's dog, is missing one of her back legs.
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* ''Literature/{{Nevermoor}}'': Nancy "Nan" Dawson used to be a professional dragonrider, but was forced into an early retirement after one of them tore her leg off and ate it. She now has a prosthetic, and focuses on training Hawthorne, a dragonriding prodigy. Overall, she doesn't seem too bothered by it, and has adjusted to her situation quite well.
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** In ''Literature/TheCourtshipOfPrincessLeia'', Chewbacca finally demonstrates the arm-ripping Han mentioned in the original movie, tearing a Nightsister's arm completely off so fast Isolder didn't even see it.
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%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order.

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%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order. Thanks!






* Version One shows up in Creator/AlfredBester's ''The Deceivers'': mine workers who steal "novaseed" gems - a sort of universal catalyst - must then have their hand amputated to prevent the novaseed-triggered matter-to-energy reaction from slowly consuming their entire body. Novaseed gems are so valuable on the black market there is apparently no shortage of miners willing to trade a hand for economic security.

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* Version One shows up in Creator/AlfredBester's ''The Deceivers'': mine workers who steal "novaseed" gems - -- a sort of universal catalyst - -- must then have their hand amputated to prevent the novaseed-triggered matter-to-energy reaction from slowly consuming their entire body. Novaseed gems are so valuable on the black market there is apparently no shortage of miners willing to trade a hand for economic security.



* Literature/HonorHarrington's arm was shredded by flechettes when escaping a prison ship. Ordinarily that wouldn't be a problem for their tech, which would have been able to grow her a new one when she got back home, but thanks to a quirk in her genetics her body rejects such procedures and she gets an almost as good prosthetic- with a built in gun. Previously, she had also lost the same eye (right) and arm (left) as her historical pattern, Vice Admiral the Viscount Sir Horatio Nelson.

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* Literature/HonorHarrington's arm was shredded by flechettes when escaping a prison ship. Ordinarily that wouldn't be a problem for their tech, which would have been able to grow her a new one when she got back home, but thanks to a quirk in her genetics her body rejects such procedures and she gets an almost as good prosthetic- prosthetic -- with a built in gun. Previously, she had also lost the same eye (right) and arm (left) as her historical pattern, Vice Admiral the Viscount Sir Horatio Nelson.



** In the ''Literature/XWingSeries'', Ton Phanan lost an arm and half of his face during the assault on the second Death Star, having to get [[WeCanRebuildHim replacement parts]]. This prompted him to switch from the field of medicine to that of killing people as a pilot - problem was, he kept getting hurt, and since he was allergic to the best medicine around, this meant [[CyberneticsEatYourSoul becoming more and more mechanical]].

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** In the ''Literature/XWingSeries'', Ton Phanan lost an arm and half of his face during the assault on the second Death Star, having to get [[WeCanRebuildHim replacement parts]]. This prompted him to switch from the field of medicine to that of killing people as a pilot - -- problem was, he kept getting hurt, and since he was allergic to the best medicine around, this meant [[CyberneticsEatYourSoul becoming more and more mechanical]].



* In ''Literature/TheTraitorSonCycle'', [[spoiler:Gabriel and the Wyrm]] lose matching arms in their first battle against Ash - the former by magic eating through the energy shield he's been casting, and the latter by having it torn off.

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* In ''Literature/TheTraitorSonCycle'', [[spoiler:Gabriel and the Wyrm]] lose matching arms in their first battle against Ash - -- the former by magic eating through the energy shield he's been casting, and the latter by having it torn off.

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* Tammy Maheswaran from ''Literature/MARiiMO'' lost her right hand in the car accident that killed her parents seven years ago, the day before her twenty-first birthday.



* ''Literature/{{Waltharius}}'': In the final combat, Walther cuts off Gunther's leg, shortly after Hagen cuts off Walther's hand, and then Walther cuts Hagen across the face and rips his eye out. With none of them able to fight on, the poem dedicates a moment to the image of Gunther's leg, Walther's hand, and Hagen's eye lying harmoniously side by side on the ground.



