wdg3rd Wrote:I have to assume you never spent any time in military service. Very few "tough guys" actually spend time in the military -- there's a weeding process even when they're drafting folks. No sniper I ever met was a "tough guy". Don't believe the crap in the movies and the recruiting adverts, bigtime crock of shit.
Most of what I know of my father's service record I learned from an FoIA request after he was dead (only a few years back, maybe 15 or so). It was "friendly fire" on that Korean hilltop that crippled him 2+ years before I was born. A US mortar shell that killed most of his squad.
Admittedly, I had little to do with my father -- my mother divorced him when I was 8 (that's when the random drunken beatings stopped), the next and last time I met him was when I hitched from Travis AFB down to San Diego when I was 20, we had nothing in common except our name (he was Jr., I'm III), our blood type and a tendency to self-inflict liver damage. He had a whole dozen books in his apt, all crappy best-seller crap, in my barracks room up at Travis I had a couple thousand SF novels.
I assume that means you close your bedroom door when you ... (sorry, I was about to get personal).
I never got a thrill from keeping a secret. Not that I compulsively tell people stuff -- the IRS and other FedGoof groups will have to use the traditional methods they inherited from the Inquisition to get me to "volunteer" information. Most of what I divulge under duress will be the best lies I can think of. Most of my "secrets" are stuff that I'm ashamed of. And a couple that could get me a boyfriend named Bubba in a small cage. Those are overlapping sets. I was well into nominal adulthood before I found the Zero Aggression Principle.
As interesting as your post is, I don't think it really says much about the book.
To me the entire appeal of Repairman Jack is his under-the-radar way of working. The fact that he came from a normal family and kept his real agenda secret from his closest relatives and had as little to do with them as possible was one of the most interesting things about the character.
I thought Jack's father's reaction to what Jack did to his wife's killer was good, but it got a little hard to swallow when he got all tooled up and went off to battle the swamp guys.
I think it was the beginning of a trend in the Repairman Jack books that I didnt really like so much. As each memeber of Jack's family turned up and found out his secret, a little bit of his myth disppeared.