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1* Creator/MaxBrooks's ''Literature/WorldWarZ'' : There's a sequence involving a pilot talking over the radio to another person who got her safely out of a zombie-infested area. Or was she talking to anyone at all...?
2* ''Literature/CharlieAndLola'': Lola has an imaginary friend by the name of Soren Laurenson. This would be one of the cases where the kid with the imaginary friend is perfectly happy and well-adjusted, she just has a somewhat overactive imagination.
3* Creator/JohnCollier's "Literature/ThusIRefuteBeelzy": This ShortStory strongly implies the child has summoned up a demon.
4* Creator/HelenCresswell's ''{{Literature/Bagthorpe}}'': The youngest cousin, Daisy, has an imaginary friend called Arry Awk (the name comes from a folksong). Daisy is a strange child who has fads, such as setting things on fire and burying sausages in the garden, and she blames Arry Awk for all her misdeeds.
5* In ''Literature/{{Gone}}'', ComicBook/SpiderMan is Toto's imaginary friend.
6* In Creator/AndrewMGreeley's ''Literature/GodGame'', a man's computer affects a {{fantasy}} kingdom (and the people around him) and characters from the game start appearing to him to ask for plot changes.
7* Creator/KevinHenkes's ''{{Literature/Jessica}}'': This picture book features girl who is initially reluctant to start kindergarten due to fears of leaving Jessica, her imaginary best friend, but eventually befriends a classmate who happens to share the name.
8* Creator/AstridLindgren's "Literature/MostBelovedSister": Lalla-Lee, the protagonist's "secret twin sister" from the short story, is ''probably'' one of these. [[NotSoImaginaryFriend Then]] [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane again]]...
9* ''Literature/MiddleSchool'': [[spoiler: Rafe's friend Leo]] turns out to be a figment of his imagination.
10* [[Creator/JoseMariaSanchezSilva José María Sánchez Silva]]'s ''Literature/GoodbyeJosephina'': This Spanish children's book (originally ''Adios, Josefina'') has a preteen boy from post-war Madrid with a whale as his friend, they go on imaginary adventures, boy starts seeing life in a better way, boy slowly grows up and lets go of imaginary friend... It inspired ''Anime/KujiraNoJosephina''.
11* In Creator/AnneTyler's ''Literature/EarthlyPossessions'', the narrator's daughter has an imaginary friend "Selinda" for whom a place must be set at the table; after a while, the daughter sits in Selinda's place and insists that she is Selinda, and that the daughter is the imaginary friend. She is always referred to as Selinda from then on.
12* Creator/JohnWyndham's ''{{Literature/Chocky}}'': Matthew's "imaginary friend" turns out to be [[NotSoImaginaryFriend actually an alien mind which has come to Earth]] to teach Humanity how to use cosmic energy. It's only the alien's mind because "mind has no mass" and thus can travel faster than the speed of light.
13* Sort of the point of the end of ''Literature/TheLaceReader'': [[spoiler: Towner's best friend as a child was her twin sister, Lyndley, who committed suicide when they were teenagers. Lyndley was really her twin Lindsey, who died at birth. Much of Lyndley's fictional traumatic childhood was based on Towner's real past.]]
14* The novel ''Literature/TheOther''. The narrator and his twin brother deal with a host of calamities. [[spoiler: The narrator has no brother, and he's a murdering sociopathic monster.]]
15* In the novel ''Film/{{Chocolat}}'', the protagonist's daughter has an imaginary friend who is a Kangaroo.
16* In ''Literature/TheGraveyardBook'', Scarlett thinks that Bod is her imaginary friend until she meets him again when she becomes older.
17* In Creator/PatriciaAMcKillip's contemporary novel ''Stepping from the Shadows'' the narrator's "ugly sister" turns out to be [[spoiler:her alternate personality. And this was published at least a decade before Literature/FightClub]].
18* The "Literature/DumarestOfTerra" books ''Haven of Darkness'' and ''Prison of Night'' by E.C. Tubb involved a world where daily flares of stellar radiation induced detailed hallucinations of dead acquaintances, friends and enemies alike. Extensive conversations often occurred with these "ghosts."
19* ''Literature/TheGoneAwayWorld'' is ''weird'' about this. [[spoiler:The main character was the imaginary friend of TheAce, serving as the inspiration and motivator for all his deeds, and became real as the result of AppliedPhlebotinum. His memories are a hybrid of what really happened and what TheAce visualized as happening, along with a few things that never happened (for instance, he thinks he's married to the woman who the ace original actually married.)]] Just to hammer in the weirdness a little more, [[spoiler:it's heavily implied that the narrator is the imaginary friend of both TheAce and a [[OldMaster wizened old kung fu master]]]] who ''really'' likes tupperware.