* In ''Literature/WarriorCats'' this has happened twice, both with tails:
** In ''Sunset'', Berrykit gets his tail caught in a fox trap and badly mangled, foreshadowing the danger they'll pose later on in the book. TheMedic Leafpool determines that she can't save it, and amputates it, leaving a stump. The injury makes the kit's mother so afraid of life in the wild that she temporarily leaves the Clan with her kits to return to the barn where they were born.
** In the sixth arc, ''A Vision of Shadows'', half of Finpaw's tail has to be amputated to free him from a massive, heavy branch that the cats cannot shift. The situation emphasizes [=SkyClan=]'s need for a medicine cat, and it is during his stay in the medicine den that he and Twigpaw first start to realize their feelings for each other.



* ''Literature/{{Waltharius}}'': In the final combat, Walther cuts off Gunther's leg, shortly after Hagen cuts off Walther's hand, and then Walther cuts Hagen across the face and rips his eye out. With none of them able to fight on, the poem dedicates a moment to the image of Gunther's leg, Walther's hand, and Hagen's eye lying harmoniously side by side on the ground.
* In ''Literature/WarriorCats'' this has happened twice, both with tails:
** In ''Sunset'', Berrykit gets his tail caught in a fox trap and badly mangled, foreshadowing the danger they'll pose later on in the book. TheMedic Leafpool determines that she can't save it, and amputates it, leaving a stump. The injury makes the kit's mother so afraid of life in the wild that she temporarily leaves the Clan with her kits to return to the barn where they were born.
** In the sixth arc, ''A Vision of Shadows'', half of Finpaw's tail has to be amputated to free him from a massive, heavy branch that the cats cannot shift. The situation emphasizes [=SkyClan=]'s need for a medicine cat, and it is during his stay in the medicine den that he and Twigpaw first start to realize their feelings for each other.

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* ''Literature/{{Waltharius}}'': In the final combat, Walther cuts off Gunther's leg, shortly after Hagen cuts off Walther's hand, and then Walther cuts Hagen across the face and rips his eye out. With none of them able to fight on, the poem dedicates a moment to the image of Gunther's leg, Walther's hand, and Hagen's eye lying harmoniously side by side on the ground.
* In ''Literature/WarriorCats'' this has happened twice, both with tails:
** In ''Sunset'', Berrykit gets his tail caught in a fox trap and badly mangled, foreshadowing the danger they'll pose later on in the book. TheMedic Leafpool determines that she can't save it, and amputates it, leaving a stump. The injury makes the kit's mother so afraid of life in the wild that she temporarily leaves the Clan with her kits to return to the barn where they were born.
** In the sixth arc, ''A Vision of Shadows'', half of Finpaw's tail has to be amputated to free him from a massive, heavy branch that the cats cannot shift. The situation emphasizes [=SkyClan=]'s need for a medicine cat, and it is during his stay in the medicine den that he and Twigpaw first start to realize their feelings for each other.
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* ''Literature/HowTheSixMadeTheirWayInTheWorld'': One of the soldier's five companions has SuperSpeed and has somehow removed one of his legs in order to slow himself down.
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* ''Literature/{{Temeraire}}'':
** ''Victory of Eagles'': Played for DissonantSerenity when a soldier reflexively tries to stop a rolling cannonball with his foot mid-battle. He's too shocked to react, and Will, having seen it happen before, matter-of-factly reassures him that it's a clean amputation and helps walk him to a medic.
** ''Crucible of Gold'': ButtMonkey [[spoiler:Granby]] ends up losing an arm during a botched mission. It's not from any one incident, but from a bad break that repeatedly gets aggravated until it requires amputation.
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* ''Literature/CradleSeries'': Yerin mentions she's had her arms and legs chopped off before. Thankfully, his master was a master [[AlchemyIsMagic refiner]] and was able to grow them back easily. [[spoiler:Lindon gets his right arm cut off during his duel with Jai Long. Lindon thanks him for this, as the Jai Patriarch was trying to get him to kill Lindon. Lindon soon gets a prosthetic replacement with a CannibalismSuperpower]].

