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Wikipedia

Kurt Vonnegut

Kurt Vonnegut (/ˈvɒnəɡət/ VON-ə-gət; November 11, 1922 – April 11, 2007) was an American writer and humorist known for his satirical and darkly humorous novels.[1] He published 14 novels, three short-story collections, five plays, and five nonfiction works over fifty-plus years; further collections have been published since his death.

Kurt Vonnegut
Vonnegut in 1965
BornKurt Vonnegut Jr.
(1922-11-11)November 11, 1922
Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
DiedApril 11, 2007(2007-04-11) (aged 84)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationAuthor
Education
Genre
Literary movementPostmodernism
Years active1951–2007
Notable worksSlaughterhouse-Five
Spouse
  • Jane Marie Cox
    (m. 1945; div. 1971)
  • (m. 1979)
Children
Signature

Born and raised in Indianapolis, Vonnegut attended Cornell University, but withdrew in January 1943 and enlisted in the U.S. Army. As part of his training, he studied mechanical engineering at Carnegie Institute of Technology and the University of Tennessee. He was then deployed to Europe to fight in World War II and was captured by the Germans during the Battle of the Bulge. He was interned in Dresden, where he survived the Allied bombing of the city in a meat locker of the slaughterhouse where he was imprisoned. After the war, he married Jane Marie Cox. He and his wife both attended the University of Chicago while he worked as a night reporter for the City News Bureau.

Vonnegut published his first novel, Player Piano, in 1952. It received positive reviews yet sold poorly. In the nearly 20 years that followed, he published several well regarded novels including two—The Sirens of Titan (1959) and Cat's Cradle (1963)—that were nominated for the Hugo Award for best science fiction or fantasy novel of the year. He published a short-story collection, Welcome to the Monkey House, in 1968.

Vonnegut's breakthrough was his commercially and critically successful sixth novel, Slaughterhouse-Five (1969). Its anti-war sentiment resonated with its readers amid the Vietnam War, and its reviews were generally positive. It rose to the top of The New York Times Best Seller list and made Vonnegut famous. Later in his career, Vonnegut published autobiographical essays and short-story collections such as Fates Worse Than Death (1991) and A Man Without a Country (2005). He has been hailed for his dark humor commentary on American society. His son Mark published a compilation of his unpublished works, Armageddon in Retrospect, in 2008. In 2017, Seven Stories Press published Complete Stories, a collection of Vonnegut's short fiction.

Biography edit

Family and early life edit

Vonnegut was born in Indianapolis on November 11, 1922, the youngest of three children of Kurt Vonnegut Sr. (1884–1956) and his wife Edith (1888–1944; née Lieber). His older siblings were Bernard (1914–1997) and Alice (1917–1958). He descended from a long line of German Americans whose immigrant ancestors settled in the United States in the mid-19th century; his paternal great-grandfather, Clemens Vonnegut, settled in Indianapolis and founded the Vonnegut Hardware Company. His father and grandfather Bernard were architects; the architecture firm under Kurt Sr. designed such buildings as Das Deutsche Haus (now called "The Athenæum"), the Indiana headquarters of the Bell Telephone Company, and the Fletcher Trust Building.[2] Vonnegut's mother was born into Indianapolis' Gilded Age high society, as her family, the Liebers, were among the wealthiest in the city based on a fortune deriving from a successful brewery.[3]

Both of Vonnegut's parents were fluent speakers of the German language, but pervasive anti-German sentiment during and after World War I caused them to abandon German culture, which many German Americans were told at the time was a precondition for American patriotism. Thus, they did not teach Vonnegut to speak German or introduce him to German literature, cuisine, or traditions, leaving him feeling "ignorant and rootless".[4][5] Vonnegut later credited Ida Young, his family's African-American cook and housekeeper during the first decade of his life, for raising him and giving him values; he said, "she gave me decent moral instruction and was exceedingly nice to me", and "was as great an influence on me as anybody". He described her as "humane and wise" and added that "the compassionate, forgiving aspects of [his] beliefs" came from her.[6]

The financial security and social prosperity that the Vonneguts had once enjoyed were destroyed in a matter of years. The Liebers' brewery closed down in 1921 after the advent of prohibition. When the Great Depression hit, few people could afford to build, causing clients at Kurt Sr.'s architectural firm to become scarce.[7] Vonnegut's brother and sister had finished their primary and secondary educations in private schools, but Vonnegut was placed in a public school called Public School No. 43 (now the James Whitcomb Riley School).[8] He was bothered by the Great Depression,[a] and both his parents were affected deeply by their economic misfortune. His father withdrew from normal life and became what Vonnegut called a "dreamy artist".[10] His mother became depressed, withdrawn, bitter, and abusive. She labored to regain the family's wealth and status, and Vonnegut said that she expressed hatred for her husband that was "as corrosive as hydrochloric acid".[11] She often tried in vain to sell short stories she had written to Collier's, The Saturday Evening Post, and other magazines.[4]

High school and Cornell University edit

 
Vonnegut as a teenager, from the Shortridge High School 1940 yearbook

Vonnegut enrolled at Shortridge High School in Indianapolis in 1936. While there, he played clarinet in the school band and became a co-editor (along with Madelyn Pugh) for the Tuesday edition of the school newspaper, The Shortridge Echo. Vonnegut said that his tenure with the Echo allowed him to write for a large audience—his fellow students—rather than for a teacher, an experience, he said, was "fun and easy".[2] "It just turned out that I could write better than a lot of other people", Vonnegut observed. "Each person has something he can do easily and can't imagine why everybody else has so much trouble doing it."[8]

After graduating from Shortridge in 1940, Vonnegut enrolled at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. He wanted to study the humanities and had aspirations of becoming an architect like his father, but his father[b] and brother Bernard, an atmospheric scientist, urged him to study a "useful" discipline.[2] As a result, Vonnegut majored in biochemistry, but he had little proficiency in the area and was indifferent towards his studies.[13] As his father had been a member at MIT,[14] Vonnegut was entitled to join the Delta Upsilon fraternity, and did.[15] He overcame stiff competition for a place at the university's independent newspaper, The Cornell Daily Sun, first serving as a staff writer, then as an editor.[16][17] By the end of his first year, he was writing a column titled "Innocents Abroad", which reused jokes from other publications. He later penned a piece "Well All Right" focusing on pacifism, a cause he strongly supported,[8] arguing against US intervention in World War II.[18]

World War II edit

 
Vonnegut in army uniform during World War II

The attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into WWII. Vonnegut was a member of Reserve Officers' Training Corps, but poor grades and a satirical article in Cornell's newspaper cost him his place there. He was placed on academic probation in May 1942 and dropped out the following January. No longer eligible for a deferment as a member of ROTC, he faced likely conscription into the U.S. Army. Instead of waiting to be drafted, he enlisted in the Army and in March 1943 reported to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, for basic training.[19] Vonnegut was trained to fire and maintain howitzers and later received instruction in mechanical engineering at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and the University of Tennessee as part of the Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP).[12]

In early 1944, the ASTP was canceled due to the Army's need for soldiers to support the D-Day invasion, and Vonnegut was ordered to an infantry battalion at Camp Atterbury, south of Indianapolis in Edinburgh, Indiana, where he trained as a scout.[20] He lived so close to his home that he was "able to sleep in [his] own bedroom and use the family car on weekends".[21]

On May 14, 1944, Vonnegut returned home on leave for Mother's Day weekend to discover that his mother had committed suicide the previous night by overdosing on sleeping pills.[22] Possible factors that contributed to Edith Vonnegut's suicide include the family's loss of wealth and status, Vonnegut's forthcoming deployment overseas, and her own lack of success as a writer. She was inebriated at the time and under the influence of prescription drugs.[22]

Three months after his mother's suicide, Vonnegut was sent to Europe as an intelligence scout with the 106th Infantry Division. In December 1944, he fought in the Battle of the Bulge, one of the last German offensives of the war.[22] On December 22, Vonnegut was captured with about 50 other American soldiers.[23] Vonnegut was taken by boxcar to a prison camp south of Dresden, in the German province of Saxony. During the journey, the Royal Air Force mistakenly attacked the trains carrying Vonnegut and his fellow prisoners of war, killing about 150 of them.[24] Vonnegut was sent to Dresden, the "first fancy city [he had] ever seen". He lived in a slaughterhouse when he got to the city, and worked in a factory that made malt syrup for pregnant women. Vonnegut recalled the sirens going off whenever another city was bombed. The Germans did not expect Dresden to be bombed, Vonnegut said. "There were very few air-raid shelters in town and no war industries, just cigarette factories, hospitals, clarinet factories."[25]

 
Dresden in 1945. More than 90% of the city's center was destroyed.

On February 13, 1945, Dresden became the target of Allied forces. In the hours and days that followed, the Allies engaged in a firebombing of the city.[22] The offensive subsided on February 15, with about 25,000 civilians killed in the bombing. Vonnegut marveled at the level of both the destruction in Dresden and the secrecy that attended it. He had survived by taking refuge in a meat locker three stories underground.[8] "It was cool there, with cadavers hanging all around", Vonnegut said. "When we came up the city was gone ... They burnt the whole damn town down."[25] Vonnegut and other American prisoners were put to work immediately after the bombing, excavating bodies from the rubble.[26] He described the activity as a "terribly elaborate Easter-egg hunt".[25]

The American POWs were evacuated on foot to the border of Saxony and Czechoslovakia after U.S. General George S. Patton's 3rd Army captured Leipzig. With the captives abandoned by their guards, Vonnegut reached a prisoner-of-war repatriation camp in Le Havre, France, in May 1945, with the aid of the Soviets.[24] Sent back to the United States, he was stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas, typing discharge papers for other soldiers.[27] Soon after he was awarded a Purple Heart, about which he remarked: "I myself was awarded my country's second-lowest decoration, a Purple Heart for frost-bite."[28] He was discharged from the U.S. Army and returned to Indianapolis.[29]

Marriage, University of Chicago, and early employment edit

After he returned to the United States, 22-year-old Vonnegut married Jane Marie Cox, his high-school girlfriend and classmate since kindergarten, on September 1, 1945. The pair moved to Chicago; there, Vonnegut enrolled in the University of Chicago on the G.I. Bill, as an anthropology student in an unusual five-year joint undergraduate/graduate program that conferred a master's degree. There, he studied under anthropologist Robert Redfield, his "most famous professor".[30] He also worked as a reporter for the City News Bureau of Chicago.[31][32]

Jane, who had graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Swarthmore,[33] accepted a scholarship from the university to study Russian literature as a graduate student. Jane dropped out of the program after becoming pregnant with the couple's first child, Mark (born May 1947), while Kurt also left the university without any degree (despite having completed his undergraduate education). Vonnegut failed to write a dissertation, as his ideas had all been rejected.[25] One abandoned topic was about the Ghost Dance and Cubist movements.[34][35][36] A later topic, rejected "unanimously", had to do with the shapes of stories.[37][38][39] Vonnegut received his graduate degree in anthropology 25 years after he left, when the university accepted his novel Cat's Cradle in lieu of his master's thesis.[40]

Shortly thereafter, General Electric (GE) hired Vonnegut as a technical writer, then publicist,[41] for the company's Schenectady, New York, News Bureau, a publicity department that operated like a newsroom.[42] His brother Bernard had worked at GE since 1945, focusing mainly on a silver-iodide-based cloud seeding project that quickly became a joint GE-U.S. Army Signal Corps program, Project Cirrus. In The Brothers Vonnegut, Ginger Strand draws connections between many real events at General Electric, including Bernard's work, and Vonnegut's early stories, which were regularly being rejected everywhere he sent them.[43] Throughout this period, Jane Vonnegut encouraged him, editing his stories, strategizing about submissions and buoying his spirits.[44]

In 1949, Kurt and Jane had a daughter named Edith. Still working for GE, Vonnegut had his first piece, titled "Report on the Barnhouse Effect", published in the February 11, 1950, issue of Collier's, for which he received $750.[45] The story concerned a scientist who fears that his invention will be used as a weapon, much as Bernard was fearing at the time about his cloudseeding work.[46] Vonnegut wrote another story, after being coached by the fiction editor at Collier's, Knox Burger, and again sold it to the magazine, this time for $950. While Burger supported Vonnegut's writing, he was shocked when Vonnegut quit GE as of January 1, 1951, later stating: "I never said he should give up his job and devote himself to fiction. I don't trust the freelancer's life, it's tough."[47] Nevertheless, in early 1951 Vonnegut moved with his family to Cape Cod, Massachusetts, to write full time, leaving GE behind.[48] He initially moved to Osterville, but he ended up purchasing a home in Barnstable.[49]

First novel edit

In 1952, Vonnegut's first novel, Player Piano, was published by Scribner's. The novel has a post-Third World War setting, in which factory workers have been replaced by machines.[50] Player Piano draws upon Vonnegut's experience as an employee at GE. The novel is set at a General Electric-like company and includes many scenes based on things Vonnegut saw there.[51] He satirizes the drive to climb the corporate ladder, one that in Player Piano is rapidly disappearing as automation increases, putting even executives out of work. His central character, Paul Proteus, has an ambitious wife, a backstabbing assistant, and a feeling of empathy for the poor. Sent by his boss, Kroner, as a double agent among the poor (who have all the material goods they want, but little sense of purpose), he leads them in a machine-smashing, museum-burning revolution.[52] Player Piano expresses Vonnegut's opposition to McCarthyism, something made clear when the Ghost Shirts, the revolutionary organization Paul penetrates and eventually leads, is referred to by one character as "fellow travelers".[53]

In Player Piano, Vonnegut originates many of the techniques he would use in his later works. The comic, heavy-drinking Shah of Bratpuhr, an outsider to this dystopian corporate United States, is able to ask many questions that an insider would not think to ask, or would cause offense by doing so. For example, when taken to see the artificially intelligent supercomputer EPICAC, the Shah asks it "what are people for?" and receives no answer. Speaking for Vonnegut, he dismisses it as a "false god". This type of alien visitor would recur throughout Vonnegut's literature.[52]

The New York Times writer and critic Granville Hicks gave Player Piano a positive review, favorably comparing it to Aldous Huxley's Brave New World. Hicks called Vonnegut a "sharp-eyed satirist". None of the reviewers considered the novel particularly important. Several editions were printed—one by Bantam with the title Utopia 14, and another by the Doubleday Science Fiction Book Club—whereby Vonnegut gained the repute of a science fiction writer, a genre held in disdain by writers at that time. He defended the genre and deplored a perceived sentiment that "no one can simultaneously be a respectable writer and understand how a refrigerator works".[50]

Struggling writer edit

 
Vonnegut with his wife Jane and children (from left to right): Mark, Edith and Nanette, in 1955

After Player Piano, Vonnegut continued to sell short stories to various magazines. Contracted to produce a second novel (which eventually became Cat's Cradle), he struggled to complete it, and the work languished for years. In 1954, the couple had a third child, Nanette. With a growing family and no financially successful novels yet, Vonnegut's short stories helped to sustain the family, though he frequently needed to find additional sources of income as well. In 1957, he and a partner opened a Saab automobile dealership on Cape Cod, but it went bankrupt by the end of the year.[54]

In 1958, his sister, Alice, died of cancer two days after her husband, James Carmalt Adams, was killed in a train accident. The Vonneguts took in three of the Adams' young sons—James, Steven, and Kurt, aged 14, 11, and 9, respectively.[55] A fourth Adams son, Peter (2), also stayed with the Vonneguts for about a year before being given to the care of a paternal relative in Georgia.[56]

Grappling with family challenges, Vonnegut continued to write, publishing novels vastly dissimilar in terms of plot. The Sirens of Titan (1959) features a Martian invasion of Earth, as experienced by a bored billionaire Malachi Constant. He meets Winston Niles Rumfoord, an aristocratic space traveler, who is virtually omniscient but stuck in a time warp that causes him to appear on Earth every 59 days. The billionaire learns that his actions and the events of all of history are determined by a race of robotic aliens from the planet Tralfamadore, who need a replacement part that can only be produced by an advanced civilization in order to repair their spaceship and return home—human history has been manipulated to produce it. Some human structures, such as the Kremlin, are coded signals from the aliens to their ship as to how long it may expect to wait for the repair to take place. Reviewers were uncertain what to think of the book, with one comparing it to Offenbach's opera The Tales of Hoffmann.[57]

Rumfoord, who is based on Franklin D. Roosevelt, also physically resembles the former president. Rumfoord is described this way: he "put a cigarette in a long, bone cigarette holder, lighted it. He thrust out his jaw. The cigarette holder pointed straight up."[58] William Rodney Allen, in his guide to Vonnegut's works, stated that Rumfoord foreshadowed the fictional political figures who would play major roles in God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater and Jailbird.[59]

Mother Night, published in 1961, received little attention at the time of its publication. Howard W. Campbell Jr., Vonnegut's protagonist, is an American who is raised in Germany from age 11 and joins the Nazi party during the war as a double agent for the US Office of Strategic Services, rising to the regime's highest ranks as a radio propagandist. After the war, the spy agency refuses to clear his name, and he is eventually imprisoned by the Israelis in the same cell block as Adolf Eichmann. Vonnegut wrote in a foreword to a later edition: "we are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be".[60] Literary critic Lawrence Berkove considered the novel, like Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, to illustrate the tendency for "impersonators to get carried away by their impersonations, to become what they impersonate and therefore to live in a world of illusion".[61]

