Canis said:
It's about the ability to dislike something that someone else likes without being told you're wrong and/or missing the point.
Except that your posts indicate that you continually miss the point.
Yup, Nope, and Yup. In that order. Some of the Corleones were indeed, mere thugs. Others (Vito, Michael) had a strong sense of morality and a code of behavior. It differed from that of the society around them, but they did have one. And they tried to do what was right for their family/their people, even if it involved murder, etc. It doesn't make them right, or just, but it does make them something other than mere thugs. But again, beside the point. I guess I'm just feeling argumentative today.
No, not beside the point. The Corleones "protect their family", but the point of protecting their family is to allow them to engage in the greedy pursuit of illegal money. Dress it up all you want, but they still remain murderous thuigs willing to kill for nothing more than profit.
I've read about hundreds of protagonists thrust into roles they didn't want. Just to pull out one rather famous example: Frodo. He wasn't exactly tickled pink about what he had to do.
Not a good example: Frodo explicitly asked for the responsibility, voluntarily accepting his role as ring-bearer. He had a choice in the matter, he could have deferred the task to someone else.
No. Not at all. I would probably curl up into the fetal position and cry like a kid with a soiled diaper. Right after I soiled myself. To use my previous and more appropriate example, Frodo was distinctly un-cheerful. But he soldiered on.
Soldiered on with a task he asked to undertake. Or have you forgotten the events of the Council of Elrond?
So, if I'm ever going to sell my autobiography to fans of the Covenant books, I'd better start kicking orphans because of how unfair it is that I inherited a big fat chunk of debt. And I'd better start beating my fiancee to rail against the responsibilities I've had dropped on me at the lab since two grad students unexpectedly quit. And I really need to work on vocalizing my self-pity. I don't particularly like my burdens, either, and I wish they would go away (if nothing else, it would leave me a lot more time to game), but I deal with them. I don't feel any need to read about someone who can't even live up to my meagre level (within the context of our respective worlds and responsibilities, fantasy is, after all, life writ large).
No, you accept those responsibilities because you have something to gain from them: continued employment helps you support yourself and your fiancee for example. They are responsibilities thrust upon you that result in something redounding to your ultimate benefit. Covenant is in a position where he is being asked to save a world he doesn't believe exists, for no reason other than he is supposed to. Responsibility not only without reward or recompense, but also without a point (from his perspective).
You keep saying that we miss the point. No. We got the point. He never wanted his responsibilities. Been done. Most heroes don't want their responsibilities. Heck, not even Superman wants his responsibilities. But he goes above and beyond them.
No, Superman does want his responsibilities, he voluntarily shoulders them. There is no requirement that he do so, he does it because he wants to.
Most modern fictional heroes want their responsibilities, or at least voluntarily assume them. Covenant doesn't want them, and never did.
But the story isn't centrally about Covenant. It is about Mhoram, Troy, Foamfollower, and so on. It is about the Bloodguard. It is about heroes, the heroes just aren't named Covenant.
Normal people at least meet them. Tom Covenant is the fantasy equivalent of a guy who sits at home watching TV all day and beats his wife when she has to stay late at work because it means his dinner is late. Assuming Covenant does save the world at the end, perhaps my little metaphor does run into the burning trailer to save his beer and grabs one of his kids while he's at it, but he probably beats his wife when she gets home for leaving the coffee pot on when she left that morning.
And not having read the books, you demonstrate here that you did , indeed, miss the point.