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* ''Literature/CradleSeries'': Yerin mentions she's had her arms and legs chopped off before. Thankfully, his her master was a master [[AlchemyIsMagic refiner]] and was able to grow them back easily. [[spoiler:Lindon gets his right arm cut off during his duel with Jai Long. Lindon thanks him for this, as the Jai Patriarch was trying to get him to kill Lindon. Lindon soon gets a prosthetic replacement with a CannibalismSuperpower]].
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* ''Literature/AllQuietOnTheWesternFront'' has a plot arc revolving around a pair of boots belonging to one of the original group who loses a leg and subsequently dues of wounds.

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* ''Literature/AllQuietOnTheWesternFront'' has a plot arc revolving around a pair of boots belonging to one of the original group who loses a leg and subsequently dues dies of wounds.
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* Rani from ''Franchise/DisneyFairies'' sacrificed her wings to save her Pixie Hollow. She can no longer fly however she is now [[DisabilitySuperpower the only fairy who can swim]].

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* Rani from ''Franchise/DisneyFairies'' ''Literature/DisneyFairies'' sacrificed her wings to save her Pixie Hollow. She can no longer fly fly, however she is now [[DisabilitySuperpower the only fairy who can swim]].
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* ''Literature/AbsolutelyTruly'': Truly's father lost an arm to an [=IED=] ('''I'''mprovised '''E'''xplosive '''D'''evice).
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* ''Literature/CradleSeries'': Yerin mentions she's had her arms and legs chopped off before. Thankfully, his master was a master [[AlchemyIsMagic refiner]] and was able to grow them back easily. [[spoiler:Lindon gets his right arm cut off during his duel with Jai Long. Lindon thanks him for this, as the Jai Patriarch was trying to get him to kill Lindon. Lindon soon gets a prosthetic replacement with a CannibalismSuperpower]].
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* ''Literature/Pax'': [[spoiler: Runt]] gets his leg blown off by a mine. Vola lost a leg in the war.

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* ''Literature/Pax'': ''Literature/{{Pax}}'': [[spoiler: Runt]] gets his leg blown off by a mine. Vola lost a leg in the war.
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* ''Literature/Pax'': [[spoiler: Runt]] gets his leg blown off by a mine. Vola lost a leg in the war.
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* OlderThanPrint: In ''Literature/{{Beowulf}}'', the title hero rips Grendel's arm off with his bare hands.

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* OlderThanPrint: In ''Literature/{{Beowulf}}'', the title hero rips Grendel's arm off with his bare hands. Grendel runs away, but eventually bleeds to death.
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* ''Literature/OldKingdom'': At the climax of ''Abhorsen'', [[spoiler:the Disreputable Dog bites Lirael's right hand off to save her from having to make a HeroicSacrifice to bind Orannis the Destroyer. [[GadgeteerGenius Sam]] makes her a magical prosthetic out of gold.]]


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%%* Captain Ahab in ''Literature/MobyDick''.

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%%* * Captain Ahab in ''Literature/MobyDick''.''Literature/MobyDick'' lost his leg to the whale, motivating his vendetta.


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* In the ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'' spin-off novel ''The Thinking Engine'' by Creator/JamesLovegrove, [[spoiler:the titular 'Thinking Engine' is actually a hollow construct with Professor Moriarty inside it, but Moriarty has been left hideously crippled by his fall after his last confrontation with Holmes, to the point that he has lost both legs and one arm as they had to be amputated when he was rescued, as well as his larynx being so badly damaged that he can only still only just speak on his own after spending over three years 'healing']].
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* Bernard Wolfe's science-fiction ''Limbo'' is all about a society where self-amputation is encouraged by the culture, using prosthesis only during sport. It is seen as a moral equivalent to warfare.

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* Bernard Wolfe's science-fiction novel ''Limbo'' is all about a society where self-amputation is encouraged by the culture, using prosthesis ArtificialLimbs only during sport. It is seen as a moral equivalent to warfare.warfare, a [[LiteralMetaphor case of literal disarmament]].
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* In ''Literature/Animorphs'' [[BigBad Visser Three]] likes to use his tail to chop off body parts [[OffWithHisHead or sometimes heads]]. Fittingly, when he is in a morph he [[LaserGuidedKarma gets his own body parts cut off frequently]] although, since morphing heals all injuries, he's fine when he demorphs.