Also published in 1961 was Vonnegut's short story "Harrison Bergeron", set in a dystopic future where all are equal, even if that means disfiguring beautiful people and forcing the strong or intelligent to wear devices that negate their advantages. Fourteen-year-old Harrison is a genius and athlete forced to wear record-level "handicaps" and imprisoned for attempting to overthrow the government. He escapes to a television studio, tears away his handicaps, and frees a ballerina from her lead weights. As they dance, they are killed by the Handicapper General, Diana Moon Glampers.[62] Vonnegut, in a later letter, suggested that "Harrison Bergeron" might have sprung from his envy and self-pity as a high-school misfit. In his 1976 biography of Vonnegut, Stanley Schatt suggested that the short story shows "in any leveling process, what really is lost, according to Vonnegut, is beauty, grace, and wisdom".[63] Darryl Hattenhauer, in his 1998 journal article on "Harrison Bergeron", theorized that the story was a satire on American Cold War understandings of communism and socialism.[63]

With Cat's Cradle (1963), Allen wrote, "Vonnegut hit full stride for the first time".[64] The narrator, John, intends to write of Dr. Felix Hoenikker, one of the fictional fathers of the atomic bomb, seeking to cover the scientist's human side. Hoenikker, in addition to the bomb, has developed another threat to mankind, "ice-nine", solid water stable at room temperature, but more dense than liquid water. If a particle of ice-nine is dropped in water, all of the surrounding water becomes ice-nine. Felix Hoenikker is based on Bernard Vonnegut's boss at the GE Research Lab, Irving Langmuir, and the way ice-nine is described in the novel is reminiscent of how Bernard Vonnegut explained his own invention, silver-iodide cloudseeding, to Kurt.[65] Much of the second half of the book is spent on the fictional Caribbean island of San Lorenzo, where John explores a religion called Bokononism, whose holy books (excerpts from which are quoted) give the novel the moral core science does not supply. After the oceans are converted to ice-nine, wiping out most of humankind, John wanders the frozen surface, seeking to save himself and to make sure that his story survives.[66][67]

Vonnegut based the title character of God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater (1964), on an accountant he knew on Cape Cod, who specialized in clients in trouble and often had to comfort them. Eliot Rosewater, the wealthy son of a Republican senator, seeks to atone for his wartime killing of noncombatant firefighters by serving in a volunteer fire department and by giving away money to those in trouble or need. Stress from a battle for control of his charitable foundation pushes him over the edge, and he is placed in a mental hospital. He recovers and ends the financial battle by declaring the children of his county to be his heirs.[68] Allen deemed God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater more "a cry from the heart than a novel under its author's full intellectual control", that reflected family and emotional stresses Vonnegut was going through at the time.[69]

In the mid-1960s, Vonnegut contemplated abandoning his writing career. In 1999, he wrote in The New York Times: "I had gone broke, was out of print and had a lot of kids..." But then, on the recommendation of an admirer, he received a surprise offer of a teaching job at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, employment that he likened to the rescue of a drowning man.[70]

Slaughterhouse-Five edit

 
Vonnegut in 1972

After spending almost two years at the writer's workshop at the University of Iowa, teaching one course each term, Vonnegut was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for research in Germany. By the time he won it, in March 1967, he was becoming a well-known writer. He used the funds to travel in Eastern Europe, including to Dresden, where he found many prominent buildings still in ruins.[71]

Vonnegut had been writing about his war experiences at Dresden ever since he returned from the war, but had never been able to write anything acceptable to himself or his publishers—chapter 1 of Slaughterhouse-Five tells of his difficulties.[72][73] Released in 1969, the novel rocketed Vonnegut to fame.[74] It tells of the life of Billy Pilgrim, who like Vonnegut was born in 1922 and survives the bombing of Dresden. The story is told in a non-linear fashion, with many of the story's climaxes—Billy's death in 1976, his kidnapping by aliens from the planet Tralfamadore nine years earlier, and the execution of Billy's friend Edgar Derby in the ashes of Dresden for stealing a teapot—disclosed in the story's first pages.[72] In 1970, Vonnegut was also a correspondent in Biafra during the Nigerian Civil War.[75][76]

Slaughterhouse-Five received generally positive reviews, with Michael Crichton writing in The New Republic:

he writes about the most excruciatingly painful things. His novels have attacked our deepest fears of automation and the bomb, our deepest political guilts, our fiercest hatreds and loves. No one else writes books on these subjects; they are inaccessible to normal novelists.[77]

The book went immediately to the top of The New York Times Best Seller list. Vonnegut's earlier works had appealed strongly to many college students, and the antiwar message of Slaughterhouse-Five resonated with a generation marked by the Vietnam War. He later stated that the loss of confidence in government that Vietnam caused finally allowed an honest conversation regarding events like Dresden.[74]

Later career and life edit

 
New York, 228 East 48th Street (center), Kurt Vonnegut's house from 1973 to 2007

After Slaughterhouse-Five was published, Vonnegut embraced the fame and financial security that attended its release. He was hailed as a hero of the burgeoning anti-war movement in the United States, was invited to speak at numerous rallies, and gave college commencement addresses around the country.[78] In addition to briefly teaching at Harvard University as a lecturer in creative writing in 1970, Vonnegut taught at the City College of New York as a distinguished professor during the 1973–1974 academic year.[79] He was later elected vice president of the National Institute of Arts and Letters and given honorary degrees by, among others, Indiana University and Bennington College. Vonnegut also wrote a play called Happy Birthday, Wanda June, which opened on October 7, 1970, at New York's Theatre de Lys. Receiving mixed reviews, it closed on March 14, 1971. In 1972, Universal Pictures adapted Slaughterhouse-Five into a film, which the author said was "flawless".[80]

Meanwhile, Vonnegut's personal life was disintegrating. His wife Jane had embraced Christianity, which was contrary to Vonnegut's atheistic beliefs, and with five of their six children having left home, Vonnegut said that the two were forced to find "other sorts of seemingly important work to do". The couple battled over their differing beliefs until Vonnegut moved from their Cape Cod home to New York in 1971. Vonnegut called the disagreements "painful" and said that the resulting split was a "terrible, unavoidable accident that we were ill-equipped to understand".[78] The couple divorced but remained friends until Jane's death in late 1986.[81][78] Beyond his marriage, he was deeply affected when his son Mark suffered a mental breakdown in 1972, which exacerbated Vonnegut's chronic depression and led him to take Ritalin. When he stopped taking the drug in the mid-1970s, he began to see a psychologist weekly.[80]

Requiem (ending)

When the last living thing
has died on account of us,
how poetical it would be
if Earth could say,
in a voice floating up
perhaps
from the floor
of the Grand Canyon,
"It is done."
People did not like it here.

Kurt Vonnegut,
A Man Without a Country, 2005[31]

Vonnegut's difficulties materialized in numerous ways, including the painfully slow progress made on his next novel, the darkly comical Breakfast of Champions. In 1971, he stopped writing the novel altogether.[80] When it was finally released in 1973, it was panned critically. In Thomas S. Hischak's book American Literature on Stage and Screen, Breakfast of Champions was called "funny and outlandish", but reviewers noted that it "lacks substance and seems to be an exercise in literary playfulness".[82] Vonnegut's 1976 novel Slapstick, which meditates on the relationship between him and his sister (Alice), met a similar fate. In The New York Times's review of Slapstick, Christopher Lehmann-Haupt said that Vonnegut "seems to be putting less effort into [storytelling] than ever before" and that "it still seems as if he has given up storytelling after all".[83] At times, Vonnegut was disgruntled by the personal nature of his detractors' complaints.[80]

In 1979, Vonnegut married Jill Krementz, a photographer whom he met while she was working on a series about writers in the early 1970s. With Jill, he adopted a daughter, Lily, when the baby was three days old.[84] In subsequent years, his popularity resurged as he published several satirical books, including Jailbird (1979), Deadeye Dick (1982), Galápagos (1985), Bluebeard (1987), and Hocus Pocus (1990).[85] Although he remained a prolific writer in the 1980s, Vonnegut struggled with depression and attempted suicide in 1984.[86] Two years later, Vonnegut was seen by a younger generation when he played himself in Rodney Dangerfield's film Back to School.[87] The last of Vonnegut's fourteen novels, Timequake (1997), was, as University of Detroit history professor and Vonnegut biographer Gregory Sumner said, "a reflection of an aging man facing mortality and testimony to an embattled faith in the resilience of human awareness and agency".[85] Vonnegut's final book, a collection of essays entitled A Man Without a Country (2005), became a bestseller.[31]

Death and legacy edit

 
Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library in 2022

Vonnegut's sincerity, his willingness to scoff at received wisdom, is such that reading his work for the first time gives one the sense that everything else is rank hypocrisy. His opinion of human nature was low, and that low opinion applied to his heroes and his villains alike—he was endlessly disappointed in humanity and in himself, and he expressed that disappointment in a mixture of tar-black humor and deep despair. He could easily have become a crank, but he was too smart; he could have become a cynic, but there was something tender in his nature that he could never quite suppress; he could have become a bore, but even at his most despairing he had an endless willingness to entertain his readers: with drawings, jokes, sex, bizarre plot twists, science fiction, whatever it took.

Lev Grossman, Time, 2007[88]

In a 2006 Rolling Stone interview, Vonnegut sardonically stated that he would sue the Brown & Williamson tobacco company, the maker of the Pall Mall-branded cigarettes he had been smoking since he was around 12 or 14 years old, for false advertising: "And do you know why? Because I'm 83 years old. The lying bastards! On the package Brown & Williamson promised to kill me."[88]

Vonnegut died in Manhattan on the night of April 11, 2007, as a result of brain injuries incurred several weeks prior, from a fall at his brownstone home.[31][89] His death was reported by his wife Jill. He was 84 years old.[31] At the time of his death, he had written fourteen novels, three short-story collections, five plays, and five nonfiction books.[88] A book composed of his unpublished pieces, Armageddon in Retrospect, was compiled and posthumously published by his son Mark in 2008.[90]

When asked about the impact Vonnegut had on his work, author Josip Novakovich stated that he has "much to learn from Vonnegut—how to compress things and yet not compromise them, how to digress into history, quote from various historical accounts, and not stifle the narrative. The ease with which he writes is sheerly masterly, Mozartian."[91] Los Angeles Times columnist Gregory Rodriguez said that the author will "rightly be remembered as a darkly humorous social critic and the premier novelist of the counterculture",[92] and Dinitia Smith of The New York Times dubbed Vonnegut the "counterculture's novelist".[31]

External videos
  Tour of the Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library, December 17, 2010, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Charles Shields on And So It Goes – Kurt Vonnegut: A Life, December 17, 2011, C-SPAN

Vonnegut has inspired numerous posthumous tributes and works. In 2008, the Kurt Vonnegut Society[93] was established, and in November 2010, the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library was opened in Vonnegut's hometown of Indianapolis. The Library of America published a compendium of Vonnegut's compositions between 1963 and 1973 the following April, and another compendium of his earlier works in 2012. Late 2011 saw the release of two Vonnegut biographies: Gregory Sumner's Unstuck in Time and Charles J. Shields's And So It Goes.[94] Shields's biography of Vonnegut created some controversy. According to The Guardian, the book portrays Vonnegut as distant, cruel and nasty. "Cruel, nasty and scary are the adjectives commonly used to describe him by the friends, colleagues, and relatives Shields quotes", said The Daily Beast's Wendy Smith. "Towards the end he was very feeble, very depressed and almost morose", said Jerome Klinkowitz of the University of Northern Iowa, who has examined Vonnegut in depth.[95]

Like Mark Twain, Mr. Vonnegut used humor to tackle the basic questions of human existence: Why are we in this world? Is there a presiding figure to make sense of all this, a god who in the end, despite making people suffer, wishes them well?

Dinitia Smith, The New York Times, 2007[31]

Vonnegut's works have evoked ire on several occasions. His most prominent novel, Slaughterhouse-Five, has been objected to or removed at various institutions in at least 18 instances.[96] In the case of Island Trees School District v. Pico, the United States Supreme Court ruled that a school district's ban on Slaughterhouse-Five—which the board had called "anti-American, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic, and just plain filthy"—and eight other novels was unconstitutional. When a school board in Republic, Missouri, decided to withdraw Vonnegut's novel from its libraries, the Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library offered a free copy to all the students of the district.[96]

Tally, writing in 2013, suggests that Vonnegut has only recently become the subject of serious study rather than fan adulation, and much is yet to be written about him. "The time for scholars to say 'Here's why Vonnegut is worth reading' has definitively ended, thank goodness. We know he's worth reading. Now tell us things we don't know."[97] Todd F. Davis notes that Vonnegut's work is kept alive by his loyal readers, who have "significant influence as they continue to purchase Vonnegut's work, passing it on to subsequent generations and keeping his entire canon in print—an impressive list of more than twenty books that [Dell Publishing] has continued to refurbish and hawk with new cover designs."[98] Donald E. Morse notes that Vonnegut "is now firmly, if somewhat controversially, ensconced in the American and world literary canon as well as in high school, college and graduate curricula".[99] Tally writes of Vonnegut's work:[100]

Vonnegut's 14 novels, while each does its own thing, together are nevertheless experiments in the same overall project. Experimenting with the form of the American novel itself, Vonnegut engages in a broadly modernist attempt to apprehend and depict the fragmented, unstable, and distressing bizarreries of postmodern American experience ... That he does not actually succeed in representing the shifting multiplicities of that social experience is beside the point. What matters is the attempt, and the recognition that ... we must try to map this unstable and perilous terrain, even if we know in advance that our efforts are doomed.

The Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame inducted Vonnegut posthumously in 2015.[101][102] The asteroid 25399 Vonnegut is named in his honor.[103] A crater on the planet Mercury has also been named in his honor.[104] In 2021, the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library in Indianapolis was designated a Literary Landmark by the Literary Landmarks Association.[105] In 1986, the University of Evansville library located in Evansville, Indiana, was named after Vonnegut, where he spoke during the dedication ceremony.[106]

Views edit

The beliefs I have to defend are so soft and complicated, actually, and, when vivisected, turn into bowls of undifferentiated mush. I am a pacifist, I am an anarchist, I am a planetary citizen, and so on.[107]

— Kurt Vonnegut

War edit

In the introduction to Slaughterhouse-Five, Vonnegut recounts meeting the film producer Harrison Starr at a party, who asked him whether his forthcoming book was an anti-war novel—"Yes, I guess", replied Vonnegut. Starr responded: "Why don't you write an anti-glacier novel?" In the novel, Vonnegut's character continues: "What he meant, of course, is that there would always be wars, that they were as easy to stop as glaciers. I believe that, too. And even if wars didn't keep coming like glaciers, there would still be plain old death". Vonnegut was a pacifist.[107]

 
A large painting of Vonnegut on Massachusetts Avenue, Indianapolis, blocks away from the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and the Rathskeller, which was designed by his family's architecture firm

In 2011, NPR wrote: "Kurt Vonnegut's blend of anti-war sentiment and satire made him one of the most popular writers of the 1960s." Vonnegut stated in a 1987 interview: "my own feeling is that civilization ended in World War I, and we're still trying to recover from that", and that he wanted to write war-focused works without glamorizing war itself.[108] Vonnegut had not intended to publish again, but his anger against the George W. Bush administration led him to write A Man Without a Country.[109]

Slaughterhouse-Five is the Vonnegut novel best known for its antiwar themes, but the author expressed his beliefs in ways beyond the depiction of the destruction of Dresden. One character, Mary O'Hare, opines that "wars were partly encouraged by books and movies", starring "Frank Sinatra or John Wayne or some of those other glamorous, war-loving, dirty old men".[110] Vonnegut made a number of comparisons between Dresden and the bombing of Hiroshima in Slaughterhouse-Five[111] and wrote in Palm Sunday (1991): "I learned how vile that religion of mine could be when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima".[112]

Nuclear war, or at least deployed nuclear arms, is mentioned in almost all of Vonnegut's novels. In Player Piano, the computer EPICAC is given control of the nuclear arsenal and is charged with deciding whether to use high-explosive or nuclear arms. In Cat's Cradle, John's original purpose in setting pen to paper was to write an account of what prominent Americans had been doing as Hiroshima was bombed.[113]

Religion edit

Some of you may know that I am neither Christian nor Jewish nor Buddhist, nor a conventionally religious person of any sort. I am a humanist, which means, in part, that I have tried to behave decently without any expectation of rewards or punishments after I'm dead. ... I myself have written, "If it weren't for the message of mercy and pity in Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, I wouldn't want to be a human being. I would just as soon be a rattlesnake."

