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Kurt Vonnegut's Biography
American author noted for his pessimistic and satirical novels. Kurt Vonnegut Jr.'s best known work is Slaughterhouse-Five or The Children's Crusade (1969) which was based on his experiences in Dresden Germany where he was a prisoner-of-war at the destruction of the town in 1945. Vonnegut used fantasy and science fiction to examine the horrors and absurdities of 20th century civilization. His constant concern about the effects of technology on humanity led some critics to consider him a science fiction writer but the author himself rejected this label.
'"You know - we've had to imagine the war here and we have imagined that it was being fought by aging men like ourselves. We had forgotten that the wars were fought by babies. When I saw those freshly shaved faces it was a shock. "My God my God – " I said to myself "it's the Children's Crusade."' (in Slaughterhouse Five)
Kurt Vonnegut Jr. was born in Indianapolis. His father Kurt Sr. was a architect. In Galápagos (1985) Vonnegut wrote: "When I got to be sixteen though I myself had arrived at the conclusion my mother and the neighbors had reached so long ago: that my father was a repellent failure his work appearing only in the most disreputable publications which paid him almost nothing. He was an insult to life itself I thought when he went on doing nothing with it but writing and smoking all the time – and I mean all the time."
For the ten years before World War II Vonnegut's father was almost constantly unemployed and anti-German feelings and cultural prejudices were later seen in Vonnegut's novel Slapstick or Lonesome No More! (1976). Vonnegut himself was proud of his German heritage. When Charles Lindbergh caused a controversy with his claim that three groups are pressing the U.S. toward war the British the Jewish and the Roosevelt Administration Vonnegut defended him in 1941 in a column: "The mud-slingers are good. They'd have to be good to get people hating a loyal and sincere patriot. On second thought Lindbergh is no patriot – to hell with the word it lost it's [sic] meaning after the Revolutionary War." (The Cornell Daily Sun October 13 1941)
In 1940 Vonnegut started to study biochemistry at Cornell; his father who funded his education had recommend that he should study chemistry rather that the humanities. However Vonnegut also wrote satirical anti-war articles for the student newspaper Cornell Sun. When Japan attacked Pearl Harbor Vonnegut volunteered in 1943 for military service. "Good! They will teach you to be neat!" his father said.
Vonnegut was sent to Europe. He was taken as a prisoner in the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944. After being transported to Dresden an old cultural town he worked there making a diet supplement for pregnant women. Between February 13 and 14 the Royal Air Force and United States Air Force made heavy raids on Dresden. At that time Vonnegut was a prisoner in a meat-locker under a slaughterhouse and was among the few people to survive the total destruction of the city. Later he was employed by the Germans to dig out corpses. Dresden was occupied in 1945 by Soviet troops and Vonnegut was repatriated to the United States.
After the war Vonnegut studied anthropology at Chicago University from 1944 to 1947 but his M.A. thesis 'Fluctuations Between Good and Evil in Simple Tales' was rejected. However in 1971 the anthropological department accepted his novel Cat's Cradle (1963) in lieu of a thesis and Vonnegut war awarded the degree. In the book Vonnegut explores destructive rationality of Western science and the turn towards mysticism which was just then beginning to take hold among students in the USA and Europe. In 1945 Vonnegut married a childhood friend. They had two daughters and a son and also adopted the three children of Vonnegut's sister who died of cancer in 1958.
Vonnegut worked for over three years as a public relations man for General Electric's research laboratory. His first science fiction story 'Report on the Barnhouse Effect' was published in Collier's Weekly in September 1950. After selling also other stories Vonnegut quit his "goddam nightmare job" as he described it in a letter to his father and moved with his family to Cape Cod (the Cape) Massachusetts. Between 1950 and 1963 Vonnegut published 45 stories which appeared in such publications as The Saturday Evening Post Cosmopolitan Esquire and the Ladies' Home Journal. "During most of my freelancing" Vonnegut recalled in 1969 in an interview "I made what I would have made in charge of the cafeteria at a pretty good junior-high school." Actually the magazines paid well for short fiction in the 1950s. Vonnegut's stories has been collected in Canary in a Cathouse (1961) Welcome to the Monkey House (1968) Bagombo Snuff Box (1999) and While Mortals Sleep (2011).
