Bold characters mine.As for the content, this is a deeply political book without once mentioning politics, as most readers would understand it.
It implies not so much the regret for lost values that other reviewers have noted and which may be obvious in the text (but which it is arguable provided a mere interlude of integrity between the normal condition of self-centred violence in the American West) but a gentle questioning of patriotism when your country has drifted far away from your own ideals and understanding, when you don't know what you are fighting for (and putting ourself at risk for) any more, when it asks too much and gives so little in return.
The American working man's experiences in America's wars overseas is a running theme 'sotto voce', underpinning the account of one incident in what is really a civil war in all but name, one in which government agents and drug runners seem to be fighting over who actually represents the will of the American people.
Review by Tim Pendrics.
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1249 ... or_Old_Men
Do you think there is a political message in No Country?