Kurt Vonnegut, God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian, 1999[114]

Vonnegut was an atheist, a humanist and a freethinker, serving as the honorary president of the American Humanist Association.[115][116] In an interview for Playboy, he stated that his forebears who came to the United States did not believe in God, and he learned his atheism from his parents.[117] Vonnegut did not, however, disdain those who seek the comfort of religion, hailing church associations as a type of extended family.[118] He occasionally attended a Unitarian church, but with little consistency. In his autobiographical work Palm Sunday, Vonnegut says that he is a "Christ-worshipping agnostic".[119] During a speech to the Unitarian Universalist Association, he called himself a "Christ-loving atheist". However, he was keen to stress that he was not a Christian.[120]

Vonnegut was an admirer of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, particularly the Beatitudes, and incorporated it into his own doctrines.[121] He also referred to it in many of his works.[122] In his 1991 book Fates Worse than Death, Vonnegut suggests that during the Reagan administration, "anything that sounded like the Sermon on the Mount was socialistic or communistic, and therefore anti-American".[123] In Palm Sunday, he wrote that "the Sermon on the Mount suggests a mercifulness that can never waver or fade".[123] However, Vonnegut had a deep dislike for certain aspects of Christianity, often reminding his readers of the bloody history of the Crusades and other religion-inspired violence. He despised the televangelists of the late 20th century, feeling that their thinking was narrow-minded.[124]

Religion features frequently in Vonnegut's work, both in his novels and elsewhere. He laced a number of his speeches with religion-focused rhetoric[114][115] and was prone to using such expressions as "God forbid" and "thank God".[116][125] He once wrote his own version of the Requiem Mass, which he then had translated into Latin and set to music.[120] In God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian, Vonnegut goes to heaven after he is euthanized by Dr. Jack Kevorkian. Once in heaven, he interviews 21 deceased celebrities, including Isaac Asimov, William Shakespeare, and Kilgore Trout—the last a fictional character from several of his novels.[126] Vonnegut's works are filled with characters founding new faiths,[124] and religion often serves as a major plot device, for example, in Player Piano, The Sirens of Titan and Cat's Cradle. In The Sirens of Titan, Rumfoord proclaims The Church of God the Utterly Indifferent. Slaughterhouse-Five sees Billy Pilgrim, lacking religion himself, nevertheless become a chaplain's assistant in the military and display a large crucifix on his bedroom wall.[127] In Cat's Cradle, Vonnegut invented the religion of Bokononism.[128]

Politics edit

Vonnegut's thoughts on politics were shaped in large part by Robert Redfield, an anthropologist at the University of Chicago, co-founder of the Committee on Social Thought, and one of Vonnegut's professors during his time at the university. In a commencement address, Vonnegut remarked that "Dr. Redfield's theory of the Folk Society ... has been the starting point for my politics, such as they are".[129] Vonnegut did not particularly sympathize with liberalism or conservatism and mused on the specious simplicity of American politics, saying facetiously: "If you want to take my guns away from me, and you're all for murdering fetuses, and love it when homosexuals marry each other ... you're a liberal. If you are against those perversions and for the rich, you're a conservative. What could be simpler?"[130] Regarding political parties, Vonnegut said: "The two real political parties in America are the Winners and the Losers. The people don't acknowledge this. They claim membership in two imaginary parties, the Republicans and the Democrats, instead."[131]

Vonnegut disregarded more mainstream American political ideologies in favor of socialism, which he thought could provide a valuable substitute for what he saw as social Darwinism and a spirit of "survival of the fittest" in American society,[132] believing that "socialism would be a good for the common man".[133] Vonnegut would often return to a quote by socialist and five-time presidential candidate Eugene V. Debs: "As long as there is a lower class, I am in it. As long as there is a criminal element, I'm of it. As long as there is a soul in prison, I am not free."[134][135] Vonnegut expressed disappointment that communism and socialism seemed to be unsavory topics to the average American and believed that they offered beneficial substitutes to contemporary social and economic systems.[136]

Technology edit

In A Man Without a Country, Vonnegut quipped "I have been called a Luddite. I welcome it. Do you know what a Luddite is? A person who hates newfangled contraptions."[137] The negative effects of the progress of technology is a constant theme throughout Vonnegut's works, from Player Piano to his final essay collection A Man Without a Country. Political theorist Patrick Deneen has identified this skepticism of technological progress as a theme of Vonnegut novels and stories, including Player Piano , "Harrison Bergeron", and "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow".[138] Scholars who position Vonnegut as a critic of liberalism reference his pessimism toward technological progress.[139][140][141] Vonnegut described Player Piano some years after its publication as "a novel about people and machines, and machines frequently got the best of it, as machines will."[142] Loss of jobs due to machine innovation, and thus loss of meaning or purpose in life, is a key plot point in the novel. The "newfangled contraptions" Vonnegut hated included the television, which he critiqued often throughout his non-fiction and fiction. In Timequake, for example, Vonnegut tells the story of "Booboolings", human analogs who develop morally through their imaginative formation. However, one evil sister on the planet of the Booboolings learns to build televisions from lunatics. He writes:

When the bad sister was a young woman, she and the nuts worked up designs for television cameras and transmitters and receivers. Then she got money from her very rich mom to manufacture these satanic devices, which made imaginations redundant. They were instantly popular because the shows were so attractive and no thinking was involved... Generations of Booboolings grew up without imaginations. . . . Without imaginations, though, they couldn't do what their ancestors had done, which was read interesting, heartwarming stories in the faces of one another. So . . . Booboolings became among the most merciless creatures in the local family of galaxies.[143]

Against imagination-killing devices like televisions, and against electronic substitutes for embodied community, Vonnegut argued that "Electronic communities build nothing. You wind up with nothing. We are dancing animals. How beautiful it is to get up and go out and do something."[144]

Writing edit

Influences edit

Vonnegut's writing was inspired by an eclectic mix of sources. When he was younger, Vonnegut stated that he read works of pulp fiction, science fiction, fantasy, and action-adventure. He also read the classics, such as the plays of Aristophanes—like Vonnegut's works, humorous critiques of contemporary society.[145] Vonnegut's life and work also share similarities with that of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn writer Mark Twain. Both shared pessimistic outlooks on humanity and a skeptical take on religion and, as Vonnegut put it, were both "associated with the enemy in a major war", as Twain briefly enlisted in the South's cause during the American Civil War, and Vonnegut's German name and ancestry connected him with the United States' enemy in both world wars.[146] He also cited Ambrose Bierce as an influence, calling "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" the greatest American short story and deeming any who disagreed or had not read the story "twerps".[147]

Vonnegut called George Orwell his favorite writer and admitted that he tried to emulate Orwell. "I like his concern for the poor, I like his socialism, I like his simplicity", Vonnegut said.[148] Vonnegut also said that Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley heavily influenced his debut novel, Player Piano, in 1952. The novel also included ideas from mathematician Norbert Wiener's book Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine.[149] Vonnegut commented that Robert Louis Stevenson's stories were emblems of thoughtfully put together works that he tried to mimic in his own compositions.[118] Vonnegut also hailed playwright and socialist George Bernard Shaw as "a hero of [his]" and an "enormous influence".[150] Within his own family, Vonnegut stated that his mother, Edith, had the greatest influence on him. "[My] mother thought she might make a new fortune by writing for the slick magazines. She took short-story courses at night. She studied writers the way gamblers study horses."[151]

Early on in his career, Vonnegut decided to model his style after Henry David Thoreau, who wrote as if from the perspective of a child, allowing Thoreau's works to be more widely comprehensible.[146] Using a youthful narrative voice allowed Vonnegut to deliver concepts in a modest and straightforward way.[152] Other influences on Vonnegut include The War of the Worlds author H. G. Wells and satirist Jonathan Swift. Vonnegut credited American journalist and critic H. L. Mencken for inspiring him to become a journalist.[118]

Style and technique edit

The book Pity the Reader: On Writing with Style by Kurt Vonnegut and his longtime friend and former student Suzanne McConnell, published posthumously by Rosetta Books and Seven Stories Press in 2019, delves into the style, humor, and methodologies Vonnegut employed, including his belief that one should "Write like a human being. Write like a writer."[153][154]

I've heard the Vonnegut voice described as "manic depressive", and there's certainly something to this. It has an incredible amount of energy married to a very deep and dark sense of despair. It's frequently over-the-top, and scathingly satirical, but it never strays too far from pathos—from an immense sympathy for society's vulnerable, oppressed and powerless. But, then, it also contains a huge allotment of warmth. Most of the time, reading Kurt Vonnegut feels more like being spoken to by a very close friend. There's an inclusiveness to his writing that draws you in, and his narrative voice is seldom absent from the story for any length of time. Usually, it's right there in the foreground—direct, involving and extremely idiosyncratic.

Gavin Extence, The Huffington Post, 2013[155]

In his book Popular Contemporary Writers, Michael D. Sharp describes Vonnegut's linguistic style as straightforward, his sentences concise, his language simple, his paragraphs brief, and his ordinary tone conversational.[134] Vonnegut uses this style to convey normally complex subject matter in a way that is intelligible to a large audience. He credited his time as a journalist for his ability and pointed to his work with the Chicago City News Bureau, which required him to convey stories in telephone conversations.[155][134] Vonnegut's compositions include distinct references to his own life, notably in Slaughterhouse-Five and Slapstick.[156]

Vonnegut believed that ideas, and the convincing communication of those ideas to the reader, were vital to literary art. He did not always sugarcoat his points: much of Player Piano leads to the moment when Paul, on trial and hooked to a lie detector, is asked to tell a falsehood. Paul states: "every new piece of scientific knowledge is a good thing for humanity".[157] Robert T. Tally Jr., in his volume on Vonnegut's novels, wrote: "rather than tearing down and destroying the icons of twentieth-century, middle-class American life, Vonnegut gently reveals their basic flimsiness".[158] Vonnegut did not simply propose utopian solutions to the ills of American society but showed how such schemes would not allow ordinary people to live lives free from want and anxiety. The large, artificial U.S. families in Slapstick soon serve as an excuse for tribalism. People give no help to those not part of their group; the extended family's place in the social hierarchy becomes vital.[159]

In the introduction to their essay "Kurt Vonnegut and Humor", Tally and Peter C. Kunze suggest that Vonnegut was not a "black humorist", but a "frustrated idealist" who used "comic parables" to teach the reader absurd, bitter or hopeless truths, with his grim witticisms serving to make the reader laugh rather than cry. "Vonnegut makes sense through humor, which is, in the author's view, as valid a means of mapping this crazy world as any other strategies."[160] Vonnegut resented being called a black humorist, feeling that, as with many literary labels, it allows readers to disregard aspects of a writer's work that do not fit the label.[161]

Vonnegut's works have been labeled science fiction, satire and postmodern.[162] He resisted such labels, but his works do contain common tropes in those genres. In his books, Vonnegut imagines alien societies and civilizations, as is common in science fiction. Vonnegut emphasizes or exaggerates absurdities and idiosyncrasies.[163] Furthermore, Vonnegut makes fun of problems, as satire does. However, literary theorist Robert Scholes noted in Fabulation and Metafiction that Vonnegut "reject[s] the traditional satirist's faith in the efficacy of satire as a reforming instrument. [He has] a more subtle faith in the humanizing value of laughter."[164]

Postmodernism entails a response to the theory that science will reveal truths.[161] Postmodernists contend that truth is subjective, rather than objective. Truth includes bias toward individual beliefs and outlooks on the world. Postmodernist writers use unreliable, first-person narration, and narrative fragmentation. One critic has argued that Vonnegut's most famous novel, Slaughterhouse-Five, features a metafictional, Janus-headed outlook and seeks to represent historical events while doubting the ability to represent history. Doubt is evident in the opening lines of the novel: "All this happened, more or less. The war parts, anyway, are pretty much true." The bombastic opening—"All this happened"—"reads like a declaration of complete mimesis," which is radically called into question in the rest of the quote and "[t]his creates an integrated perspective that seeks out extratextual themes [like war and trauma] while thematizing the novel's textuality and inherent constructedness at one and the same time."[165] Although Vonnegut does use fragmentation and metafiction in some of his works, he more distinctly focuses on the peril of individuals who find subjective truths, mistake them for objective truths, and proceed to impose these truths on other people.[166]

Themes edit

Vonnegut was a vocal critic of American society, and this was reflected in his writings. Several key social themes recur in Vonnegut's works, such as wealth, the lack of it, and its unequal distribution among a society. In The Sirens of Titan, the novel's protagonist, Malachi Constant, is exiled to Saturn's moon Titan as a result of his vast wealth, which has made him arrogant and wayward.[167] In God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater, readers may find it difficult to determine whether the rich or the poor are in worse circumstances, as the lives of both groups' members are ruled by their wealth or their poverty.[148] Further, in Hocus Pocus, the protagonist is named Eugene Debs Hartke, a homage to the famed socialist Eugene V. Debs and Vonnegut's socialist views.[134]

In Kurt Vonnegut: A Critical Companion, Thomas F. Marvin states: "Vonnegut points out that, left unchecked, capitalism will erode the democratic foundations of the United States." Marvin suggests that Vonnegut's works demonstrate what happens when a "hereditary aristocracy" develops, where wealth is inherited along familial lines: the ability of poor Americans to overcome their situations is greatly or completely diminished.[148] Vonnegut also often laments social Darwinism and a "survival of the fittest" view of society. He points out that social Darwinism leads to a society that condemns its poor for their own misfortune and fails to help them out of their poverty because "they deserve their fate".[132]

Science and the ethical obligations of scientists are also a common theme in Vonnegut's works. His first published story, "Report on the Barnhouse Effect", like many of his early stories, centered on a scientist concerned about the uses of his own invention.[168] Player Piano and Cat's Cradle explore the effects on humans of scientific advances. In 1969, Vonnegut gave a speech to the American Association of Physics Teachers called "The Virtuous Physicist". Asked afterwards what a virtuous scientist was, Vonnegut replied, "one who declines to work on weapons."[169]

Vonnegut also confronts the idea of free will in a number of his pieces. In Slaughterhouse-Five and Timequake the characters have no choice in what they do; in Breakfast of Champions, characters are very obviously stripped of their free will and even receive it as a gift; and in Cat's Cradle, Bokononism views free will as heretical.[118]

The majority of Vonnegut's characters are estranged from their actual families and seek to build replacement or extended families. For example, the engineers in Player Piano called their manager's spouse "Mom". In Cat's Cradle, Vonnegut devises two separate methods for loneliness to be combated: A "karass", which is a group of individuals appointed by God to do his will, and a "granfalloon", defined by Marvin as a "meaningless association of people, such as a fraternal group or a nation".[170] Similarly, in Slapstick, the US government codifies that all Americans are a part of large extended families.[136]

Fear of the loss of one's purpose in life is a theme in Vonnegut's works. The Great Depression forced Vonnegut to witness the devastation many people felt when they lost their jobs, and while at General Electric, Vonnegut witnessed machines being built to take the place of human labor. He confronts these things in his works through references to the growing use of automation and its effects on human society. This is most starkly represented in his first novel, Player Piano, where many Americans are left purposeless and unable to find work, as machines replace human workers. Loss of purpose is also depicted in Galápagos, where a florist rages at her spouse for creating a robot able to do her job, and in Timequake, where an architect kills himself when replaced by computer software.[171]

Suicide by fire is another common theme in Vonnegut's works; the author often returns to the theory that "many people are not fond of life". He uses this as an explanation for why humans have so severely damaged their environments and made devices such as nuclear weapons that can make their creators extinct.[136] In Deadeye Dick, Vonnegut features the neutron bomb, which is designed to kill people, but leave buildings and structures untouched. He also uses this theme to demonstrate the recklessness of those who put powerful, apocalypse-inducing devices at the disposal of politicians.[172]

"What is the point of life?" is a question Vonnegut often pondered in his works. When one of Vonnegut's characters, Kilgore Trout, finds the question "What is the purpose of life?" written in a bathroom, his response is: "To be the eyes and ears and conscience of the Creator of the Universe, you fool." Marvin finds Trout's theory curious, given that Vonnegut was an atheist, and thus for him, there is no Creator to report back to, and comments that, "[as] Trout chronicles one meaningless life after another, readers are left to wonder how a compassionate creator could stand by and do nothing while such reports come in". In the epigraph to Bluebeard, Vonnegut quotes his son Mark and gives an answer to what he believes is the meaning of life: "We are here to help each other get through this thing, whatever it is."[170]

Awards and nominations edit

Works edit

Unless otherwise cited, items in this list are taken from Thomas F. Marvin's 2002 book Kurt Vonnegut: A Critical Companion, and the date in parentheses is the date the work was published:[173]

Novels edit

Short fiction collections edit

Plays edit

Nonfiction edit

Interviews edit

Children's books edit

  • Sun Moon Star (1980)

Art edit

  • Kurt Vonnegut Drawings (2014)

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ In fact, Vonnegut often described himself as a "child of the Great Depression". He also stated the Depression and its effects incited pessimism about the validity of the American Dream.[9]
  2. ^ Kurt Sr. was embittered by his own lack of work as an architect during the Great Depression and feared a similar fate for his son. He dismissed his son's desired areas of study as "junk jewellery" and persuaded his son against following in his footsteps.[12]

