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Jack Jr.

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Jack Jardine Jr. — Character Overview

Background

  • Jack Jr. is Jack Jardine's eighteen-year-old son
  • He is described as a six-foot tall, gangly, red-headed teenager
  • He has grown up in the wealthy, predominantly white bubble of Arroyo Blanco, surrounded by his father's openly racist views and the prejudices of the neighbourhood
  • Throughout the novel, Cándido mistakenly believes Jack Jr. to be Delaney's son — a detail that quietly links the two families and highlights how all the wealthy white men of Arroyo Blanco look the same to someone on the outside

Personality

  • Jack Jr. is aggressive, cruel, and completely unapologetic about his hatred of immigrants
  • Unlike his father, who at least tries to dress his racism up in legal and economic language, Jack Jr. makes no such effort — his hatred is open, physical, and violent
  • He holds the same views as his father, but taken further and acted upon more violently
  • He tells racist and misogynistic jokes about Mexican women within earshot of other people, showing no awareness or shame
  • He is also manipulative and cunning in a specific way — he vandalises the wall himself but does so knowing that immigrants will automatically be blamed for it

Actions in the Novel

  • Jack Jr. and an unnamed friend destroy Cándido and América's camp in the canyon and graffiti it with the words "Beaners Die"
  • They do this even after noticing that a woman lives at the camp — showing complete indifference to América's vulnerability
  • After overhearing Delaney's conversation about the hit-and-run accident at the community meeting, Jack Jr. asks Delaney where the Mexican has set up camp — and then goes and destroys it the very next day
  • He is also responsible for spray painting the wall surrounding Arroyo Blanco, presumably to stoke further tension between the community and the immigrants he knows will be blamed for it
  • Only Delaney ever finds out the truth — and he deliberately destroys the evidence to hide it

Role in the Novel

  • Jack Jr. is the novel's clearest representation of violent, anti-immigrant sentiment
  • He shows what happens when the prejudices of the adult world — his father's casual racism, the neighbourhood's fear of outsiders — are absorbed by a young person with no restraint or moral filter
  • He is essentially his father without the polished, professional outer layer
  • There is also a pointed irony in his role as the true graffiti vandal:
    • The entire neighbourhood is convinced that immigrants are behind the vandalism
    • In reality, it is the son of their own HOA president — a wealthy white teenager — who is causing the damage and letting others take the blame
  • Delaney initially finds Jack Jr.'s actions revolting — yet by the end of the novel, Delaney's own actions are not so different, as he ends up hunting Cándido with a gun and destroying the small home the Rincóns had built

Symbolism

  • Jack Jr. represents the next generation of prejudice — showing that without challenge or change, hatred simply gets passed down and grows more extreme
  • He also shows how the system protects its own: Delaney, who knows the truth about the graffiti, hides the evidence rather than expose the son of a neighbour and friend
  • Delaney even worries at one point that his own stepson Jordan will grow up to be just like Jack Jr. — a fear that says as much about the environment they all live in as it does about the individual