Maggers Wrote:My problem with Gia, and I do have one, is that she is too perfect. She's just the best. Her short, perky blond hair feathers just so. Her blue eyes always gleam, except when they are brimming with tears as she looks at AIDS kids, or lost puppies or anything else guaranteed to make anyone cry. As I've stated a few million times, she wouldn't be caught dead farting or burping, even in private. I wonder if she CAN move her bowels; maybe she is so perfect she can live without that function. I bet she doesn't have bed hair in the morning or wake up with crusties in her eyes.Wow, Maggers... you hit the nail right on the head. She's the kind of woman who makes me go, "Ugh, whatever," when I encounter them in real life.
Noelie Wrote:Wow, Maggers... you hit the nail right on the head. She's the kind of woman who makes me go, "Ugh, whatever," when I encounter them in real life.
When I think of the kind of woman Jack seems like he should be with, I always think of someone a little more gritty, a little less perfect, a lot more ballsy, and a lot less of a quivering lower lip, "Oh Jack, what should I do?" dumbass.
webby Wrote:No! Without Gia and Vicky, Repairman Jack would be about the same as Jack Reacher in the novels by Lee Child. Reacher is interesting but he comes off as way too cold and selfish.I like Jack Reacher, but he does have no center -- and that is what Gia provides for Repairman Jack. But yeah, she doesn't have to be so "nice" -- which is sort of what leads me to believe she will get killed off one day. Name a famous "lone hero" type character who keeps his main squeeze through ten novels (except Spenser).
Scott Miller Wrote:I must admit to a bit of surprise at the dislike of Gia simply because we see her through Jack's eyes. We see her as he does and he can't find fault with her. I've never found her to be stupid or anything other that an ideal partner for Jack. In fact, FPW writes her like how I describe my wife. I'm sure she farts and has all the typical concerns that go with being a woman, but her description is painted through the rose-colored glasses on the end of Jack's nose.
Scott Miller Wrote:I must admit to a bit of surprise at the dislike of Gia simply because we see her through Jack's eyes. We see her as he does and he can't find fault with her. I've never found her to be stupid or anything other that an ideal partner for Jack. In fact, FPW writes her like how I describe my wife. I'm sure she farts and has all the typical concerns that go with being a woman, but her description is painted through the rose-colored glasses on the end of Jack's nose.
cobalt79 Wrote:I must say, I agree.....Gia must stay....but....could FPW give her some brains. Let's see Gia help Jack with a fix, take the initiative or as Magger's said....fart. Make her human and we might like her more.
But now that she has suffered after the car accident, I hope she rages at the Ally and the Otherness. If she sits in a corner and mopes about......I sure as hell will like her even less.
Why does Jack keep her around? I've said it before....Love is blind....our hero is in love.
Noelie Wrote:And as far as me seeing her as stupid, well... that mostly has to do with the things that she has seen and experienced that should have scared the shit out of her and made her not quite so... I'm not sure how to describe it. Happy go lucky isn't right, but it's close to what I mean. Someone mentioned something in another thread about how all the bad things haven't touched her, but to me, stuff like that should leave a mark.
Maggers Wrote:She's just not real enough for me, just too one-sided. Sorry, rose colored glasses or no, she is not three dimensional, IMO.
Scott Miller Wrote:That is the best argument yet(she is not my favorite either), it is the hatred of her I find alarming. I think it is one of the pitfalls of writing a series, characters who weren't meant to be around for such a long time suddenly need to be fleshed out. And I think that FPW has taken such pains to make each book work on its own so that any new readers won't be completely at sea that we are forced to be introduced her in each book even though she is forever on the periphery in the books.