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* In ''Literature/Animorphs'' ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'', [[BigBad Visser Three]] likes to use his tail to chop off body parts [[OffWithHisHead or sometimes heads]]. Fittingly, when he is in a morph he [[LaserGuidedKarma gets his own body parts cut off frequently]] although, since morphing heals all injuries, he's fine when he demorphs.



* Bernard Wolfe's science-fiction ''Limbo'' is all about a society where self-amputation, using then prosthesis only during sport. This is encouraged by the culture.

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* Bernard Wolfe's science-fiction ''Limbo'' is all about a society where self-amputation, self-amputation is encouraged by the culture, using then prosthesis only during sport. This sport. It is encouraged by the culture.seen as a moral equivalent to warfare.

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* Cielo from ''Literature/QuantumDevilSagaAvatarTuner'' loses his arm in his efforts to stop the Solids from abducting [[LivingMacGuffin Sera]].

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* ''Literature/QuantumDevilSagaAvatarTuner''
**
Cielo from ''Literature/QuantumDevilSagaAvatarTuner'' loses his arm in his efforts to stop the Solids from abducting [[LivingMacGuffin Sera]].Sera]]. His HealingFactor allows him to reattach, it, but it takes a specialized and experimental surgery and a lot of time spent in recovery.
** In the next book, [[spoiler:Bat has his wings burned off by Heat]]. While he also has HealingFactor he is not as lucky as Cielo.
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* In ''Literature/Animorphs'' [[BigBad Visser Three]] likes to use his tail to chop off body parts [[OffWithHisHead or sometimes heads]]. Fittingly, when he is in a morph he [[LaserGuidedKarma gets his own body parts cut off frequently]] although, since morphing heals all injuries, he's fine when he demorphs.
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* In ''Literature/ToWelcomeOblivion'', Kaya Seratin's arms are violently severed off by Rhett Talbot nine years prior to the events of the story.
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* Cielo from ''Literature/QuantumDevilSagaAvatarTuner'' loses his arm in his efforts to stop the Solids from abducting [[LivingMacGuffin Sera]].
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* Hertzer Herrick in Creator/JohnRingo's ''Literature/CouncilWars'' series loses a hand in the climactic battle at the end of the first book. Of course, being [[MartyStu Hertzer]], it just serves to make him even more badass.

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* Hertzer Herrick in Creator/JohnRingo's ''Literature/CouncilWars'' series loses a hand in the climactic battle at the end of the first book. Of course, being [[MartyStu Hertzer]], Hertzer, it just serves to make him even more badass.
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* In ''Literature/WarriorCats'' this has happened twice, both with tails:
** In ''Sunset'', Berrykit gets his tail caught in a fox trap and badly mangled, foreshadowing the danger they'll pose later on in the book. TheMedic Leafpool determines that she can't save it, and amputates it, leaving a stump. The injury makes the kit's mother so afraid of life in the wild that she temporarily leaves the Clan with her kits to return to the barn where they were born.
** In the sixth arc, ''A Vision of Shadows'', half of Finpaw's tail has to be amputated to free him from a massive, heavy branch that the cats cannot shift. The situation emphasizes [=SkyClan=]'s need for a medicine cat, and it is during his stay in the medicine den that he and Twigpaw first start to realize their feelings for each other.
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* Near the end of ''Literature/TailchasersSong'', [[spoiler:the TagalongKid Pouncequick]] has his tail ripped off by Scratchnail.
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* ''Literature/{{Waltharius}}'': In the final combat, Walther cuts off Gunther's leg, shortly after Hagen cuts off Walther's hand, and then Walther cuts Hagen across the face and rips his eye out. With none of them able to fight on, the poem dedicates a moment to the image of Gunther's leg, Walther's hand, and Hagen's eye lying harmoniously side by side on the ground.