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Kurt Vonnegut". Britannica. from the original on April 26, 2022. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Boomhower 1999; Farrell 2009, pp. 4–5.
  3. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 2.
  4. ^ a b Sharp 2006, p. 1360.
  5. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 2; Farrell 2009, pp. 3–4.
  6. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 4.
  7. ^ Sharp 2006, p. 1360.
  8. ^ a b c d Boomhower 1999.
  9. ^ Sumner 2014.
  10. ^ Sharp 2006, p. 1360; Marvin 2002, pp. 2–3.
  11. ^ Marvin 2002, pp. 2–3.
  12. ^ a b Farrell 2009, p. 5; Boomhower 1999.
  13. ^ Sumner 2014; Farrell 2009, p. 5.
  14. ^ Shields 2011, p. 41.
  15. ^ Lowery 2007.
  16. ^ Farrell 2009, p. 5.
  17. ^ Shields 2011, pp. 41–42.
  18. ^ Shields 2011, pp. 44–45.
  19. ^ Shields 2011, pp. 45–49.
  20. ^ Shields 2011, pp. 50–51.
  21. ^ Farrell 2009, p. 6.
  22. ^ a b c d Farrell 2009, p. 6; Marvin 2002, p. 3.
  23. ^ Sharp 2006, p. 1363; Farrell 2009, p. 6.
  24. ^ a b Vonnegut 2008.
  25. ^ a b c d Hayman et al. 1977.
  26. ^ Boomhower 1999; Farrell 2009, pp. 6–7.
  27. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (April 6, 2006). "Kurt Vonnegut". Bookworm (Interview). Interviewed by Michael Silverblatt. Santa Monica, California: KCRW. from the original on April 5, 2023. Retrieved October 6, 2015.
  28. ^ Dalton 2011.
  29. ^ Thomas 2006, p. 7; Shields 2011, pp. 80–82.
  30. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (1991). Fates worse than death: an autobiographical collage of the 1980s. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-399-13633-7. OCLC 23253474.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h Smith 2007.
  32. ^ "Kurt Vonnegut to visit campus as Kovler Fellow". chronicle.uchicago.edu. February 3, 1994.
  33. ^ Strand 2015, p. 26
  34. ^ "Excerpt from Kurt Vonnegut". Penguin Random House Canada. from the original on March 24, 2023. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  35. ^ electricliterature (April 7, 2015). "Kurt Vonnegut's Graduation Speech: What the "Ghost Dance" of the Native Americans and the French..." Electric Literature. from the original on March 25, 2023. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  36. ^ . May 18, 2017. Archived from the original on May 18, 2017. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  37. ^ Klinkowitz, Jerome (June 5, 2012). The Vonnegut Effect. Univ of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-61117-114-3. from the original on March 24, 2023. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  38. ^ "Kurt Vonnegut, Counterculture's Novelist, Dies". archive.nytimes.com. from the original on March 24, 2023. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  39. ^ Vonnegut 2009, p. 285.
  40. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 7.
  41. ^ Noble 2017, p. 166: "In the early 1950s novelist Kurt Vonnegut was a technical writer and publicist at GE headquarters in Schenectady.".
  42. ^ Strand 2015, p. 81
  43. ^ Strand 2015, p. 87
  44. ^ Strand 2015, p. 89
  45. ^ Boomhower 1999; Sumner 2014; Farrell 2009, pp. 7–8.
  46. ^ Strand 2015, p. 117
  47. ^ Shields 2011, p. 115.
  48. ^ Boomhower 1999; Hayman et al. 1977; Farrell 2009, p. 8.
  49. ^ Sidman, Dan. "Cape ties to writer Kurt Vonnegut celebrated". Cape Cod Times. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  50. ^ a b Boomhower 1999; Farrell 2009, pp. 8–9; Marvin 2002, p. 25.
  51. ^ Strand 2015, pp. 202–212
  52. ^ a b Allen 1991, pp. 20–30.
  53. ^ Allen 1991, p. 32.
  54. ^ Shields 2011, p. 142.
  55. ^ Farrell 2009, p. 9.
  56. ^ Shields 2011, p. 164.
  57. ^ Shields 2011, pp. 159–161.
  58. ^ Allen 1991, p. 39.
  59. ^ Allen 1991, p. 40.
  60. ^ Shields 2011, pp. 171–173.
  61. ^ Morse 2003, p. 19.
  62. ^ Leeds 1995, p. 46.
  63. ^ a b Hattenhauer 1998, p. 387.
  64. ^ Allen 1991, p. 53.
  65. ^ Strand 2015, pp. 236–237
  66. ^ Allen 1991, pp. 54–65.
  67. ^ Morse 2003, pp. 62–63.
  68. ^ Shields 2011, pp. 182–183.
  69. ^ Allen 1991, p. 75.
  70. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (May 24, 1999). "Writers on Writing: Despite Tough Guys, Life is Not the Only School for Real Novelists". The New York Times. from the original on December 19, 2019. Retrieved January 2, 2020.
  71. ^ Shields 2011, pp. 219–228.
  72. ^ a b Allen, pp. 82–85.
  73. ^ Strand 2015, pp. 49–50.
  74. ^ a b Shields 2011, pp. 248–249.
  75. ^ Bloom, Harold (2007). Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five. Bloom's Guides. Infobase Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-4381-2709-5.
  76. ^ Klinkowitz, Jerome (2009). Kurt Vonnegut's America. University of South Carolina Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-1-57003-826-6. from the original on March 12, 2024. Retrieved September 2, 2017.
  77. ^ Shields 2011, p. 254.
  78. ^ a b c Marvin 2002, p. 10.
  79. ^ "Marquis Biographies Online". Marquis Biographies Online. from the original on March 12, 2024. Retrieved December 2, 2017.
  80. ^ a b c d Marvin 2002, p. 11.
  81. ^ Wolff 1987.
  82. ^ Hischak 2012, p. 31.
  83. ^ Lehmann-Haupt 1976.
  84. ^ Farrell 2009, p. 451.
  85. ^ a b Sumner 2014.
  86. ^ "Kurt Vonnegut". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on May 24, 2018. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  87. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 12.
  88. ^ a b c Grossman 2007.
  89. ^ Allen.
  90. ^ Blount 2008.
  91. ^ Banach 2013.
  92. ^ Rodriguez 2007.
  93. ^ "The Kurt Vonnegut Society – Promoting the Scholarly Study of Kurt Vonnegut, his Life, and Works". Blogs.cofc.edu. from the original on October 25, 2017. Retrieved December 2, 2017.
  94. ^ Kunze & Tally 2012, p. 7.
  95. ^ Harris 2011.
  96. ^ a b Morais 2011.
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  98. ^ Davis 2006, p. 2.
  99. ^ Morse 2013, p. 56.
  100. ^ Tally 2011, p. 158.
  101. ^ "2015 SF&F Hall of Fame Inductees & James Gunn Fundraiser" July 15, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. June 12, 2015. Locus Publications. Retrieved July 17, 2015.
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  103. ^ Haley, Guy (2014). Sci-Fi Chronicles: A Visual History of the Galaxy's Greatest Science Fiction. London: Aurum Press (Quarto Group). p. 135. ISBN 978-1-78131-359-6. The asteroid 25399 Vonnegut is named in his honor.
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  105. ^ "Indianapolis' Kurt Vonnegut museum named Literary Landmark". AP News. September 26, 2021. from the original on September 26, 2021. Retrieved September 26, 2021.
  106. ^ LinC 1987 Yearbook. University of Evansville. 1987. p. 34.
  107. ^ a b Baker, Phil (April 13, 2007). "Kurt Vonnegut". The Guardian. London. from the original on June 21, 2023. Retrieved June 21, 2023.
  108. ^ NPR 2011.
  109. ^ Daily Telegraph 2007.
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  111. ^ Leeds 1995, p. 2.
  112. ^ Leeds 1995, p. 68.
  113. ^ Leeds 1995, pp. 1–2.
  114. ^ a b Vonnegut 1999, introduction.
  115. ^ a b Vonnegut 2009, pp. 177, 185, 191.
  116. ^ a b Niose 2007.
  117. ^ Leeds 1995, p. 480.
  118. ^ a b c d Sharp 2006, p. 1366.
  119. ^ Vonnegut 1982, p. 327.
  120. ^ a b Wakefield, Dan (2014). "Kurt Vonnegut, Christ-Loving Atheist". Image (82): 67–75. from the original on October 13, 2017. Retrieved October 13, 2017.
  121. ^ Davis 2006, p. 142.
  122. ^ Vonnegut 2006b.
  123. ^ a b Leeds 1995, p. 525.
  124. ^ a b Farrell 2009, p. 141.
  125. ^ Vonnegut 2009, p. 191.
  126. ^ Kohn 2001.
  127. ^ Leeds 1995, pp. 477–479.
  128. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 78.
  129. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (2014). If This Isn't Nice, What Is?. Seven Stories Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-1-60980-591-3.
  130. ^ Zinn & Arnove 2009, p. 620.
  131. ^ Vonnegut 2006a, "In a Manner that Must Shame God Himself".
  132. ^ a b Sharp 2006, pp. 1364–1365.
  133. ^ Gannon & Taylor 2013.
  134. ^ a b c d Sharp 2006, p. 1364.
  135. ^ Zinn & Arnove 2009, p. 618.
  136. ^ a b c Sharp 2006, p. 1365.
  137. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (2007). A Man Without a Country. Seven Stories Press. p. 55.
  138. ^ "Folk Tales". Claremont Review of Books. from the original on September 30, 2023. Retrieved March 12, 2024.
  139. ^ Hamlin, D. A. (2005). "The Art of Citizenship in the Graduation Speeches of Kurt Vonnegut". In Deneen, Patrick (ed.). Democracy's Literature: Politics and Fiction in America. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 294.
  140. ^ McGrath, Michael J. Gargas (1982). "Keset and Vonnegut: The Critique of Liberal Democracy in Contemporary Literature". In Barber, Benjamin (ed.). The Artist and Political Vision. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
  141. ^ Bunn, Philip D. (September 2019). "Communities Are All That's Substantial: Kurt Vonnegut's Post-liberal Political Thought". American Political Thought. 8 (4): 504–527. doi:10.1086/705602. ISSN 2161-1580. S2CID 211321082. from the original on March 12, 2024. Retrieved March 12, 2024.
  142. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (1974). Wampeters, Foma, and Granfalloons (Opinions). Dell. p. 1.
  143. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (1999b). Timequake. Putnam. p. 501.
  144. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (2007). A Man Without a Country. Seven Stories Press. pp. 61–62.
  145. ^ Marvin 2002, pp. 17–18.
  146. ^ a b Marvin 2002, p. 18.
  147. ^ "A quote by Kurt Vonnegut". www.goodreads.com. from the original on March 8, 2021. Retrieved December 8, 2019.
  148. ^ a b c Marvin 2002, p. 19.
  149. ^ Strand 2015, pp. 155–156.
  150. ^ Barsamian 2004, p. 15.
  151. ^ Hayman et al. 1977.
  152. ^ Marvin 2002, pp. 18–19.
  153. ^ Kurt Vonnegut; Suzanne McConnell (2019). Pity The Reader: On Writing With Style. Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1-60980-962-1.
  154. ^ "Kurt Vonnegut on Writing and Talent". Poets & Writers. October 12, 2019. from the original on July 1, 2022. Retrieved July 1, 2022.
  155. ^ a b Extence 2013.
  156. ^ Sharp 2006, pp. 1363–1364.
  157. ^ Davis 2006, pp. 45–46.
  158. ^ Tally 2011, p. 157.
  159. ^ Tally 2011, pp. 103–105.
  160. ^ Kunze & Tally 2012, introduction.
  161. ^ a b Marvin 2002, p. 16.
  162. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 13.
  163. ^ Marvin 2002, pp. 14–15.
  164. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 15.
  165. ^ Jensen 2016, pp. 8–11.
  166. ^ Marvin 2002, pp. 16–17.
  167. ^ Marvin 2002, pp. 19, 44–45.
  168. ^ Strand 2015, pp. 147–157.
  169. ^ Strand 2015, p. 245.
  170. ^ a b Marvin 2002, p. 20.
  171. ^ Sharp 2006, pp. 1365–1366.
  172. ^ Marvin 2002, p. 21.
  173. ^ Marvin 2002, pp. 157–158.

General and cited sources edit

  • Allen, William R. . Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library. Archived from the original on January 18, 2015. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Allen, William R. (1991). Understanding Kurt Vonnegut. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-87249-722-1.
  • Banach, Je (April 11, 2013). "Laughing in the Face of Death: A Vonnegut Roundtable". The Paris Review. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  • Barsamian, David (2004). Louder Than Bombs: Interviews from the Progressive Magazine. South End Press. ISBN 978-0-89608-725-5.
  • Blount, Roy Jr. (May 4, 2008). "So It Goes". Sunday Book Review. The New York Times. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Boomhower, Ray E. (1999). "Slaughterhouse-Five: Kurt Vonnegut Jr". Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History. 11 (2): 42–47. ISSN 1040-788X.
  • "Obituary of Kurt Vonnegut: Guru of the counterculture whose science fiction novel Slaughterhouse-Five, inspired by his survival of the Dresden bombings, became an anti-war classic". The Daily Telegraph. May 13, 2007. p. 25.
  • Dalton, Corey M. (October 24, 2011). . The Saturday Evening Post. Archived from the original on December 9, 2014. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Davis, Todd F. (2006). Kurt Vonnegut's Crusade. State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-6675-9.
  • Extence, Gavin (June 25, 2013). "Most of What I Know about Writing, I Learned from Kurt Vonnegut". The Huffington Post. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Farrell, Susan E. (2009). Critical Companion to Kurt Vonnegut: A Literary Reference to His Life and Work. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4381-0023-4.
  • Freese, Peter (2013). "'Instructions for use': the opening chapter of Slaughterhouse-Five and the reader of historiographical metafictions". In Tally, Robert T. Jr. (ed.). Kurt Vonnegut. Critical Insights. Salem Press. pp. 95–117. ISBN 978-1-4298-3848-1.
  • Gannon, Matthew; Taylor, Wilson (September 4, 2013). "The working class needs its next Kurt Vonnegut". Jacobin. Salon.com. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Grossman, Lev (April 12, 2007). "Kurt Vonnegut, 1922–2007". Time.
  • Harris, Paul (December 3, 2011). "Kurt Vonnegut's dark, sad, cruel side is laid bare". The Guardian.
  • Hattenhauer, Darryl (1998). "The Politics of Kurt Vonnegut's 'Harrison Bergeron'". Studies in Short Fiction. 35 (4): 387–392. ISSN 0039-3789.
  • Hayman, David; Michaelis, David; et al. (1977). . The Paris Review. 69: 55–103. Archived from the original on February 5, 2015.
  • Hischak, Thomas S. (2012). American Literature on Stage and Screen: 525 Works and Their Adaptations. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-7864-9279-4.
  • Jensen, Mikkel (2016). "Janus-Headed Postmodernism: The Opening Lines of Slaughterhouse-Five". The Explicator. 74 (1): 8–11. doi:10.1080/00144940.2015.1133546. ISSN 1939-926X. S2CID 162509316.
  • Kohn, Martin (March 28, 2001). "God Bless You Dr. Kevorkian listing". New York University School of Medicine. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Kunze, Peter C.; Tally, Robert T. Jr. (2012). "Vonnegut's sense of humor". Studies in American Humor. 3 (26): 7–11. doi:10.5325/studamerhumor.26.2012.0007. S2CID 246645063. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Leeds, Marc (1995). The Vonnegut Encyclopedia. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-29230-9.
  • Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher (September 24, 1976). "Books of The Times". The New York Times. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Lowery, George (April 12, 2007). . Cornell Chronicle. Archived from the original on November 8, 2014. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Marvin, Thomas F. (2002). Kurt Vonnegut: A Critical Companion. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-29230-9.
  • Morais, Betsy (August 12, 2011). "The Neverending Campaign to Ban 'Slaughterhouse Five'". The Atlantic. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Morse, Donald E. (2013). "The curious reception of Kurt Vonnegut". In Tally, Robert T. Jr. (ed.). Kurt Vonnegut. Critical Insights. Salem Press. pp. 42–59. ISBN 978-1-4298-3848-1.
  • Morse, Donald E. (2003). The Novels of Kurt Vonnegut: Imagining Being an American. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-29230-9.
  • Niose, David A. (July 1, 2007). . The Humanist. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Noble, David (2017). "Forces of Production: A Social History of Industrial Automation". New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-52364-7. OCLC 1015814093.
  • Rodriguez, Gregory (April 16, 2007). "The kindness of Kurt Vonnegut". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Sharp, Michael D. (2006). Popular Contemporary Writers. Vol. 10. Marshall Cavendish Reference. ISBN 978-0-7614-7601-6.
  • Shields, Charles J. (2011). And So It Goes: Kurt Vonnegut, a Life. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-0-8050-8693-5.
  • Smith, Dinitia (April 13, 2007). "Kurt Vonnegut, Counterculture's Novelist, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Strand, Ginger (2015). The Brothers Vonnegut: Science and Fiction in the House of Magic. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-11701-6.
  • Sumner, Gregory (2014). "Vonnegut, Kurt Jr". American National Biography Online. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Tally, Robert T. Jr. (2011). Kurt Vonnegut and the American Novel: A Postmodern Iconography. Continuum Books. ISBN 978-1-4411-6445-2.
  • Tally, Robert T. Jr. (2013). "On Kurt Vonnegut". In Tally, Robert T. Jr. (ed.). Kurt Vonnegut. Critical Insights. Salem Press. pp. 3–17. ISBN 978-1-4298-3848-1.
  • Thomas, Peter L. (2006). Reading, Learning, Teaching Kurt Vonnegut. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-0-8204-6337-7.
  • "Up to 25,000 died in Dresden's WWII bombing – report". BBC. March 18, 2010. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Vitale, Tom (May 31, 2011). "Kurt Vonnegut: Still Speaking To The War Weary". NPR. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  • Vonnegut, Kurt (January 21, 2006). "A Man Without A Country, "Custodians of chaos"". The Guardian. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Vonnegut, Kurt (1999). God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian. Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1-58322-020-7.
  • Vonnegut, Kurt (June 28, 2008). . Newsweek. Archived from the original on March 1, 2015. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Vonnegut, Kurt (1982). Palm Sunday: An Autobiographical Collage. Dell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-440-57163-6.
  • Vonnegut, Kurt (2009). Palm Sunday: An Autobiographical Collage. Random House Publishing. ISBN 978-0-307-56806-9.
  • Vonnegut, Kurt (2006). Wampeters, Foma & Granfalloons. Dial Press. ISBN 978-0-385-33381-8.
  • Wolff, Gregory (October 25, 1987). "A Wildly Improbable Gang of Nine". The New York Times. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  • Zinn, Howard; Arnove, Anthony (2009). Voices of A People's History of the United States. Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1-58322-916-3.