20** On top of this, [[spoiler:the friend [[ReplacementGoldfish is said to resemble the original's dead older brother.]]]]
21* In Creator/JohnVarley's ''Literature/TheGoldenGlobe'', protagonist Kenneth "Sparky" Valentine's imaginary friend turns out to be a symptom of a disassociative personality disorder caused by years of suffering at the hands of his abusive father, Kenneth Sr.
22** This is also the plot to ''Me and Emma'' by Elizabeth Flock. [[spoiler: Carrie's sister, Emma, ''does'' exist but the perception Carrie has of her was created as a coping method to deal with the severe abuse Carrie suffers from her mother and stepfather. The real Emma was taken away from the family after Carrie's father shook her and she was taken away from the family.]]
23* J.D. Salinger's story "Uncle Wiggly in Connecticut" is about habitually drunk wannabe socialite Eloise's lost afternoon spent with a [[strike:close friend]] half-remembered acquaintance, to whom she [[strike:happily relives]] moans about their GloryDays in college. Her daughter Ramona ''seems'' to have little purpose in the story other than to demonstrate how [[NotNowKid Eloise neglects her]]. Ramona--insisting her friend Jimmy Jimmereeno is corporeal--makes room in bed for him (which annoys her mother). No need to use [[spoiler:spoiler text]], as this short story--like most of Salinger's--is anti-climactic. (Perhaps--after "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", and "Teddy"--Salinger felt he'd written enough jarring endings for a lifetime.)
24* In the Literature/{{Discworld}} novels, when Agnes Nitt was young, she used to blame things that went wrong on "the other little girl". "The other little girl" is now Perdita; somewhere between a SplitPersonality and the part of your mind where all the thoughts you don't dare think go. And she and Agnes don't get on.
25** Earlier, in ''Literature/SmallGods'', desert-dwelling religious hermit S.T. ("Saint") Ungulant has an imaginary friend called Angus. [[spoiler: Because the small gods of the desert don't miss an opportunity to latch onto anyone's belief, even a delusional crackpot's belief in his imaginary friend, Angus is "real" enough to hit a lion over the head with a rock.]]
26** In ''Literature/{{Snuff}}'', it's revealed that Sam Vimes' son has an imaginary friend named Mr. Whistle, "who lived in a house in a tree but was occasionally a dragon."
27* Anne of the ''Literature/AnneOfGreenGables'' series starts out having two imaginary friends: her reflection, whom she imagined was another little girl who lived in an enchanted world, and another little girl named Violetta, based on an echo she heard in a meadow near a home she grew up in. Marilla does not approve, and tells her it will be good to have a real friend to replace her imaginary ones.
28** In the sequel ''Anne of Avonlea'', one of Anne's students, Paul Irving, has some imaginary friends that he collectively refers to as the "Rock People".
29* In the book ''Magic for Marigold'', also by L. M. Montgomery, Marigold has an imaginary friend named Sylvia.
30* A teenage example: near the end of [[spoiler:''Literature/TheBasicEight'', Flannery discovers that her best friend, Natasha, is a figment of her imagination.]]
31* In the short story "Faithless Margaret", (appeared in ''Wiggansnatch'' 18, Feb. 1986[[note]]''Wiggansnatch'' was the creation of James Moore Laughing Otter, a gay pagan interested in the traditional connection of gays and shamanic magic. He organized gay pagans to march in Seattle Pride, studied and taught rituals, and eventually died of AIDS in 1988.[[/note]]), an old man, Mr. Humple, has an imaginary companion by that name who shares his life, takes bus rides with him and generally livens things up. Then the pair meet an old lady, Mrs. Crowley, who has an imaginary companion named Charles Whitcomb. In the final scene the old man and woman ride the bus sullenly apart, angry and bereft -- Margaret and Charles apparently hit it off and now ride the bus together, abandoning their respective people.
32* In Creator/ZilphaKeatleySnyder's ''The Changeling'', both Martha and Ivy have imaginary friends when they meet; Martha's is a protective lion, and Ivy's is Nicky Red Eagle, a Native American boy. Ivy's baby sister Josie sees and chats with all sorts of people, at least one of whom [[NotSoImaginaryFriend may actually be a ghost]].
33* Adam Gopnik's essay ''[[https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2002/09/30/bumping-into-mr-ravioli Bumping Into Mr. Ravioli]]'' is about his three-year-old daughter and the elusive Charlie Ravioli, who was apparently so busy that they rarely had time to do more than "grab lunch" or chat for a minute on the phone. Mr. Ravioli even had a receptionist who said "He's in a meeting right now, may I take a message?" Gopnik's sister, psychologist Alison Gopnik[[note]]author of ''The philosophical baby: What Children's Minds Tell Us About Truth, Love, and the Meaning of Life''[[/note]] tells him imaginary friends and [[WorldBuilding paracosms]] are actually used by children to orient themselves in reality. Gopnik is one of several [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imaginary_friend professionals who have recently published studies on imaginary friends]].