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* Ashley Gaynes in ''Blackbirds'' is envisioned by the main character Literature/MiriamBlack to die in his eighties, having lost his left foot sometime after their first meeting. [[spoiler:He loses it later in the novel courtesy of Ingersoll]].


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* Ashley Gaynes in ''Blackbirds'' is envisioned by the main character Literature/MiriamBlack to die in his eighties, having lost his left foot sometime after their first meeting. [[spoiler:He loses it later in the novel courtesy of Ingersoll]].
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* ''Literature/{{Circleverse}}'': In ''[[Literature/TheCircleOpens Magic Steps]]'', the [[AntiMagic unmage]] the assassins are using had his legs cut off by pirates so he would be easier to control.
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%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order.
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[[AnArmAndALeg Amputations]] in literature.
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* ''Literature/AllQuietOnTheWesternFront'' has a plot arc revolving around a pair of boots belonging to one of the original group who loses a leg and subsequently dues of wounds.
* The ''Literature/AubreyMaturin'' stories contain various amputees. One is an elderly Lieutenant who Aubrey is able to both reward and dispose of by making him Captain of a prize vessel, thus ensuring that the man will be honourably and securely pensioned off; another is a below-knee amputee who appears as Captain of an East Indiaman, being felt to have no career prospects in the Royal Navy with his disability. Tom Pullings' facial scarring is generally reckoned to have hindered his already slim prospects, and an officer who loses part of his nose to frostbite steers every introduction round to his wounding to prevent suspicion that he is syphilitic.
* OlderThanPrint: In ''Literature/{{Beowulf}}'', the title hero rips Grendel's arm off with his bare hands.
* Midway into ''Literature/BerlinAlexanderplatz'' [[spoiler:the protagonist Franz Biberkopf suffers an injury that loses him an arm, which ends up being amputated]].
* Ashley Gaynes in ''Blackbirds'' is envisioned by the main character Literature/MiriamBlack to die in his eighties, having lost his left foot sometime after their first meeting. [[spoiler:He loses it later in the novel courtesy of Ingersoll]].
* Early in ''Nine Gates'', the second book of the ''Literature/BreakingTheWall'' trilogy, Righteous Drum loses an arm in an enemy attack. While it weakens him while he adjusts, all it really does is make him a HandicappedBadass.
* In ''Literature/ChildrenOfTheBlackSun'', Isidro loses the functioning of one arm to torture. In a culture that values strength and pulling your weight, it's a big psychological issue for him as well as a physical one.
* Hertzer Herrick in Creator/JohnRingo's ''Literature/CouncilWars'' series loses a hand in the climactic battle at the end of the first book. Of course, being [[MartyStu Hertzer]], it just serves to make him even more badass.
* ''Literature/TheCrimsonShadow'': Duke Morkney sentences a man to lose a hand (plus all of his property) for stealing.
* Roland of ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' loses his right big toe and two fingers from his right hand. Not the most traumatic injury ever, but not without consequence either, since it was his "good" hand and considering what used to be his [[GunsAkimbo preferred method of combat.]] He remarks to himself that at least he masturbates left-handed.
* Version One shows up in Creator/AlfredBester's ''The Deceivers'': mine workers who steal "novaseed" gems - a sort of universal catalyst - must then have their hand amputated to prevent the novaseed-triggered matter-to-energy reaction from slowly consuming their entire body. Novaseed gems are so valuable on the black market there is apparently no shortage of miners willing to trade a hand for economic security.
* ''Literature/{{Dexter}}'': Dr. Danco takes Doakes's hands, feet and also tongue, as well as Debbie's boyfriend's arm and leg.
* In ''Literature/TheDinosaurLords'', Karyl loses his right hand to a raptor and is forced to go without it for several months. Later, Aphrodite regrows it for him.