Further reading edit

  • Craig, Cairns (1983), "An Interview with Kurt Vonnegut", in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), Cencrastus No. 13, Summer 1983, pp. 29–32, ISSN 0264-0856.
  • Oltean-Cîmpean, A. A. (2016). "Kurt Vonnegut's Humanism: An Author's Journey Towards Preaching for Peace". Studii De Ştiintă Şi Cultură, 12(2), 259–266.
  • Párraga, J. J. (2013). "Kurt Vonnegut's Quest for Identity". Revista Futhark, 8185–8199.

External links edit

kurt, vonnegut, vonnegut, redirects, here, other, uses, vonnegut, disambiguation, gət, november, 1922, april, 2007, american, writer, humorist, known, satirical, darkly, humorous, novels, published, novels, three, short, story, collections, five, plays, five, . Vonnegut redirects here For other uses see Vonnegut disambiguation Kurt Vonnegut ˈ v ɒ n e ɡ e t VON e get November 11 1922 April 11 2007 was an American writer and humorist known for his satirical and darkly humorous novels 1 He published 14 novels three short story collections five plays and five nonfiction works over fifty plus years further collections have been published since his death Kurt VonnegutVonnegut in 1965BornKurt Vonnegut Jr 1922 11 11 November 11 1922Indianapolis Indiana U S DiedApril 11 2007 2007 04 11 aged 84 New York City U S OccupationAuthorEducationCornell UniversityCarnegie Mellon UniversityUniversity of TennesseeUniversity of Chicago MA GenreSatiregallows humorscience fictionLiterary movementPostmodernismYears active1951 2007Notable worksSlaughterhouse FiveSpouseJane Marie Cox m 1945 div 1971 wbr Jill Krementz m 1979 wbr Children3 biological including Mark and Edith4 adopted including Steve AdamsSignature Born and raised in Indianapolis Vonnegut attended Cornell University but withdrew in January 1943 and enlisted in the U S Army As part of his training he studied mechanical engineering at Carnegie Institute of Technology and the University of Tennessee He was then deployed to Europe to fight in World War II and was captured by the Germans during the Battle of the Bulge He was interned in Dresden where he survived the Allied bombing of the city in a meat locker of the slaughterhouse where he was imprisoned After the war he married Jane Marie Cox He and his wife both attended the University of Chicago while he worked as a night reporter for the City News Bureau Vonnegut published his first novel Player Piano in 1952 It received positive reviews yet sold poorly In the nearly 20 years that followed he published several well regarded novels including two The Sirens of Titan 1959 and Cat s Cradle 1963 that were nominated for the Hugo Award for best science fiction or fantasy novel of the year He published a short story collection Welcome to the Monkey House in 1968 Vonnegut s breakthrough was his commercially and critically successful sixth novel Slaughterhouse Five 1969 Its anti war sentiment resonated with its readers amid the Vietnam War and its reviews were generally positive It rose to the top of The New York Times Best Seller list and made Vonnegut famous Later in his career Vonnegut published autobiographical essays and short story collections such as Fates Worse Than Death 1991 and A Man Without a Country 2005 He has been hailed for his dark humor commentary on American society His son Mark published a compilation of his unpublished works Armageddon in Retrospect in 2008 In 2017 Seven Stories Press published Complete Stories a collection of Vonnegut s short fiction Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family and early life 1 2 High school and Cornell University 1 3 World War II 1 4 Marriage University of Chicago and early employment 1 5 First novel 1 6 Struggling writer 1 7 Slaughterhouse Five 1 8 Later career and life 1 9 Death and legacy 2 Views 2 1 War 2 2 Religion 2 3 Politics 2 4 Technology 3 Writing 3 1 Influences 3 2 Style and technique 3 3 Themes 3 4 Awards and nominations 4 Works 4 1 Novels 4 2 Short fiction collections 4 3 Plays 4 4 Nonfiction 4 5 Interviews 4 6 Children s books 4 7 Art 5 See also 6 Explanatory notes 7 Citations 8 General and cited sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography editFamily and early life edit Vonnegut was born in Indianapolis on November 11 1922 the youngest of three children of Kurt Vonnegut Sr 1884 1956 and his wife Edith 1888 1944 nee Lieber His older siblings were Bernard 1914 1997 and Alice 1917 1958 He descended from a long line of German Americans whose immigrant ancestors settled in the United States in the mid 19th century his paternal great grandfather Clemens Vonnegut settled in Indianapolis and founded the Vonnegut Hardware Company His father and grandfather Bernard were architects the architecture firm under Kurt Sr designed such buildings as Das Deutsche Haus now called The Athenaeum the Indiana headquarters of the Bell Telephone Company and the Fletcher Trust Building 2 Vonnegut s mother was born into Indianapolis Gilded Age high society as her family the Liebers were among the wealthiest in the city based on a fortune deriving from a successful brewery 3 Both of Vonnegut s parents were fluent speakers of the German language but pervasive anti German sentiment during and after World War I caused them to abandon German culture which many German Americans were told at the time was a precondition for American patriotism Thus they did not teach Vonnegut to speak German or introduce him to German literature cuisine or traditions leaving him feeling ignorant and rootless 4 5 Vonnegut later credited Ida Young his family s African American cook and housekeeper during the first decade of his life for raising him and giving him values he said she gave me decent moral instruction and was exceedingly nice to me and was as great an influence on me as anybody He described her as humane and wise and added that the compassionate forgiving aspects of his beliefs came from her 6 The financial security and social prosperity that the Vonneguts had once enjoyed were destroyed in a matter of years The Liebers brewery closed down in 1921 after the advent of prohibition When the Great Depression hit few people could afford to build causing clients at Kurt Sr s architectural firm to become scarce 7 Vonnegut s brother and sister had finished their primary and secondary educations in private schools but Vonnegut was placed in a public school called Public School No 43 now the James Whitcomb Riley School 8 He was bothered by the Great Depression a and both his parents were affected deeply by their economic misfortune His father withdrew from normal life and became what Vonnegut called a dreamy artist 10 His mother became depressed withdrawn bitter and abusive She labored to regain the family s wealth and status and Vonnegut said that she expressed hatred for her husband that was as corrosive as hydrochloric acid 11 She often tried in vain to sell short stories she had written to Collier s The Saturday Evening Post and other magazines 4 High school and Cornell University edit nbsp Vonnegut as a teenager from the Shortridge High School 1940 yearbook Vonnegut enrolled at Shortridge High School in Indianapolis in 1936 While there he played clarinet in the school band and became a co editor along with Madelyn Pugh for the Tuesday edition of the school newspaper The Shortridge Echo Vonnegut said that his tenure with the Echo allowed him to write for a large audience his fellow students rather than for a teacher an experience he said was fun and easy 2 It just turned out that I could write better than a lot of other people Vonnegut observed Each person has something he can do easily and can t imagine why everybody else has so much trouble doing it 8 After graduating from Shortridge in 1940 Vonnegut enrolled at Cornell University in Ithaca New York He wanted to study the humanities and had aspirations of becoming an architect like his father but his father b and brother Bernard an atmospheric scientist urged him to study a useful discipline 2 As a result Vonnegut majored in biochemistry but he had little proficiency in the area and was indifferent towards his studies 13 As his father had been a member at MIT 14 Vonnegut was entitled to join the Delta Upsilon fraternity and did 15 He overcame stiff competition for a place at the university s independent newspaper The Cornell Daily Sun first serving as a staff writer then as an editor 16 17 By the end of his first year he was writing a column titled Innocents Abroad which reused jokes from other publications He later penned a piece Well All Right focusing on pacifism a cause he strongly supported 8 arguing against US intervention in World War II 18 World War II edit nbsp Vonnegut in army uniform during World War II The attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into WWII Vonnegut was a member of Reserve Officers Training Corps but poor grades and a satirical article in Cornell s newspaper cost him his place there He was placed on academic probation in May 1942 and dropped out the following January No longer eligible for a deferment as a member of ROTC he faced likely conscription into the U S Army Instead of waiting to be drafted he enlisted in the Army and in March 1943 reported to Fort Bragg North Carolina for basic training 19 Vonnegut was trained to fire and maintain howitzers and later received instruction in mechanical engineering at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and the University of Tennessee as part of the Army Specialized Training Program ASTP 12 In early 1944 the ASTP was canceled due to the Army s need for soldiers to support the D Day invasion and Vonnegut was ordered to an infantry battalion at Camp Atterbury south of Indianapolis in Edinburgh Indiana where he trained as a scout 20 He lived so close to his home that he was able to sleep in his own bedroom and use the family car on weekends 21 On May 14 1944 Vonnegut returned home on leave for Mother s Day weekend to discover that his mother had committed suicide the previous night by overdosing on sleeping pills 22 Possible factors that contributed to Edith Vonnegut s suicide include the family s loss of wealth and status Vonnegut s forthcoming deployment overseas and her own lack of success as a writer She was inebriated at the time and under the influence of prescription drugs 22 Three months after his mother s suicide Vonnegut was sent to Europe as an intelligence scout with the 106th Infantry Division In December 1944 he fought in the Battle of the Bulge one of the last German offensives of the war 22 On December 22 Vonnegut was captured with about 50 other American soldiers 23 Vonnegut was taken by boxcar to a prison camp south of Dresden in the German province of Saxony During the journey the Royal Air Force mistakenly attacked the trains carrying Vonnegut and his fellow prisoners of war killing about 150 of them 24 Vonnegut was sent to Dresden the first fancy city he had ever seen He lived in a slaughterhouse when he got to the city and worked in a factory that made malt syrup for pregnant women Vonnegut recalled the sirens going off whenever another city was bombed The Germans did not expect Dresden to be bombed Vonnegut said There were very few air raid shelters in town and no war industries just cigarette factories hospitals clarinet factories 25 nbsp Dresden in 1945 More than 90 of the city s center was destroyed On February 13 1945 Dresden became the target of Allied forces In the hours and days that followed the Allies engaged in a firebombing of the city 22 The offensive subsided on February 15 with about 25 000 civilians killed in the bombing Vonnegut marveled at the level of both the destruction in Dresden and the secrecy that attended it He had survived by taking refuge in a meat locker three stories underground 8 It was cool there with cadavers hanging all around Vonnegut said When we came up the city was gone They burnt the whole damn town down 25 Vonnegut and other American prisoners were put to work immediately after the bombing excavating bodies from the rubble 26 He described the activity as a terribly elaborate Easter egg hunt 25 The American POWs were evacuated on foot to the border of Saxony and Czechoslovakia after U S General George S Patton s 3rd Army captured Leipzig With the captives abandoned by their guards Vonnegut reached a prisoner of war repatriation camp in Le Havre France in May 1945 with the aid of the Soviets 24 Sent back to the United States he was stationed at Fort Riley Kansas typing discharge papers for other soldiers 27 Soon after he was awarded a Purple Heart about which he remarked I myself was awarded my country s second lowest decoration a Purple Heart for frost bite 28 He was discharged from the U S Army and returned to Indianapolis 29 Marriage University of Chicago and early employment edit After he returned to the United States 22 year old Vonnegut married Jane Marie Cox his high school girlfriend and classmate since kindergarten on September 1 1945 The pair moved to Chicago there Vonnegut enrolled in the University of Chicago on the G I Bill as an anthropology student in an unusual five year joint undergraduate graduate program that conferred a master s degree There he studied under anthropologist Robert Redfield his most famous professor 30 He also worked as a reporter for the City News Bureau of Chicago 31 32 Jane who had graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Swarthmore 33 accepted a scholarship from the university to study Russian literature as a graduate student Jane dropped out of the program after becoming pregnant with the couple s first child Mark born May 1947 while Kurt also left the university without any degree despite having completed his undergraduate education Vonnegut failed to write a dissertation as his ideas had all been rejected 25 One abandoned topic was about the Ghost Dance and Cubist movements 34 35 36 A later topic rejected unanimously had to do with the shapes of stories 37 38 39 Vonnegut received his graduate degree in anthropology 25 years after he left when the university accepted his novel Cat s Cradle in lieu of his master s thesis 40 Shortly thereafter General Electric GE hired Vonnegut as a technical writer then publicist 41 for the company s Schenectady New York News Bureau a publicity department that operated like a newsroom 42 His brother Bernard had worked at GE since 1945 focusing mainly on a silver iodide based cloud seeding project that quickly became a joint GE U S Army Signal Corps program Project Cirrus In The Brothers Vonnegut Ginger Strand draws connections between many real events at General Electric including Bernard s work and Vonnegut s early stories which were regularly being rejected everywhere he sent them 43 Throughout this period Jane Vonnegut encouraged him editing his stories strategizing about submissions and buoying his spirits 44 In 1949 Kurt and Jane had a daughter named Edith Still working for GE Vonnegut had his first piece titled Report on the Barnhouse Effect published in the February 11 1950 issue of Collier s for which he received 750 45 The story concerned a scientist who fears that his invention will be used as a weapon much as Bernard was fearing at the time about his cloudseeding work 46 Vonnegut wrote another story after being coached by the fiction editor at Collier s Knox Burger and again sold it to the magazine this time for 950 While Burger supported Vonnegut s writing he was shocked when Vonnegut quit GE as of January 1 1951 later stating I never said he should give up his job and devote himself to fiction I don t trust the freelancer s life it s tough 47 Nevertheless in early 1951 Vonnegut moved with his family to Cape Cod Massachusetts to write full time leaving GE behind 48 He initially moved to Osterville but he ended up purchasing a home in Barnstable 49 First novel edit In 1952 Vonnegut s first novel Player Piano was published by Scribner s The novel has a post Third World War setting in which factory workers have been replaced by machines 50 Player Piano draws upon Vonnegut s experience as an employee at GE The novel is set at a General Electric like company and includes many scenes based on things Vonnegut saw there 51 He satirizes the drive to climb the corporate ladder one that in Player Piano is rapidly disappearing as automation increases putting even executives out of work His central character Paul Proteus has an ambitious wife a backstabbing assistant and a feeling of empathy for the poor Sent by his boss Kroner as a double agent among the poor who have all the material goods they want but little sense of purpose he leads them in a machine smashing museum burning revolution 52 Player Piano expresses Vonnegut s opposition to McCarthyism something made clear when the Ghost Shirts the revolutionary organization Paul penetrates and eventually leads is referred to by one character as fellow travelers 53 In Player Piano Vonnegut originates many of the techniques he would use in his later works The comic heavy drinking Shah of Bratpuhr an outsider to this dystopian corporate United States is able to ask many questions that an insider would not think to ask or would cause offense by doing so For example when taken to see the artificially intelligent supercomputer EPICAC the Shah asks it what are people for and receives no answer Speaking for Vonnegut he dismisses it as a false god This type of alien visitor would recur throughout Vonnegut s literature 52 The New York Times writer and critic Granville Hicks gave Player Piano a positive review favorably comparing it to Aldous Huxley s Brave New World Hicks called Vonnegut a sharp eyed satirist None of the reviewers considered the novel particularly important Several editions were printed one by Bantam with the title Utopia 14 and another by the Doubleday Science Fiction Book Club whereby Vonnegut gained the repute of a science fiction writer a genre held in disdain by writers at that time He defended the genre and deplored a perceived sentiment that no one can simultaneously be a respectable writer and understand how a refrigerator works 50 Struggling writer edit nbsp Vonnegut with his wife Jane and children from left to right Mark Edith and Nanette in 1955 After Player Piano Vonnegut continued to sell short stories to various magazines Contracted to produce a second novel which eventually became Cat s Cradle he struggled to complete it and the work languished for years In 1954 the couple had a third child Nanette With a growing family and no financially successful novels yet Vonnegut s short stories helped to sustain the family though he frequently needed to find additional sources of income as well In 1957 he and a partner opened a Saab automobile dealership on Cape Cod but it went bankrupt by the end of the year 54 In 1958 his sister Alice died of cancer two days after her husband James Carmalt Adams was killed in a train accident The Vonneguts took in three of the Adams young sons James Steven and Kurt aged 14 11 and 9 respectively 55 A fourth Adams son Peter 2 also stayed with the Vonneguts for about a year before being given to the care of a paternal relative in Georgia 56 Grappling with family challenges Vonnegut continued to write publishing novels vastly dissimilar in terms of plot The Sirens of Titan 1959 features a Martian invasion of Earth as experienced by a bored billionaire Malachi Constant He meets Winston Niles Rumfoord an aristocratic space traveler who is virtually omniscient but stuck in a time warp that causes him to appear on Earth every 59 days The billionaire learns that his actions and the events of all of history are determined by a race of robotic aliens from the planet Tralfamadore who need a replacement part that can only be produced by an advanced civilization in order to repair their spaceship and return home human history