34* ''Literature/LifeAmongTheSavages'', Creator/ShirleyJackson's essays based on her family, describes a shopping trip with her son, daughter, and her daughter's seven daughters, all named Martha, whom Joanne has adopted after their real parents killed each other.
35* "Carrie-Barry-Annie" by Ethel Calbert Phillips is the story of Margery and how she looks after her slightly absentminded friend. When Margery starts school she immediately realizes that Carrie cannot come with her. She gives her into the care of a sickly child named Gennifer, who sees Carrie as a winged creature small enough to live in a china house on the mantelpiece. She flies out at night and doesn't come back until morning.
36* The Wind Woman in ''Literature/EmilyOfNewMoon,'' an AnthropomorphicPersonification whose shape changes with the direction of the wind.
37* The main character in Creator/AnthonyBoucher's "Mr. Lupescu" ''pretended'' to be an imaginary friend--a fairy godfather, to be specific--so that he could [[spoiler: shoot the father of the kid the pretense was centered on, get off scot free and marry the mother]].
38* In ''Literature/{{Newsflesh}}'' adult Shaun Mason conjures one as a result of grief from events in the first book, ''Feed''. As his SanitySlippage worsens in the second book, ''Deadline'', he goes from just being able to hear the voice [[spoiler: of his dead adopted sister (and lover) George]], to being able to see the imago before his eyes. On several occasions, he can even feel physical contact.
39* The Swedish children's book series ''Alfons Åberg'' by Gunilla Bergström, published in English as ''Literature/AlfieAtkins'', has Alfons' imaginary friend Mållgan (Malcolm or Moggy in the English versions), an albino version of Alfons who he often plays with when his father is busy. He also tends to use Mållgan as the occasional scapegoat to get out of trouble. In the 1976 book ''Vem räddar Alfons Åberg?'' (''Who'll Save Alfie Atkins?''), Alfons befriends Viktor, another boy in his building, and Mållgan, aware that Alfons is outgrowing him, leaves in search of someone else who needs an imaginary friend.
40* In ''Literature/TheAmyVirus'', Cyan imagines a spectral version of her favorite singer Amy Zander following her around and talking to her. [[spoiler:Spectral Amy disappears at the end, when Cyan no longer needs her.]]
41* Dinosaur from ''Literature/DinosaurVs'' has an imaginary whale, which he waters in "Dinosaur vs. the Potty".
42* ''Literature/TheLightJar'' has a whole society of imaginary friends, who look just like human children, except their hair, skin, and clothes are all the same color (for example, Sam is yellow), and they glow. Each friend is assigned to a child for a few years, and goes away when they aren't needed anymore. Nate's childhood imaginary friend Sam shows up after his mother disappears, to Nate's shock, and [[spoiler:Kitty, who at first seems like a regular girl, turns out to be the imaginary friend of a girl who died decades ago]].
43* In ''Literature/BackyardDragon'' by Betsy Sterman, the protagonist is a ten-year-old named Owen. On the one hand, he wishes that people would stop bringing up the incident in kindergarten, when he cried about "Dooley" getting on the wrong bus home and caused a panic because the teachers didn't realize that he was imaginary. However, in the present his journal is written in the form of letters to Dooley. The book ends with him finally having made some real friends, with the implication that he might be able to let Dooley go now.
44* Robert from ''Literature/{{Stim}}'' remembers that when he was a child, his best friend was an imaginary boy named Sam, who shared all his interests and provided advice for how to interact with people. His mother hated how much he talked about Sam, but she couldn't see how important he was to Robert.
45* ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKid: The Third Wheel'': Manny has many imaginary friends, including Joey, Petey, Danny, Charles Tribble, The Other Charles Tribble, Tiny Jim, and Johnny Cheddar. He mainly uses them as scapegoats and excuses to get extra dessert.
46* ''Literature/LilyAndDunkin'': Dunkin's best friend from New Jersey, Phineas, turns out to be a hallucination who reappears when he goes off his meds.
47* During the first chapter of ''Literature/TheYellowBag'', Raquel writes letters to "André" in order to express her frustrations while practicing writing at the same time, but stops after her brother reads it and gets mad at her for thinking she's hiding something from him. She tries it again with another imaginary friend, Lorelai, but her family once again gets mad at her, as the letters mention her wishes of running away.

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