I read somewhere that Jack was an example of what happens when showed yourself in that time they became him as a lesson of that are the limits of the homophobia unfortunately i'm of the belief that he may have been killed the more i investigate the more i realize, but i don't know why some people thinks this look at this thread in annieproulxs forum
copied from
www.annieproulxs.comPlease answer my questions, they have been keeping me up at night.
a) How did Ennis know it had been the "tire iron"?
shamir wrote:
b) Did Lureen know her husband had been murdered?
Ennis was only guessing that Jack's "accident was done with THE " tire iron " since he had tire-iron phobia about being found out that he "queer" like "Earl" of the ranching couple, Earl and Roy, who was murdered. Ennis had been afraid of being murdered with a tire iron since he was a boy.
I and probably a million other people, who apparently aren't participating in this forum, believe that Jack was not "DECEASED" at all. And that was because in the story, there was never any proof that Jack was actually dead.
Since Ennis had that constant fear of the "tire iron," I think that Jack used a phony story about changing of a truck tire ON A BACK ROAD to make Ennis think he was dead. And, since a tire iron must be used to change tires, it made sense to Ennis that Jack was murdered with one.
shamir wrote:
c) How was Jack's homosexuality discovered?
Oh, in the short story, the only one who discovers that Jack Twist likes to have sex with guys is Ennis Del Mar. While Ennis's ex-wife, Alama, calls Jack Twist "Jack Nasty," she is probably just assuming that Jack and Ennis were doing the "nasty" with other women since they certainly never actually went trout fishing on their 'fishing trips."
Nobody else ever makes a statement to imply that Jack is a homosexual.
shamir wrote:
d) Who was this ranch buddy Jack's father talks about Jack wanting to bring home to help with the ranch? A boyfriend?
Actually, the Texas rancher friend of Jack is never mentioned. He has no name in the book. And, I think that the "this spring" in the words of John C. Twist, refers to the spring which is either yet to come or Ennis is at the Twist homestead in the Spring of 1984.
shamir wrote:
Did Jack give up on Ennis?
Thank you
Yes, according to the way that I read the short story, sometime after May 1983, after they had gone their separate ways, Jack decided to "Let be, let be."
In making that decision, since Ennis would never give in and spend the rest of his life with Jack, he decided that he needed to get on with his life without Ennis.
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to me what doesn't make sense there was the mother and the dad way of acting jack was dead but well people think what they want. what do you think about this thoughts?