has been manipulated to produce it Some human structures such as the Kremlin are coded signals from the aliens to their ship as to how long it may expect to wait for the repair to take place Reviewers were uncertain what to think of the book with one comparing it to Offenbach s opera The Tales of Hoffmann 57 Rumfoord who is based on Franklin D Roosevelt also physically resembles the former president Rumfoord is described this way he put a cigarette in a long bone cigarette holder lighted it He thrust out his jaw The cigarette holder pointed straight up 58 William Rodney Allen in his guide to Vonnegut s works stated that Rumfoord foreshadowed the fictional political figures who would play major roles in God Bless You Mr Rosewater and Jailbird 59 Mother Night published in 1961 received little attention at the time of its publication Howard W Campbell Jr Vonnegut s protagonist is an American who is raised in Germany from age 11 and joins the Nazi party during the war as a double agent for the US Office of Strategic Services rising to the regime s highest ranks as a radio propagandist After the war the spy agency refuses to clear his name and he is eventually imprisoned by the Israelis in the same cell block as Adolf Eichmann Vonnegut wrote in a foreword to a later edition we are what we pretend to be so we must be careful about what we pretend to be 60 Literary critic Lawrence Berkove considered the novel like Mark Twain s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn to illustrate the tendency for impersonators to get carried away by their impersonations to become what they impersonate and therefore to live in a world of illusion 61 Also published in 1961 was Vonnegut s short story Harrison Bergeron set in a dystopic future where all are equal even if that means disfiguring beautiful people and forcing the strong or intelligent to wear devices that negate their advantages Fourteen year old Harrison is a genius and athlete forced to wear record level handicaps and imprisoned for attempting to overthrow the government He escapes to a television studio tears away his handicaps and frees a ballerina from her lead weights As they dance they are killed by the Handicapper General Diana Moon Glampers 62 Vonnegut in a later letter suggested that Harrison Bergeron might have sprung from his envy and self pity as a high school misfit In his 1976 biography of Vonnegut Stanley Schatt suggested that the short story shows in any leveling process what really is lost according to Vonnegut is beauty grace and wisdom 63 Darryl Hattenhauer in his 1998 journal article on Harrison Bergeron theorized that the story was a satire on American Cold War understandings of communism and socialism 63 With Cat s Cradle 1963 Allen wrote Vonnegut hit full stride for the first time 64 The narrator John intends to write of Dr Felix Hoenikker one of the fictional fathers of the atomic bomb seeking to cover the scientist s human side Hoenikker in addition to the bomb has developed another threat to mankind ice nine solid water stable at room temperature but more dense than liquid water If a particle of ice nine is dropped in water all of the surrounding water becomes ice nine Felix Hoenikker is based on Bernard Vonnegut s boss at the GE Research Lab Irving Langmuir and the way ice nine is described in the novel is reminiscent of how Bernard Vonnegut explained his own invention silver iodide cloudseeding to Kurt 65 Much of the second half of the book is spent on the fictional Caribbean island of San Lorenzo where John explores a religion called Bokononism whose holy books excerpts from which are quoted give the novel the moral core science does not supply After the oceans are converted to ice nine wiping out most of humankind John wanders the frozen surface seeking to save himself and to make sure that his story survives 66 67 Vonnegut based the title character of God Bless You Mr Rosewater 1964 on an accountant he knew on Cape Cod who specialized in clients in trouble and often had to comfort them Eliot Rosewater the wealthy son of a Republican senator seeks to atone for his wartime killing of noncombatant firefighters by serving in a volunteer fire department and by giving away money to those in trouble or need Stress from a battle for control of his charitable foundation pushes him over the edge and he is placed in a mental hospital He recovers and ends the financial battle by declaring the children of his county to be his heirs 68 Allen deemed God Bless You Mr Rosewater more a cry from the heart than a novel under its author s full intellectual control that reflected family and emotional stresses Vonnegut was going through at the time 69 In the mid 1960s Vonnegut contemplated abandoning his writing career In 1999 he wrote in The New York Times I had gone broke was out of print and had a lot of kids But then on the recommendation of an admirer he received a surprise offer of a teaching job at the Iowa Writers Workshop employment that he likened to the rescue of a drowning man 70 Slaughterhouse Five edit Main article Slaughterhouse Five nbsp Vonnegut in 1972 After spending almost two years at the writer s workshop at the University of Iowa teaching one course each term Vonnegut was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for research in Germany By the time he won it in March 1967 he was becoming a well known writer He used the funds to travel in Eastern Europe including to Dresden where he found many prominent buildings still in ruins 71 Vonnegut had been writing about his war experiences at Dresden ever since he returned from the war but had never been able to write anything acceptable to himself or his publishers chapter 1 of Slaughterhouse Five tells of his difficulties 72 73 Released in 1969 the novel rocketed Vonnegut to fame 74 It tells of the life of Billy Pilgrim who like Vonnegut was born in 1922 and survives the bombing of Dresden The story is told in a non linear fashion with many of the story s climaxes Billy s death in 1976 his kidnapping by aliens from the planet Tralfamadore nine years earlier and the execution of Billy s friend Edgar Derby in the ashes of Dresden for stealing a teapot disclosed in the story s first pages 72 In 1970 Vonnegut was also a correspondent in Biafra during the Nigerian Civil War 75 76 Slaughterhouse Five received generally positive reviews with Michael Crichton writing in The New Republic he writes about the most excruciatingly painful things His novels have attacked our deepest fears of automation and the bomb our deepest political guilts our fiercest hatreds and loves No one else writes books on these subjects they are inaccessible to normal novelists 77 The book went immediately to the top of The New York Times Best Seller list Vonnegut s earlier works had appealed strongly to many college students and the antiwar message of Slaughterhouse Five resonated with a generation marked by the Vietnam War He later stated that the loss of confidence in government that Vietnam caused finally allowed an honest conversation regarding events like Dresden 74 Later career and life edit nbsp New York 228 East 48th Street center Kurt Vonnegut s house from 1973 to 2007 After Slaughterhouse Five was published Vonnegut embraced the fame and financial security that attended its release He was hailed as a hero of the burgeoning anti war movement in the United States was invited to speak at numerous rallies and gave college commencement addresses around the country 78 In addition to briefly teaching at Harvard University as a lecturer in creative writing in 1970 Vonnegut taught at the City College of New York as a distinguished professor during the 1973 1974 academic year 79 He was later elected vice president of the National Institute of Arts and Letters and given honorary degrees by among others Indiana University and Bennington College Vonnegut also wrote a play called Happy Birthday Wanda June which opened on October 7 1970 at New York s Theatre de Lys Receiving mixed reviews it closed on March 14 1971 In 1972 Universal Pictures adapted Slaughterhouse Five into a film which the author said was flawless 80 Meanwhile Vonnegut s personal life was disintegrating His wife Jane had embraced Christianity which was contrary to Vonnegut s atheistic beliefs and with five of their six children having left home Vonnegut said that the two were forced to find other sorts of seemingly important work to do The couple battled over their differing beliefs until Vonnegut moved from their Cape Cod home to New York in 1971 Vonnegut called the disagreements painful and said that the resulting split was a terrible unavoidable accident that we were ill equipped to understand 78 The couple divorced but remained friends until Jane s death in late 1986 81 78 Beyond his marriage he was deeply affected when his son Mark suffered a mental breakdown in 1972 which exacerbated Vonnegut s chronic depression and led him to take Ritalin When he stopped taking the drug in the mid 1970s he began to see a psychologist weekly 80 Requiem ending When the last living thing has died on account of us how poetical it would be if Earth could say in a voice floating up perhaps from the floor of the Grand Canyon It is done People did not like it here Kurt Vonnegut A Man Without a Country 2005 31 Vonnegut s difficulties materialized in numerous ways including the painfully slow progress made on his next novel the darkly comical Breakfast of Champions In 1971 he stopped writing the novel altogether 80 When it was finally released in 1973 it was panned critically In Thomas S Hischak s book American Literature on Stage and Screen Breakfast of Champions was called funny and outlandish but reviewers noted that it lacks substance and seems to be an exercise in literary playfulness 82 Vonnegut s 1976 novel Slapstick which meditates on the relationship between him and his sister Alice met a similar fate In The New York Times s review of Slapstick Christopher Lehmann Haupt said that Vonnegut seems to be putting less effort into storytelling than ever before and that it still seems as if he has given up storytelling after all 83 At times Vonnegut was disgruntled by the personal nature of his detractors complaints 80 In 1979 Vonnegut married Jill Krementz a photographer whom he met while she was working on a series about writers in the early 1970s With Jill he adopted a daughter Lily when the baby was three days old 84 In subsequent years his popularity resurged as he published several satirical books including Jailbird 1979 Deadeye Dick 1982 Galapagos 1985 Bluebeard 1987 and Hocus Pocus 1990 85 Although he remained a prolific writer in the 1980s Vonnegut struggled with depression and attempted suicide in 1984 86 Two years later Vonnegut was seen by a younger generation when he played himself in Rodney Dangerfield s film Back to School 87 The last of Vonnegut s fourteen novels Timequake 1997 was as University of Detroit history professor and Vonnegut biographer Gregory Sumner said a reflection of an aging man facing mortality and testimony to an embattled faith in the resilience of human awareness and agency 85 Vonnegut s final book a collection of essays entitled A Man Without a Country 2005 became a bestseller 31 Death and legacy edit nbsp Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library in 2022 Vonnegut s sincerity his willingness to scoff at received wisdom is such that reading his work for the first time gives one the sense that everything else is rank hypocrisy His opinion of human nature was low and that low opinion applied to his heroes and his villains alike he was endlessly disappointed in humanity and in himself and he expressed that disappointment in a mixture of tar black humor and deep despair He could easily have become a crank but he was too smart he could have become a cynic but there was something tender in his nature that he could never quite suppress he could have become a bore but even at his most despairing he had an endless willingness to entertain his readers with drawings jokes sex bizarre plot twists science fiction whatever it took Lev Grossman Time 2007 88 In a 2006 Rolling Stone interview Vonnegut sardonically stated that he would sue the Brown amp Williamson tobacco company the maker of the Pall Mall branded cigarettes he had been smoking since he was around 12 or 14 years old for false advertising And do you know why Because I m 83 years old The lying bastards On the package Brown amp Williamson promised to kill me 88 Vonnegut died in Manhattan on the night of April 11 2007 as a result of brain injuries incurred several weeks prior from a fall at his brownstone home 31 89 His death was reported by his wife Jill He was 84 years old 31 At the time of his death he had written fourteen novels three short story collections five plays and five nonfiction books 88 A book composed of his unpublished pieces Armageddon in Retrospect was compiled and posthumously published by his son Mark in 2008 90 When asked about the impact Vonnegut had on his work author Josip Novakovich stated that he has much to learn from Vonnegut how to compress things and yet not compromise them how to digress into history quote from various historical accounts and not stifle the narrative The ease with which he writes is sheerly masterly Mozartian 91 Los Angeles Times columnist Gregory Rodriguez said that the author will rightly be remembered as a darkly humorous social critic and the premier novelist of the counterculture 92 and Dinitia Smith of The New York Times dubbed Vonnegut the counterculture s novelist 31 External videos nbsp Tour of the Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library December 17 2010 C SPAN nbsp Presentation by Charles Shields on And So It Goes Kurt Vonnegut A Life December 17 2011 C SPAN Vonnegut has inspired numerous posthumous tributes and works In 2008 the Kurt Vonnegut Society 93 was established and in November 2010 the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library was opened in Vonnegut s hometown of Indianapolis The Library of America published a compendium of Vonnegut s compositions between 1963 and 1973 the following April and another compendium of his earlier works in 2012 Late 2011 saw the release of two Vonnegut biographies Gregory Sumner s Unstuck in Time and Charles J Shields s And So It Goes 94 Shields s biography of Vonnegut created some controversy According to The Guardian the book portrays Vonnegut as distant cruel and nasty Cruel nasty and scary are the adjectives commonly used to describe him by the friends colleagues and relatives Shields quotes said The Daily Beast s Wendy Smith Towards the end he was very feeble very depressed and almost morose said Jerome Klinkowitz of the University of Northern Iowa who has examined Vonnegut in depth 95 Like Mark Twain Mr Vonnegut used humor to tackle the basic questions of human existence Why are we in this world Is there a presiding figure to make sense of all this a god who in the end despite making people suffer wishes them well Dinitia Smith The New York Times 2007 31 Vonnegut s works have evoked ire on several occasions His most prominent novel Slaughterhouse Five has been objected to or removed at various institutions in at least 18 instances 96 In the case of Island Trees School District v Pico the United States Supreme Court ruled that a school district s ban on Slaughterhouse Five which the board had called anti American anti Christian anti Semitic and just plain filthy and eight other novels was unconstitutional When a school board in Republic Missouri decided to withdraw Vonnegut s novel from its libraries the Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library offered a free copy to all the students of the district 96 Tally writing in 2013 suggests that Vonnegut has only recently become the subject of serious study rather than fan adulation and much is yet to be written about him The time for scholars to say Here s why Vonnegut is worth reading has definitively ended thank goodness We know he s worth reading Now tell us things we don t know 97 Todd F Davis notes that Vonnegut s work is kept alive by his loyal readers who have significant influence as they continue to purchase Vonnegut s work passing it on to subsequent generations and keeping his entire canon in print an impressive list of more than twenty books that Dell Publishing has continued to refurbish and hawk with new cover designs 98 Donald E Morse notes that Vonnegut is now firmly if somewhat controversially ensconced in the American and world literary canon as well as in high school college and graduate curricula 99 Tally writes of Vonnegut s work 100 Vonnegut s 14 novels while each does its own thing together are nevertheless experiments in the same overall project Experimenting with the form of the American novel itself Vonnegut engages in a broadly modernist attempt to apprehend and depict the fragmented unstable and distressing bizarreries of postmodern American experience That he does not actually succeed in representing the shifting multiplicities of that social experience is beside the point What matters is the attempt and the recognition that we must try to map this unstable and perilous terrain even if we know in advance that our efforts are doomed The Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame inducted Vonnegut posthumously in 2015 101 102 The asteroid 25399 Vonnegut is named in his honor 103 A crater on the planet Mercury has also been named in his honor 104 In 2021 the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library in Indianapolis was designated a Literary Landmark by the Literary Landmarks Association 105 In 1986 the University of Evansville library located in Evansville Indiana was named after Vonnegut where he spoke during the dedication ceremony 106 Views editThe beliefs I have to defend are so soft and complicated actually and when vivisected turn into bowls of undifferentiated mush I am a pacifist I am an anarchist I am a planetary citizen and so on 107 Kurt Vonnegut War edit In the introduction to Slaughterhouse Five Vonnegut recounts meeting the film producer Harrison Starr at a party who asked him whether his forthcoming book was an anti war novel Yes I guess replied Vonnegut Starr responded Why don t you write an anti glacier novel In the novel Vonnegut s character continues What he meant of course is that there would always be wars that they were as easy to stop as glaciers I believe that too And even if wars didn t keep coming like glaciers there would still be plain old death Vonnegut was a pacifist 107 nbsp A large painting of Vonnegut on Massachusetts Avenue Indianapolis blocks away from the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and the Rathskeller which was designed by his family s architecture firm In 2011 NPR wrote Kurt Vonnegut s blend of anti war sentiment and satire made him one of the most popular writers of the 1960s Vonnegut stated in a 1987 interview my own feeling is that civilization ended in World War I and we re still trying to recover from that and that he wanted to write war focused works without glamorizing war itself 108 Vonnegut had not intended to publish again but his anger against the George W Bush administration led him to write A Man Without a Country 109 Slaughterhouse Five is the Vonnegut novel best known for its antiwar themes but the author expressed his beliefs in ways beyond the depiction of the destruction of Dresden One character Mary O Hare opines that wars were partly encouraged by books and movies starring Frank Sinatra or John Wayne or some of those other glamorous war loving dirty old men 110 Vonnegut made a number of comparisons between Dresden and the bombing of Hiroshima in Slaughterhouse Five 111 and wrote in Palm Sunday 1991 I learned how