Humor as a major theme? Jacko as a comedian?
- Ferdinand_Otieno
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Humor as a major theme? Jacko as a comedian?
What humor in this book made you laugh the hardest and which character said it.
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The humor is actually what makes me look forward to reading more of this book. I don't read much historical or war-based. I appreciate the humor--I think it makes the characters more realistic as some use it as a defense or coping mechanism.
- dhomespot
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Yes, I do believe it does. I hardly see historical fictions with this kind of wit and humor, so it's a first one. And would gladly recommend it to historical fiction writers because it does make the book less heavy to read.Ruba Abu Ali wrote: ↑03 Feb 2019, 01:11 Inserting humor into the context of historical fiction adds a light heart and wit to the prose and helps you get through it smoothly. Same applies to a real-life setting.
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I know right? He refused to call him anything else. The nickname also grew on me as the book progressed.
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A little correction: the statement you mention was actually made by Jamie, not Jacko. Nonetheless, Jacko was definitely the comic relief in the book. One instance that comes to mind is after he teaches Jamie to hoot. Jamie hoots so well an owl in the distance answers him. Jacko then says, “See, Cap? You’ve got it. You’ve even attracted a sexy young lady owl who-oo is desperate to meet you.”
You just gotta love Jacko.