* Rani from ''Franchise/DisneyFairies'' sacrificed her wings to save her Pixie Hollow. She can no longer fly however she is now [[DisabilitySuperpower the only fairy who can swim]].
* Some of the characters in the ''Literature/DragonsOfRequiem'' series lose at least one of their limbs at some point during battles. The most notable case is [[spoiler:King Raem Seran]], who has both his arms ''and'' legs bitten off by Laira and Jeid.
* Edgar Freemantle from Stephen King's ''Literature/DumaKey'' loses his right arm. He choice to forgo a prosthesis allows for him to channel power through his 'mojo' arm.
* Evening of ''{{Literature/Eve and Adam}}'' loses her right arm and leg in the first sentence of the book.
* In the novels and animated version of ''LightNovel/FateZero'', [[spoiler: Sola-Ui]] gets [[spoiler: her]] right arm cut off by [[spoiler: Maiya]] to [[spoiler: remove the Command Spells that let her control Diarmuid!Lancer, which she got after subjecting Kayneth to {{Fingore}}.]]
-->>[[spoiler: Sola-Ui]]: [[MadnessMantra "My right hand... my hand..."]]
* In ''Literature/GunsOfTheDawn'', Emily's brother-in-law, Tubal, finishes the war minus a leg. He's not as bitter about it as he might be — after all, a lot of the people he fought beside got worse.
* ''Literature/HarryPotter'':
** [[spoiler:Peter Pettigrew]] cuts off his own hand to help resurrect Voldemort in ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire''. Earlier, [[spoiler:he had cut off a finger from that same hand to fake his death.]]
** Speaking of ''Literature/HarryPotter'', this is also the reason the Care of Magical Creatures post is available for Hagrid, as Dumbledore pointed out during ''Literature/HarryPotterAndThePrisonerOfAzkaban'':
--->'''Dumbledore''': I am sorry to say that Professor Kettleburn has retired from his post at the end of last term, in order to enjoy more time with his remaining limbs.
* Three examples in ''Literature/HeartOfSteel''. In all cases the limbs were replaced with either biological (Julia's) or mechanical (everyone else's) parts:
** Alistair Mechanus' backstory includes a car accident that cost him his left arm and both legs.
** Julia Parker loses a leg to the shark-man Scarface.
** Julia's boyfriend Jim is torn in half and loses an arm during the same even that cost Julia her leg.
* Literature/HonorHarrington's arm was shredded by flechettes when escaping a prison ship. Ordinarily that wouldn't be a problem for their tech, which would have been able to grow her a new one when she got back home, but thanks to a quirk in her genetics her body rejects such procedures and she gets an almost as good prosthetic- with a built in gun. Previously, she had also lost the same eye (right) and arm (left) as her historical pattern, Vice Admiral the Viscount Sir Horatio Nelson.
%%* Happens to [[spoiler: Magawisca]] in ''Literature/HopeLeslie''.
* Lieutenant Bush of the ''Literature/HoratioHornblower'' books loses his leg in the battle at the end of ''Ship of the Line''. He gets a wooden one and learns how to walk on it in ''Flying Colours'', and while he's slated to be a desk captain, Hornblower makes him the captain of his squadron's lead ship in ''The Commodore''.
* Alvin the Treacherous from ''Literature/HowToTrainYourDragon'' starts off with a HookHand, explaining that he lost his hand to the booby-trapped coffin of Grimbeard the Ghastly. He then proceeds to lose another body part for each encounter with Hiccup and his friends, until he is a one-eyed, one-handed, one-legged, noseless, hairless shell of a man.
* Averted in ''Literature/TheHungerGames''. Peeta loses his left leg in the arena but it bears so little impact on the plot and characterization that you wonder what the whole point of it was. The only effect it seems to have is that he's a bit unsteady on his feet when Katniss leaps into his arms for the first few months after the amputation. Oh, and there is one scene where Katniss feels guilty over him losing his leg. Other than that you would never notice that he's lost a limb and the movie version didn't even bother to include it.