vile that religion of mine could be when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima 112 Nuclear war or at least deployed nuclear arms is mentioned in almost all of Vonnegut s novels In Player Piano the computer EPICAC is given control of the nuclear arsenal and is charged with deciding whether to use high explosive or nuclear arms In Cat s Cradle John s original purpose in setting pen to paper was to write an account of what prominent Americans had been doing as Hiroshima was bombed 113 Religion edit Some of you may know that I am neither Christian nor Jewish nor Buddhist nor a conventionally religious person of any sort I am a humanist which means in part that I have tried to behave decently without any expectation of rewards or punishments after I m dead I myself have written If it weren t for the message of mercy and pity in Jesus Sermon on the Mount I wouldn t want to be a human being I would just as soon be a rattlesnake Kurt Vonnegut God Bless You Dr Kevorkian 1999 114 Vonnegut was an atheist a humanist and a freethinker serving as the honorary president of the American Humanist Association 115 116 In an interview for Playboy he stated that his forebears who came to the United States did not believe in God and he learned his atheism from his parents 117 Vonnegut did not however disdain those who seek the comfort of religion hailing church associations as a type of extended family 118 He occasionally attended a Unitarian church but with little consistency In his autobiographical work Palm Sunday Vonnegut says that he is a Christ worshipping agnostic 119 During a speech to the Unitarian Universalist Association he called himself a Christ loving atheist However he was keen to stress that he was not a Christian 120 Vonnegut was an admirer of Jesus Sermon on the Mount particularly the Beatitudes and incorporated it into his own doctrines 121 He also referred to it in many of his works 122 In his 1991 book Fates Worse than Death Vonnegut suggests that during the Reagan administration anything that sounded like the Sermon on the Mount was socialistic or communistic and therefore anti American 123 In Palm Sunday he wrote that the Sermon on the Mount suggests a mercifulness that can never waver or fade 123 However Vonnegut had a deep dislike for certain aspects of Christianity often reminding his readers of the bloody history of the Crusades and other religion inspired violence He despised the televangelists of the late 20th century feeling that their thinking was narrow minded 124 Religion features frequently in Vonnegut s work both in his novels and elsewhere He laced a number of his speeches with religion focused rhetoric 114 115 and was prone to using such expressions as God forbid and thank God 116 125 He once wrote his own version of the Requiem Mass which he then had translated into Latin and set to music 120 In God Bless You Dr Kevorkian Vonnegut goes to heaven after he is euthanized by Dr Jack Kevorkian Once in heaven he interviews 21 deceased celebrities including Isaac Asimov William Shakespeare and Kilgore Trout the last a fictional character from several of his novels 126 Vonnegut s works are filled with characters founding new faiths 124 and religion often serves as a major plot device for example in Player Piano The Sirens of Titan and Cat s Cradle In The Sirens of Titan Rumfoord proclaims The Church of God the Utterly Indifferent Slaughterhouse Five sees Billy Pilgrim lacking religion himself nevertheless become a chaplain s assistant in the military and display a large crucifix on his bedroom wall 127 In Cat s Cradle Vonnegut invented the religion of Bokononism 128 Politics edit Vonnegut s thoughts on politics were shaped in large part by Robert Redfield an anthropologist at the University of Chicago co founder of the Committee on Social Thought and one of Vonnegut s professors during his time at the university In a commencement address Vonnegut remarked that Dr Redfield s theory of the Folk Society has been the starting point for my politics such as they are 129 Vonnegut did not particularly sympathize with liberalism or conservatism and mused on the specious simplicity of American politics saying facetiously If you want to take my guns away from me and you re all for murdering fetuses and love it when homosexuals marry each other you re a liberal If you are against those perversions and for the rich you re a conservative What could be simpler 130 Regarding political parties Vonnegut said The two real political parties in America are the Winners and the Losers The people don t acknowledge this They claim membership in two imaginary parties the Republicans and the Democrats instead 131 Vonnegut disregarded more mainstream American political ideologies in favor of socialism which he thought could provide a valuable substitute for what he saw as social Darwinism and a spirit of survival of the fittest in American society 132 believing that socialism would be a good for the common man 133 Vonnegut would often return to a quote by socialist and five time presidential candidate Eugene V Debs As long as there is a lower class I am in it As long as there is a criminal element I m of it As long as there is a soul in prison I am not free 134 135 Vonnegut expressed disappointment that communism and socialism seemed to be unsavory topics to the average American and believed that they offered beneficial substitutes to contemporary social and economic systems 136 Technology editIn A Man Without a Country Vonnegut quipped I have been called a Luddite I welcome it Do you know what a Luddite is A person who hates newfangled contraptions 137 The negative effects of the progress of technology is a constant theme throughout Vonnegut s works from Player Piano to his final essay collection A Man Without a Country Political theorist Patrick Deneen has identified this skepticism of technological progress as a theme of Vonnegut novels and stories including Player Piano Harrison Bergeron and Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow 138 Scholars who position Vonnegut as a critic of liberalism reference his pessimism toward technological progress 139 140 141 Vonnegut described Player Piano some years after its publication as a novel about people and machines and machines frequently got the best of it as machines will 142 Loss of jobs due to machine innovation and thus loss of meaning or purpose in life is a key plot point in the novel The newfangled contraptions Vonnegut hated included the television which he critiqued often throughout his non fiction and fiction In Timequake for example Vonnegut tells the story of Booboolings human analogs who develop morally through their imaginative formation However one evil sister on the planet of the Booboolings learns to build televisions from lunatics He writes When the bad sister was a young woman she and the nuts worked up designs for television cameras and transmitters and receivers Then she got money from her very rich mom to manufacture these satanic devices which made imaginations redundant They were instantly popular because the shows were so attractive and no thinking was involved Generations of Booboolings grew up without imaginations Without imaginations though they couldn t do what their ancestors had done which was read interesting heartwarming stories in the faces of one another So Booboolings became among the most merciless creatures in the local family of galaxies 143 Against imagination killing devices like televisions and against electronic substitutes for embodied community Vonnegut argued that Electronic communities build nothing You wind up with nothing We are dancing animals How beautiful it is to get up and go out and do something 144 Writing editInfluences edit Vonnegut s writing was inspired by an eclectic mix of sources When he was younger Vonnegut stated that he read works of pulp fiction science fiction fantasy and action adventure He also read the classics such as the plays of Aristophanes like Vonnegut s works humorous critiques of contemporary society 145 Vonnegut s life and work also share similarities with that of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn writer Mark Twain Both shared pessimistic outlooks on humanity and a skeptical take on religion and as Vonnegut put it were both associated with the enemy in a major war as Twain briefly enlisted in the South s cause during the American Civil War and Vonnegut s German name and ancestry connected him with the United States enemy in both world wars 146 He also cited Ambrose Bierce as an influence calling An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge the greatest American short story and deeming any who disagreed or had not read the story twerps 147 Vonnegut called George Orwell his favorite writer and admitted that he tried to emulate Orwell I like his concern for the poor I like his socialism I like his simplicity Vonnegut said 148 Vonnegut also said that Orwell s Nineteen Eighty Four and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley heavily influenced his debut novel Player Piano in 1952 The novel also included ideas from mathematician Norbert Wiener s book Cybernetics Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine 149 Vonnegut commented that Robert Louis Stevenson s stories were emblems of thoughtfully put together works that he tried to mimic in his own compositions 118 Vonnegut also hailed playwright and socialist George Bernard Shaw as a hero of his and an enormous influence 150 Within his own family Vonnegut stated that his mother Edith had the greatest influence on him My mother thought she might make a new fortune by writing for the slick magazines She took short story courses at night She studied writers the way gamblers study horses 151 Early on in his career Vonnegut decided to model his style after Henry David Thoreau who wrote as if from the perspective of a child allowing Thoreau s works to be more widely comprehensible 146 Using a youthful narrative voice allowed Vonnegut to deliver concepts in a modest and straightforward way 152 Other influences on Vonnegut include The War of the Worlds author H G Wells and satirist Jonathan Swift Vonnegut credited American journalist and critic H L Mencken for inspiring him to become a journalist 118 Style and technique edit The book Pity the Reader On Writing with Style by Kurt Vonnegut and his longtime friend and former student Suzanne McConnell published posthumously by Rosetta Books and Seven Stories Press in 2019 delves into the style humor and methodologies Vonnegut employed including his belief that one should Write like a human being Write like a writer 153 154 I ve heard the Vonnegut voice described as manic depressive and there s certainly something to this It has an incredible amount of energy married to a very deep and dark sense of despair It s frequently over the top and scathingly satirical but it never strays too far from pathos from an immense sympathy for society s vulnerable oppressed and powerless But then it also contains a huge allotment of warmth Most of the time reading Kurt Vonnegut feels more like being spoken to by a very close friend There s an inclusiveness to his writing that draws you in and his narrative voice is seldom absent from the story for any length of time Usually it s right there in the foreground direct involving and extremely idiosyncratic Gavin Extence The Huffington Post 2013 155 In his book Popular Contemporary Writers Michael D Sharp describes Vonnegut s linguistic style as straightforward his sentences concise his language simple his paragraphs brief and his ordinary tone conversational 134 Vonnegut uses this style to convey normally complex subject matter in a way that is intelligible to a large audience He credited his time as a journalist for his ability and pointed to his work with the Chicago City News Bureau which required him to convey stories in telephone conversations 155 134 Vonnegut s compositions include distinct references to his own life notably in Slaughterhouse Five and Slapstick 156 Vonnegut believed that ideas and the convincing communication of those ideas to the reader were vital to literary art He did not always sugarcoat his points much of Player Piano leads to the moment when Paul on trial and hooked to a lie detector is asked to tell a falsehood Paul states every new piece of scientific knowledge is a good thing for humanity 157 Robert T Tally Jr in his volume on Vonnegut s novels wrote rather than tearing down and destroying the icons of twentieth century middle class American life Vonnegut gently reveals their basic flimsiness 158 Vonnegut did not simply propose utopian solutions to the ills of American society but showed how such schemes would not allow ordinary people to live lives free from want and anxiety The large artificial U S families in Slapstick soon serve as an excuse for tribalism People give no help to those not part of their group the extended family s place in the social hierarchy becomes vital 159 In the introduction to their essay Kurt Vonnegut and Humor Tally and Peter C Kunze suggest that Vonnegut was not a black humorist but a frustrated idealist who used comic parables to teach the reader absurd bitter or hopeless truths with his grim witticisms serving to make the reader laugh rather than cry Vonnegut makes sense through humor which is in the author s view as valid a means of mapping this crazy world as any other strategies 160 Vonnegut resented being called a black humorist feeling that as with many literary labels it allows readers to disregard aspects of a writer s work that do not fit the label 161 Vonnegut s works have been labeled science fiction satire and postmodern 162 He resisted such labels but his works do contain common tropes in those genres In his books Vonnegut imagines alien societies and civilizations as is common in science fiction Vonnegut emphasizes or exaggerates absurdities and idiosyncrasies 163 Furthermore Vonnegut makes fun of problems as satire does However literary theorist Robert Scholes noted in Fabulation and Metafiction that Vonnegut reject s the traditional satirist s faith in the efficacy of satire as a reforming instrument He has a more subtle faith in the humanizing value of laughter 164 Postmodernism entails a response to the theory that science will reveal truths 161 Postmodernists contend that truth is subjective rather than objective Truth includes bias toward individual beliefs and outlooks on the world Postmodernist writers use unreliable first person narration and narrative fragmentation One critic has argued that Vonnegut s most famous novel Slaughterhouse Five features a metafictional Janus headed outlook and seeks to represent historical events while doubting the ability to represent history Doubt is evident in the opening lines of the novel All this happened more or less The war parts anyway are pretty much true The bombastic opening All this happened reads like a declaration of complete mimesis which is radically called into question in the rest of the quote and t his creates an integrated perspective that seeks out extratextual themes like war and trauma while thematizing the novel s textuality and inherent constructedness at one and the same time 165 Although Vonnegut does use fragmentation and metafiction in some of his works he more distinctly focuses on the peril of individuals who find subjective truths mistake them for objective truths and proceed to impose these truths on other people 166 Themes edit Vonnegut was a vocal critic of American society and this was reflected in his writings Several key social themes recur in Vonnegut s works such as wealth the lack of it and its unequal distribution among a society In The Sirens of Titan the novel s protagonist Malachi Constant is exiled to Saturn s moon Titan as a result of his vast wealth which has made him arrogant and wayward 167 In God Bless You Mr Rosewater readers may find it difficult to determine whether the rich or the poor are in worse circumstances as the lives of both groups members are ruled by their wealth or their poverty 148 Further in Hocus Pocus the protagonist is named Eugene Debs Hartke a homage to the famed socialist Eugene V Debs and Vonnegut s socialist views 134 In Kurt Vonnegut A Critical Companion Thomas F Marvin states Vonnegut points out that left unchecked capitalism will erode the democratic foundations of the United States Marvin suggests that Vonnegut s works demonstrate what happens when a hereditary aristocracy develops where wealth is inherited along familial lines the ability of poor Americans to overcome their situations is greatly or completely diminished 148 Vonnegut also often laments social Darwinism and a survival of the fittest view of society He points out that social Darwinism leads to a society that condemns its poor for their own misfortune and fails to help them out of their poverty because they deserve their fate 132 Science and the ethical obligations of scientists are also a common theme in Vonnegut s works His first published story Report on the Barnhouse Effect like many of his early stories centered on a scientist concerned about the uses of his own invention 168 Player Piano and Cat s Cradle explore the effects on humans of scientific advances In 1969 Vonnegut gave a speech to the American Association of Physics Teachers called The Virtuous Physicist Asked afterwards what a virtuous scientist was Vonnegut replied one who declines to work on weapons 169 Vonnegut also confronts the idea of free will in a number of his pieces In Slaughterhouse Five and Timequake the characters have no choice in what they do in Breakfast of Champions characters are very obviously stripped of their free will and even receive it as a gift and in Cat s Cradle Bokononism views free will as heretical 118 The majority of Vonnegut s characters are estranged from their actual families and seek to build replacement or extended families For example the engineers in Player Piano called their manager s spouse Mom In Cat s Cradle Vonnegut devises two separate methods for loneliness to be combated A karass which is a group of individuals appointed by God to do his will and a granfalloon defined by Marvin as a meaningless association of people such as a fraternal group or a nation 170 Similarly in Slapstick the US government codifies that all Americans are a part of large extended families 136 Fear of the loss of one s purpose in life is a theme in Vonnegut s works The Great Depression forced Vonnegut to witness the devastation many people felt when they lost their jobs and while at General Electric Vonnegut witnessed machines being built to take the place of human labor He confronts these things in his works through references to the growing use of automation and its effects on human society This is most starkly represented in his first novel Player Piano where many Americans are left purposeless and unable to find work as machines replace human workers Loss of purpose is also depicted in Galapagos where a florist rages at her spouse for creating a robot able to do her job and in Timequake where an architect kills himself when replaced by computer software 171 Suicide by fire is another common theme in Vonnegut s works the author often returns to the theory that many people are not fond of life He uses this as an explanation for why humans have so severely damaged their environments and made devices such as nuclear weapons that can make their creators extinct 136 In Deadeye Dick Vonnegut features the neutron bomb which is designed to kill people but leave buildings and structures untouched He also uses this theme to demonstrate the recklessness of those who put powerful apocalypse inducing devices at the disposal of politicians 172 What is the point of