Still Under Oath
Frank Castle, Mack Bolan, war memory, duty, and the argument that the oath does not simply vanish when the uniform comes off.
Still Under Oath: Frank Castle, The Punisher
Status: NonfictionNot a comic critique. A hard look at oath, war, doctrine, and the soldier behind the vigilante myth.
This nonfiction work uses Frank Castle and Mack Bolan as more than pop-culture figures. It treats them as veterans shaped by Vietnam, by military law, by duty, and by the silence that follows men home after combat.
Through a personal lens rooted in the author’s father’s war, the book examines why the easy label of vigilante may not be enough. It is sharp, argumentative, and personal: part cultural reading, part legal and historical argument, part reckoning with inherited war.
About This Book
Still Under Oath is an author-driven nonfiction study of Frank Castle, Mack Bolan, duty, violence, memory, and military obligation. The supplied manuscript frames the book as a search to understand a father’s Vietnam War experience and the fictional soldiers the author used as a map for that understanding.
The page keeps the argument at marketing distance: serious, culturally aware, and direct without turning the book into a slogan.
What It Examines
- The myth of the vigilante and the truth of the soldier.
- Frank Castle and Mack Bolan as oath-bound combat veterans in a failed system.
- Vietnam, silence, scars, and the long afterlife of war inside a family.
- Military doctrine, lawful authority, and the language used to judge men trained for war.
- The difference between revenge fantasy and a disciplined, mission-shaped code.
For Readers Who Want
- Nonfiction that takes Frank Castle and Mack Bolan seriously without sanding off the violence or moral pressure.
- A personal argument about soldiers, duty, and what war leaves behind.
- A culturally aware reading of The Punisher rooted in military memory rather than corporate mythology.
- Sharp, plainspoken prose that does not ask the subject to become comfortable.