** Although it does have some impact in [[spoiler:the Quarter Quell]] of "''Catching Fire''". Which, in turn, makes Peeta come off as more of TheLoad in the second film because they removed the reason why he can't keep up with the other characters physically.
* ''Literature/InheritanceCycle'': The high priest of Dras-Leona's evil {{cult}} has given ''all four'' of his limbs as sacrifices to the gods.
* In Creator/StephenKing's ''Literature/{{It}}'', Pennywise pulls off Georgie Denbrough's arm, which ends up with him bleeding profusely until death. The same thing happens in the TV miniseries.
* ''Literature/JamesBond''
** Bond's CIA friend Felix Leiter had his arm and leg bitten off by a shark twice. First in Creator/IanFleming's ''Literature/LiveAndLetDie'', and again in John Gardner's novelization of ''Film/LicenceToKill'', since Gardner's film novelizations [[ContinuitySnarl kept the continuity of Fleming's books]].
** One villain's arms are severed in ''Literature/NobodyLivesForEver'' with a guillotine after an ill-fated attempt to grab a gun by reaching for it under the blade.
** A villain in the ''Literature/YoungBond'' novel ''Literature/DoubleOrDie'' has his legs whipped off by a loose towrope. The rest of his body presumably flew into the sea.
* ''Literature/JaneEyre'': Mr. Rochester was badly hurt when there was a fire at Thornfield. One hand was so crushed that a surgeon had to amputate it.
* In the ''{{Literature/Lensmen}}'' series, Kimball Kinnison at one point gets captured and [[ColdBloodedTorture tortured]]. Among the tortures is a deliberate infection that [[LifeOrLimbDecision forces the Patrol to amputate both arms and both legs to save his life]], once they get him back.
* Bernard Wolfe's science-fiction ''Limbo'' is all about a society where self-amputation, using then prosthesis only during sport. This is encouraged by the culture.
* Max Barry's ''Literature/MachineMan'' has Dr. Charles Neumann first lose one leg at the thigh, then the other. Both losses are treated realistically. The worst of it is when [[spoiler:he has to sever his own left arm at the shoulder as a LifeOrLimbDecision]].
* Also from King: ''Literature/{{Misery}}''. In the novel, Annie [[spoiler: cuts off Paul's foot to "hobble" him, taken from the slave narratives and Congo examples as listed below]]. The scene, while averted in the film, is even more horrific. [[spoiler: She breaks both feet with a sledgehammer]].
%%* Captain Ahab in ''Literature/MobyDick''.
* Suffering from the disorder mentioned in the RealLife entry below, one of the characters takes off her own leg in the novella ''Monster P*rn'', by KJ Moore.
* ''Literature/NemesisSeries'': ''Dreadnought'' has [[spoiler:Calamity]] losing an arm after being hit by Utopia's [[DisintegratorRay inversion beam]].
* ''Literature/NinaTanleven'': In the backstory of ''The Ghost in the Big Brass Bed'', Cornelius Fletcher sustained major leg injuries in World War I. A few years later, his wounded legs were further damaged to the point of no return from frostbite, and subsequently amputated.
* In ''Literature/TheShatteredKingdoms'', Isa agrees to have her arm amputated to [[AmputationStopsSpread stop the spread]] of sunlight-inflicted damage (her people being WeakenedByTheLight). Given that her culture exiles people with such "deformities" to their deaths, it's unsure for a while whether she'd want it done or not, since she might feel she's as good as dead either way.
* In ''Literature/TheSilmarillion'', Maedhros asks his friend Fingon to cut his hand off in a LifeOrLimbDecision while he is captures. Later, Beren gets his hand bitten off by a werewolf, and ends up with the nickname "Beren One-Hand".
* [[spoiler: Jaime Lannister]] in ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' has his hand cut off by a rival at one point. It's rather worse than just the loss of a hand though, as he's a knight (and one of the best swordsmen around), and his sword hand was the one chopped off.
** In the history of this world, related in ''Literature/TheWorldOfIceAndFire'', Orys Baratheon Was captured by the Dornish and had his sword hand chopped off by Wyl of Wyl the second time Aegon invaded Dorne. He later paid the debt back by capturing Walter Wyl, the son of Wyl of Wyl, and cut off his sword hand. Then he cut off Walter's other hand and both feet due to interest gathered over the years since his own hand was cut off.
* ''Literature/{{Stardoc}}'': [[spoiler:Jory's [[{{Kneecapping}} bad knee]] results in the loss of that leg]] in the final chapter of ''Blade Dancer''.