life is a question Vonnegut often pondered in his works When one of Vonnegut s characters Kilgore Trout finds the question What is the purpose of life written in a bathroom his response is To be the eyes and ears and conscience of the Creator of the Universe you fool Marvin finds Trout s theory curious given that Vonnegut was an atheist and thus for him there is no Creator to report back to and comments that as Trout chronicles one meaningless life after another readers are left to wonder how a compassionate creator could stand by and do nothing while such reports come in In the epigraph to Bluebeard Vonnegut quotes his son Mark and gives an answer to what he believes is the meaning of life We are here to help each other get through this thing whatever it is 170 Awards and nominations edit 1953 International Fantasy Award nomination Player Piano 1960 Writers Guild of America Award Auf Wiedersehen 1960 Hugo Award for Best Novel finalist The Sirens of Titan 1964 Hugo Award for Best Novel finalist Cat s Cradle 1970 Nebula Award nomination Slaughterhouse Five 1970 Hugo Award for Best Novel finalist Slaughterhouse Five 1971 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Play Happy Birthday Wanda June 1973 Seiun Award winner for foreign novel The Sirens of Titan 1973 Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation winner Slaughterhouse Five 1986 John W Campbell Award second place Galapagos 2009 Audie Award for Short Stories Collections Armageddon in Retrospect 2015 Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame from the Science Fiction Museum 2019 Prometheus Hall of Fame award for Harrison Bergeron from the Libertarian Futurist SocietyWorks editMain article Kurt Vonnegut bibliography Unless otherwise cited items in this list are taken from Thomas F Marvin s 2002 book Kurt Vonnegut A Critical Companion and the date in parentheses is the date the work was published 173 Novels edit Player Piano 1952 The Sirens of Titan 1959 Mother Night 1962 Cat s Cradle 1963 God Bless You Mr Rosewater 1965 Slaughterhouse Five 1969 Breakfast of Champions 1973 Slapstick 1976 Jailbird 1979 Deadeye Dick 1982 Galapagos 1985 Bluebeard 1987 Hocus Pocus 1990 Timequake 1997 Short fiction collections edit Canary in a Cat House 1961 Welcome to the Monkey House 1968 Bagombo Snuff Box 1997 God Bless You Dr Kevorkian 1999 Armageddon in Retrospect 2008 short stories and essays Look at the Birdie 2009 While Mortals Sleep 2011 We Are What We Pretend to Be 2012 Sucker s Portfolio 2013 Complete Stories 2017 Plays edit The First Christmas Morning 1962 Fortitude 1968 Happy Birthday Wanda June 1970 Between Time and Timbuktu 1972 Stones Time and Elements A Humanist Requiem 1987 Make Up Your Mind 1993 L Histoire du Soldat 1997 Nonfiction edit Wampeters Foma and Granfalloons 1974 Palm Sunday 1981 Nothing Is Lost Save Honor Two Essays 1984 Fates Worse Than Death 1991 A Man Without a Country 2005 31 Kurt Vonnegut The Cornell Sun Years 1941 1943 2012 If This Isn t Nice What Is Advice to the Young 2013 Vonnegut by the Dozen 2013 Kurt Vonnegut Letters 2014 Pity the Reader On Writing With Style 2019 with Suzanne McConnell Love Kurt The Vonnegut Love Letters 1941 1945 2020 Editor Edith Vonnegut Interviews edit Conversations with Kurt Vonnegut 1988 with William Rodney Allen Like Shaking Hands with God A Conversation About Writing 1999 with Lee Stringer Kurt Vonnegut The Last Interview And Other Conversations 2011 Children s books edit Sun Moon Star 1980 Art edit Kurt Vonnegut Drawings 2014 See also editList of peace activistsExplanatory notes edit In fact Vonnegut often described himself as a child of the Great Depression He also stated the Depression and its effects incited pessimism about the validity of the American Dream 9 Kurt Sr was embittered by his own lack of work as an architect during the Great Depression and feared a similar fate for his son He dismissed his son s desired areas of study as junk jewellery and persuaded his son against following in his footsteps 12 Citations edit Kurt Vonnegut Britannica Archived from the original on April 26 2022 Retrieved April 26 2022 a b c Boomhower 1999 Farrell 2009 pp 4 5 Marvin 2002 p 2 a b Sharp 2006 p 1360 Marvin 2002 p 2 Farrell 2009 pp 3 4 Marvin 2002 p 4 Sharp 2006 p 1360 a b c d Boomhower 1999 Sumner 2014 Sharp 2006 p 1360 Marvin 2002 pp 2 3 Marvin 2002 pp 2 3 a b Farrell 2009 p 5 Boomhower 1999 Sumner 2014 Farrell 2009 p 5 Shields 2011 p 41 Lowery 2007 Farrell 2009 p 5 Shields 2011 pp 41 42 Shields 2011 pp 44 45 Shields 2011 pp 45 49 Shields 2011 pp 50 51 Farrell 2009 p 6 a b c d Farrell 2009 p 6 Marvin 2002 p 3 Sharp 2006 p 1363 Farrell 2009 p 6 a b Vonnegut 2008 a b c d Hayman et al 1977 Boomhower 1999 Farrell 2009 pp 6 7 Vonnegut Kurt April 6 2006 Kurt Vonnegut Bookworm Interview Interviewed by Michael Silverblatt Santa Monica California KCRW Archived from the original on April 5 2023 Retrieved October 6 2015 Dalton 2011 Thomas 2006 p 7 Shields 2011 pp 80 82 Vonnegut Kurt 1991 Fates worse than death an autobiographical collage of the 1980s New York G P Putnam s Sons p 122 ISBN 978 0 399 13633 7 OCLC 23253474 a b c d e f g h Smith 2007 Kurt Vonnegut to visit campus as Kovler Fellow chronicle uchicago edu February 3 1994 Strand 2015 p 26 Excerpt from Kurt Vonnegut Penguin Random House Canada Archived from the original on March 24 2023 Retrieved March 24 2023 electricliterature April 7 2015 Kurt Vonnegut s Graduation Speech What the Ghost Dance of the Native Americans and the French Electric Literature Archived from the original on March 25 2023 Retrieved March 24 2023 Of Ghost Shirts and Gizmos May 18 2017 Archived from the original on May 18 2017 Retrieved March 24 2023 Klinkowitz Jerome June 5 2012 The Vonnegut Effect Univ of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 61117 114 3 Archived from the original on March 24 2023 Retrieved March 24 2023 Kurt Vonnegut Counterculture s Novelist Dies archive nytimes com Archived from the original on March 24 2023 Retrieved March 24 2023 Vonnegut 2009 p 285 Marvin 2002 p 7 Noble 2017 p 166 In the early 1950s novelist Kurt Vonnegut was a technical writer and publicist at GE headquarters in Schenectady Strand 2015 p 81 Strand 2015 p 87 Strand 2015 p 89 Boomhower 1999 Sumner 2014 Farrell 2009 pp 7 8 Strand 2015 p 117 Shields 2011 p 115 Boomhower 1999 Hayman et al 1977 Farrell 2009 p 8 Sidman Dan Cape ties to writer Kurt Vonnegut celebrated Cape Cod Times Retrieved April 4 2023 a b Boomhower 1999 Farrell 2009 pp 8 9 Marvin 2002 p 25 Strand 2015 pp 202 212 a b Allen 1991 pp 20 30 Allen 1991 p 32 Shields 2011 p 142 Farrell 2009 p 9 Shields 2011 p 164 Shields 2011 pp 159 161 Allen 1991 p 39 Allen 1991 p 40 Shields 2011 pp 171 173 Morse 2003 p 19 Leeds 1995 p 46 a b Hattenhauer 1998 p 387 Allen 1991 p 53 Strand 2015 pp 236 237 Allen 1991 pp 54 65 Morse 2003 pp 62 63 Shields 2011 pp 182 183 Allen 1991 p 75 Vonnegut Kurt May 24 1999 Writers on Writing Despite Tough Guys Life is Not the Only School for Real Novelists The New York Times Archived from the original on December 19 2019 Retrieved January 2 2020 Shields 2011 pp 219 228 a b Allen pp 82 85 Strand 2015 pp 49 50 a b Shields 2011 pp 248 249 Bloom Harold 2007 Kurt Vonnegut s Slaughterhouse Five Bloom s Guides Infobase Publishing p 12 ISBN 978 1 4381 2709 5 Klinkowitz Jerome 2009 Kurt Vonnegut s America University of South Carolina Press p 55 ISBN 978 1 57003 826 6 Archived from the original on March 12 2024 Retrieved September 2 2017 Shields 2011 p 254 a b c Marvin 2002 p 10 Marquis Biographies Online Marquis Biographies Online Archived from the original on March 12 2024 Retrieved December 2 2017 a b c d Marvin 2002 p 11 Wolff 1987 Hischak 2012 p 31 Lehmann Haupt 1976 Farrell 2009 p 451 a b Sumner 2014 Kurt Vonnegut Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on May 24 2018 Retrieved May 24 2018 Marvin 2002 p 12 a b c Grossman 2007 Allen Blount 2008 Banach 2013 Rodriguez 2007 The Kurt Vonnegut Society Promoting the Scholarly Study of Kurt Vonnegut his Life and Works Blogs cofc edu Archived from the original on October 25 2017 Retrieved December 2 2017 Kunze amp Tally 2012 p 7 Harris 2011 a b Morais 2011 Tally 2013 pp 14 15 Davis 2006 p 2 Morse 2013 p 56 Tally 2011 p 158 2015 SF amp F Hall of Fame Inductees amp James Gunn Fundraiser Archived July 15 2017 at the Wayback Machine June 12 2015 Locus Publications Retrieved July 17 2015 Kurt Vonnegut American author who combined satiric social commentary with surrealist and science fictional elements Archived September 10 2015 at the Wayback Machine Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame EMP Museum empmuseum org Retrieved September 10 2015 Haley Guy 2014 Sci Fi Chronicles A Visual History of the Galaxy s Greatest Science Fiction London Aurum Press Quarto Group p 135 ISBN 978 1 78131 359 6 The asteroid 25399 Vonnegut is named in his honor Kurt Vonnegut Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature USGS Astrogeology Research Program Indianapolis Kurt Vonnegut museum named Literary Landmark AP News September 26 2021 Archived from the original on September 26 2021 Retrieved September 26 2021 LinC 1987 Yearbook University of Evansville 1987 p 34 a b Baker Phil April 13 2007 Kurt Vonnegut The Guardian London Archived from the original on June 21 2023 Retrieved June 21 2023 NPR 2011 Daily Telegraph 2007 Freese 2013 p 101 Leeds 1995 p 2 Leeds 1995 p 68 Leeds 1995 pp 1 2 a b Vonnegut 1999 introduction a b Vonnegut 2009 pp 177 185 191 a b Niose 2007 Leeds 1995 p 480 a b c d Sharp 2006 p 1366 Vonnegut 1982 p 327 a b Wakefield Dan 2014 Kurt Vonnegut Christ Loving Atheist Image 82 67 75 Archived from the original on October 13 2017 Retrieved October 13 2017 Davis 2006 p 142 Vonnegut 2006b a b Leeds 1995 p 525 a b Farrell 2009 p 141 Vonnegut 2009 p 191 Kohn 2001 Leeds 1995 pp 477 479 Marvin 2002 p 78 Vonnegut Kurt 2014 If This Isn t Nice What Is Seven Stories Press p 97 ISBN 978 1 60980 591 3 Zinn amp Arnove 2009 p 620 Vonnegut 2006a In a Manner that Must Shame God Himself a b Sharp 2006 pp 1364 1365 Gannon amp Taylor 2013 a b c d Sharp 2006 p 1364 Zinn amp Arnove 2009 p 618 a b c Sharp 2006 p 1365 Vonnegut Kurt 2007 A Man Without a Country Seven Stories Press p 55 Folk Tales Claremont Review of Books Archived from the original on September 30 2023 Retrieved March 12 2024 Hamlin D A 2005 The Art of Citizenship in the Graduation Speeches of Kurt Vonnegut In Deneen Patrick ed Democracy s Literature Politics and Fiction in America Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield p 294 McGrath Michael J Gargas 1982 Keset and Vonnegut The Critique of Liberal Democracy in Contemporary Literature In Barber Benjamin ed The Artist and Political Vision New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers Bunn Philip D September 2019 Communities Are All That s Substantial Kurt Vonnegut s Post liberal Political Thought American Political Thought 8 4 504 527 doi 10 1086 705602 ISSN 2161 1580 S2CID 211321082 Archived from the original on March 12 2024 Retrieved March 12 2024 Vonnegut Kurt 1974 Wampeters Foma and Granfalloons Opinions Dell p 1 Vonnegut Kurt 1999b Timequake Putnam p 501 Vonnegut Kurt 2007 A Man Without a Country Seven Stories Press pp 61 62 Marvin 2002 pp 17 18 a b Marvin 2002 p 18 A quote by Kurt Vonnegut www goodreads com Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved December 8 2019 a b c Marvin 2002 p 19 Strand 2015 pp 155 156 Barsamian 2004 p 15 Hayman et al 1977 Marvin 2002 pp 18 19 Kurt Vonnegut Suzanne McConnell 2019 Pity The Reader On Writing With Style Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1 60980 962 1 Kurt Vonnegut on Writing and Talent Poets amp Writers October 12 2019 Archived from the original on July 1 2022 Retrieved July 1 2022 a b Extence 2013 Sharp 2006 pp 1363 1364 Davis 2006 pp 45 46 Tally 2011 p 157 Tally 2011 pp 103 105 Kunze amp Tally 2012 introduction a b Marvin 2002 p 16 Marvin 2002 p 13 Marvin 2002 pp 14 15 Marvin 2002 p 15 Jensen 2016 pp 8 11 Marvin 2002 pp 16 17 Marvin 2002 pp 19 44 45 Strand 2015 pp 147 157 Strand 2015 p 245 a b Marvin 2002 p 20 Sharp 2006 pp 1365 1366 Marvin 2002 p 21 Marvin 2002 pp 157 158 General and cited sources editAllen William R A Brief Biography of Kurt Vonnegut Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved August 14 2015 Allen William R 1991 Understanding Kurt Vonnegut University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 87249 722 1 Banach Je April 11 2013 Laughing in the Face of Death A Vonnegut Roundtable The Paris Review Retrieved August 13 2015 Barsamian David 2004 Louder Than Bombs Interviews from the Progressive Magazine South End Press ISBN 978 0 89608 725 5 Blount Roy Jr May 4 2008 So It Goes Sunday Book Review The New York Times Retrieved August 14 2015 Boomhower Ray E 1999 Slaughterhouse Five Kurt Vonnegut Jr Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History 11 2 42 47 ISSN 1040 788X Obituary of Kurt Vonnegut Guru of the counterculture whose science fiction novel Slaughterhouse Five inspired by his survival of the Dresden bombings became an anti war classic The Daily Telegraph May 13 2007 p 25 Dalton Corey M October 24 2011 Treasures of the Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library The Saturday Evening Post Archived from the original on December 9 2014 Retrieved August 14 2015 Davis Todd F 2006 Kurt Vonnegut s Crusade State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 6675 9 Extence Gavin June 25 2013 Most of What I Know about Writing I Learned from Kurt Vonnegut The Huffington Post Retrieved August 14 2015 Farrell Susan E 2009 Critical Companion to Kurt Vonnegut A Literary Reference to His Life and Work Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 0023 4 Freese Peter 2013 Instructions for use the opening chapter of Slaughterhouse Five and the reader of historiographical metafictions In Tally Robert T Jr ed Kurt Vonnegut Critical Insights Salem Press pp 95 117 ISBN 978 1 4298 3848 1 Gannon Matthew Taylor Wilson September 4 2013 The working class needs its next Kurt Vonnegut Jacobin Salon com Retrieved August 14 2015 Grossman Lev April 12 2007 Kurt Vonnegut 1922 2007 Time Harris Paul December 3 2011 Kurt Vonnegut s dark sad cruel side is laid bare The Guardian Hattenhauer Darryl 1998 The Politics of Kurt Vonnegut s Harrison Bergeron Studies in Short Fiction 35 4 387 392 ISSN 0039 3789 Hayman David Michaelis David et al 1977 Kurt Vonnegut The Art of Fiction No 64 The Paris Review 69 55 103 Archived from the original on February 5 2015 Hischak Thomas S 2012 American Literature on Stage and Screen 525 Works and Their Adaptations McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 9279 4 Jensen Mikkel 2016 Janus Headed Postmodernism The Opening Lines of Slaughterhouse Five The Explicator 74 1 8 11 doi 10 1080 00144940 2015 1133546 ISSN 1939 926X S2CID 162509316 Kohn Martin March 28 2001 God Bless You Dr Kevorkian listing New York University School of Medicine Retrieved August 14 2015 Kunze Peter C Tally Robert T Jr 2012 Vonnegut s sense of humor Studies in American Humor 3 26 7 11 doi 10 5325 studamerhumor 26 2012 0007 S2CID 246645063 Retrieved August 14 2015 Leeds Marc 1995 The Vonnegut Encyclopedia Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 29230 9 Lehmann Haupt Christopher September 24 1976 Books of The Times The New York Times Retrieved August 14 2015 Lowery George April 12 2007 Kurt Vonnegut Jr novelist counterculture icon and Cornellian dies at 84 Cornell Chronicle Archived from the original on November 8 2014 Retrieved August 14 2015 Marvin Thomas F 2002 Kurt Vonnegut A Critical Companion Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 29230 9 Morais Betsy August 12 2011 The Neverending Campaign to Ban Slaughterhouse Five The Atlantic Retrieved August 14 2015 Morse Donald E 2013 The curious reception of Kurt Vonnegut In Tally Robert T Jr ed Kurt Vonnegut Critical Insights Salem Press pp 42 59 ISBN 978 1 4298 3848 1 Morse Donald E 2003 The Novels of Kurt Vonnegut Imagining Being an American Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 29230 9 Niose David A July 1 2007 Kurt Vonnegut saw humanism as a way to build a better world The Humanist Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved August 14 2015 Noble David 2017 Forces of Production A Social History of Industrial Automation New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 52364 7 OCLC 1015814093 Rodriguez Gregory April 16 2007 The kindness of Kurt Vonnegut Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 14 2015 Sharp Michael D 2006 Popular Contemporary Writers Vol 10 Marshall Cavendish Reference ISBN 978 0 7614 7601 6 Shields Charles J 2011 And So It Goes Kurt Vonnegut a Life Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 0 8050 8693 5 Smith Dinitia April 13 2007 Kurt Vonnegut Counterculture s Novelist Dies The New York Times Retrieved August 14 2015 Strand Ginger 2015 The Brothers Vonnegut Science and Fiction in the House of Magic Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 11701 6 Sumner Gregory 2014 Vonnegut Kurt Jr American National Biography Online Retrieved August 14 2015 Tally Robert T Jr 2011 Kurt Vonnegut and the American Novel A Postmodern Iconography Continuum Books ISBN 978 1 4411 6445 2 Tally Robert T Jr 2013 On Kurt Vonnegut In Tally Robert T Jr ed Kurt Vonnegut Critical Insights Salem Press pp 3 17 ISBN 978 1 4298 3848 1 Thomas Peter L 2006 Reading Learning Teaching Kurt Vonnegut Peter Lang ISBN 978 0 8204 6337 7 Up to 25 000 died in Dresden s WWII bombing report BBC March 18 2010 Retrieved August 14 2015 Vitale Tom May 31 2011 Kurt Vonnegut Still Speaking To The War Weary NPR Retrieved August 13 2015 Vonnegut Kurt January 21 2006 A Man Without A Country Custodians of chaos The Guardian Retrieved August 14 2015 Vonnegut Kurt 1999 God Bless You Dr Kevorkian Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1 58322 020 7 Vonnegut Kurt June 28 2008 Kurt Vonnegut on His Time as a POW Newsweek Archived from the original on March 1 2015 Retrieved August 14 2015 Vonnegut Kurt 1982 Palm Sunday An Autobiographical Collage Dell Publishing ISBN 978 0 440 57163 6 Vonnegut Kurt 2009 Palm Sunday An Autobiographical Collage Random House Publishing ISBN 978 0 307 56806 9 Vonnegut Kurt 2006 Wampeters Foma amp Granfalloons Dial Press ISBN 978 0 385 33381 8 Wolff Gregory October 25 1987 A Wildly Improbable Gang of Nine The New York Times Retrieved August 14 2015 Zinn Howard Arnove Anthony 2009 Voices of A People s History of the United States Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1 58322 916 3 Further reading editLibrary resources about Kurt Vonnegut Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Kurt Vonnegut Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Craig Cairns 1983 An Interview with Kurt Vonnegut in Hearn Sheila G ed Cencrastus No 13 Summer 1983 pp 29 32 ISSN 0264 0856 Oltean Cimpean A A 2016 Kurt Vonnegut s Humanism An Author s Journey Towards Preaching for Peace Studii De Stiintă Si Cultură 12 2 259 266 Parraga J J 2013 Kurt Vonnegut s Quest for Identity Revista Futhark 8185 8199 External links editKurt Vonnegut Memorial Library Works by Kurt Vonnegut at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Kurt Vonnegut at Internet Archive Works by Kurt Vonnegut at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Kurt Vonnegut Jr at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Kurt Vonnegut at IMDb Appearances on C SPAN Kurt Vonnegut Jr at the Science Fiction Awards Database Great Lives Kurt Vonnegut Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Comedy nbsp LiteratureKurt Vonnegut at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kurt Vonnegut amp oldid 1219332819, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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