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Mary V. O’Hare Jill Taylor from Home Improvement.
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Mary V. O’HareJill Taylor from Home Improvement Vonnegut visits Bernard V. O’Hare 20 years after the conclusion of WWII. This makes him about forty. Jill Taylor has children in their teens, so she is approximately the right age. Mary O’Hare clearly loves her husband and family enough to care about his meeting with Vonnegut; however, much like Jill Taylor, she only lets her husband stray so far before she reigns him in and shows him the logic behind his plans. This is why she finally speaks to Vonnegut about his intentions in writing a war novel. Mary remarks, “You were just babies in the war – like the ones upstairs!” (18) Her words not only remind her husband of reality, but also remind him of the true victims of war, the young soldiers.
Mary V. O’HareJill Taylor from Home Improvement Vonnegut visits Bernard V. O’Hare 20 years after the conclusion of WWII. This makes him about forty. Jill Taylor has children in their teens, so she is approximately the right age. Mary O’Hare clearly loves her husband and family enough to care about his meeting with Vonnegut; however, much like Jill Taylor, she only lets her husband stray so far before she reigns him in and shows him the logic behind his plans. This is why she finally speaks to Vonnegut about his intentions in writing a war novel. Mary remarks, “You were just babies in the war – like the ones upstairs!” (18) Her words not only remind her husband of reality, but also remind him of the true victims of war, the young soldiers.
Mary V. O’HareJill Taylor from Home Improvement Vonnegut visits Bernard V. O’Hare 20 years after the conclusion of WWII. This makes him about forty. Jill Taylor has children in their teens, so she is approximately the right age. Mary O’Hare clearly loves her husband and family enough to care about O’Hare’s meeting with Vonnegut; however, much like Jill Taylor, she only lets her husband stray so far before she reigns him in and shows him the error behind his plans. This is why she finally speaks to Vonnegut about his intentions in writing a war novel. Mary remarks, “You were just babies in the war – like the ones upstairs!” (18) Her words not only remind her husband of reality, but also remind him of the true victims of war, the young soldiers.
Mary V. O’HareJill Taylor from Home Improvement Vonnegut visits Bernard V. O’Hare 20 years after the conclusion of WWII. This makes him about forty. Jill Taylor has children in their teens, so she is approximately the right age. Mary O’Hare clearly loves her husband and family enough to care about his meeting with Vonnegut; however, much like Jill Taylor, she only lets her husband stray so far before she reigns him in and shows him the logic behind his plans. This is why she finally speaks to Vonnegut about his intentions in writing a war novel. Mary remarks, “You were just babies in the war – like the ones upstairs!” (18) Her words not only remind her husband of reality, but also remind him of the true victims of war, the young soldiers.