* ''Franchise/StarWarsExpandedUniverse'':
** ''[[Literature/StarWarsAhsoka Ahsoka]]'': Selda, the owner of the cantina on Raada, is mentioned to have lost an arm and a leg in the same farming accident that Kaeden and Miara Larte's parents died in. [[spoiler:During the evacuation of Raada at the end of the book, Vartan is shot by an Imperial tank and loses two limbs, with Selda joking that they now match.]]
* ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'':
** In the ''Literature/XWingSeries'', Ton Phanan lost an arm and half of his face during the assault on the second Death Star, having to get [[WeCanRebuildHim replacement parts]]. This prompted him to switch from the field of medicine to that of killing people as a pilot - problem was, he kept getting hurt, and since he was allergic to the best medicine around, this meant [[CyberneticsEatYourSoul becoming more and more mechanical]].
** ''Literature/SplinterOfTheMindsEye'' has Luke, fighting against Darth Vader, manage to cut off one of the Dark Lord's arms. Not perturbed by this, Vader picks up his lightsaber with his remaining hand and keeps fighting.
** ''Literature/GalaxyOfFear'': [[spoiler: Eppon]] can just [[HealingFactor instantly regrow a severed limb]]. Several books later, a smuggler is less lucky. When he's injured, a friendly tribe calling themselves The Children offer to take care of him, and they neatly remove the injured appendages [[ImAHumanitarian to have for dinner]]. Offered a bowl in good spirits, the viewpoint character [[LostMyAppetite had just seen his injured buddy]], decides to take the bowl anyway, and only figures it out at the last moment, when the spoon he lifts has a ring in it.
** Tenel Ka of ''Literature/YoungJediKnights'' lost an arm in a training accident and refused to get a replacement.
* In ''Literature/ThreeDarkCrowns'' the Temple higher-ups cut off novice priestess Elizabeth's hand with a serrated knife as punishment for helping Queen Mirabella run away. It is done mostly to punish Mirabella through guilt.
* Creator/EricFlint's AlternateHistory series ''Literature/TrailOfGlory'': In ''The Rivers of War'' Sergeant Driscol has a lower arm mangled by a British volley at [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Chippawa the Battle of Chippawa,]] during the UsefulNotes/WarOf1812. The later amputation of the limb and recovery period is what puts him in a position to help in the defense of Washington, DC along with Sam Houston, changing the course of history.
* In ''Literature/TheTraitorSonCycle'', [[spoiler:Gabriel and the Wyrm]] lose matching arms in their first battle against Ash - the former by magic eating through the energy shield he's been casting, and the latter by having it torn off.
* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
** In ''Literature/{{Ravenor}}'', Carl Thonius loses his right arm to an angry native wielding a chainsword when a routine mission goes horribly wrong. While they manage to surgically reattach the arm, Carl loses the fine motor skills needed for his role as Ravenor’s computer expert, and sinks into depression as a result. He starts dabbling in Chaos-tainted [[FantasticDrug flects]] as a coping mechanism, which leads to [[spoiler:him getting possessed by the daemon Slyte]] in ''Ravenor Returned''.
** From ''Literature/{{Eisenhorn}}'', Gregor Eisenhorn loses a hand in battle, in one of the short stories. Not caring for the prosthetic he was provided, he eventually has it surgically replaced with a vat grown duplicate.
** Literature/CiaphasCain (HERO OF THE IMPERIUM) has two augmetic fingers, having lost them to a Necron gauss weapon.
* Rand in ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'' loses a hand to one of the Forsaken. The casual manner in which he shrugs it off ("I guess I'll have to learn the sword again") is presented as further evidence of his degrading mental state. A few books later, he admits it does bother him, which is reasonable since it seems at that point that the fate of the world depends on his winning a sword fight.
* The Tin Man from ''Literature/TheWonderfulWizardOfOz'' was based off of the UsefulNotes/AmericanCivilWar amputees Baum saw growing up.

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