why ever not???
i don't think Irving meant to say John Wheelwright is a non-practicising homosexual.. that's what some of his aquaintances think, but he thinks it's crap.
why shouldn't he remain a virgin? does there have to be any significance to it?
ok, i admit it's unusual for a man in RL to remain a virgin...
let me put it the other way round: if Wheelwright were to lose his virginity in one way or the other (e.g. get married or stay single but have casual sexual encounters or hire a prostitute or all of them), would you ask "what's the significance of that"?
i think most of Irvings characters are a quirky mix of realistic and unusual.. so maybe that's all there is to it.. I mean John Wheelwright is rather boring in some ways.. it's not him who's special but his friend Owen. John functions as a narrator of Owens life and his own life was clearly affected by Owens... but if there's anything special/unusual about him, that's because he knew Owen, not because of himself...
hehehe, no offence, I'm not trying to argue with you...
maybe I'll be able to make a more coherent contribution when I've finished re-reading the book