Vonnegut's first novel Player Piano (1952) was a tale of black humour. The story is set in the future where scientists and engineers of vast corporations attempt to automate everything. As a result the functions of human beings are gradually taken over by machines. Noteworthy Vonnegut also prophesied the collapse of the Soviet Union under the impact of American know-how. This work labelled Vonnegut as a sciece-fiction writer although the author himself though that he had written a novel about people and machines. Noteworthy Mother Night originally published in paperback in 1961 and republished in 1965 in hardcover was a non-sf novel about the "true" identity of a double agent.
Before his breakthrough novel Slaughterhouse Five Vonnegut wrote The Sirens of Titan (1959). It featured a character for whom the events of history take place simultaneously. Cat's Craddle his fourth novel which also gained attention among the broad readership was about a scientist a Nobel laureate named Felix Hoenikker who has created a chemical Ice-Nine that turns all water into ice. Absentmindedly he is responsible for the end of the world. The English writer Douglas Adams a fan of Vonnegut took the comedy of apocalypse a few steps further in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1979) in which Earth is demolished to make way for a hyperspace bypass.
Slaughterhouse Five combined historical facts and science fiction. At the time of its publication and even to this day it is a rare American novel that presented Germans as victims of war. Vonnegut also placed the atrocity in the larger context of human history. "Thank God I was in Dresden when it was burned down" Vonnegut once said meaning he had something to write about that he had experienced himself. Vonnegut depicts the Allied firebombing of Dresden seen through the eyes of Billy Pilgrim a kind of descendant of Voltaire's Candide. Billy finds peace of mind after being kidnapped by Tralfamadorians. He learns that time is not necessarily moving in a liner fashion and that the secret of life is to live only in the happy moments. Billy lives on Earth and on the distant planet Tralfamadore responding to events with the resignated slogan "So it goes".
For roughly twenty years from 1950 to 1970 Vonnegut led much as his fictional alter ego Kilgore Trout the anonymous life of a drugstore-rack writer who is said to have been modelled on the science fiction writer Theodore Sturgeon. A novel attributed to Kilgore Trout written by Philip José Farmer was published in 1975 under the title Venus on the Half-Shell. In 1979 Vonnegut divorced his first wife and married the photographer Jill Krementz. An innate pessimism central to Vonnegut's oeuvre did not make the author's later years any easier. In 1984 he made a suicide attempt. Vonnegut did not specify the culprit responsible for the ills of the world but viewed misfortunes as a part of our common nature or coming by chance.
Happy Birthday Wanda June (1971) was loosely based on the last book of Homer's Odyssey. The novel grew from a play entitled Penelope in which Harold Ryan a big game hunter and male chauvinist the "Odysseus" was modelled after Ernest Hemingway. Since Breakfast of Champions or Goodbye Blue Monday (1973) Vonnegut used self-consciously and mockingly his public personality as the author-narrator. Robert Altman planned to film the book in the mid-1950s Alan Rudolph wrote the script for him but they never got it made and lost the right. Eventually Rudolp's adaptation in which Bruce Willis played the suicidal Pontiac dealer Dwayne Hoover and Albert Finney was Kilgore Trout was released in 1999. The film failed both critically and commercially.
In Jailbird (1979) and Deadeye Dick (1983) Vonnegut explored idealized Mid-western middle-class values and the social and political course of American history in this century. Vonnegut's commandments for a better world were deceitfully simple: honor the Sermon of the Mount stop exploiting and killing people be kind to everyone. Sometimes Vonnegut turned against his radical reputation and made chauvinist statements: "Educating a beautiful woman is like pouring honey into a fine Swiss watch: everything stops."
Vonnegut's later novels received mixed reviews and he was accused of recycling essentially the same ideas. "And what is literature Rabo" he argued on the art of writing in Bluebeard (1987) "but an insider's newsletters about affairs relating to molecules of no importance to anything in the Universe but a few molecules who have the disease called 'thought.'" Hocus Pocus (1990) the author's thirteenth novel was set in the years following the defeat of the Vietnam war. With Timequake (1997) Vonnegut struggled for ten years. Instead of throwing it away the author published it with fragments of autobiography. The novel was again about Kilgore Trout thrown into a world set back ten years from February 13 2001 to February 17 1991. Inside the story Vonnegut makes comments on all kinds of matters between heaven and earth.
Vonnegut's other works include plays essays critics and TV plays. Although Vonnegut announced that Timequake would be his last book he started again another novel If God Were Alive Today about a stand-up comedian. His essays written after Timequake Vonnegut collected in A Man Without a Country (2005). On January 2000 Vonnegut was hospitalized for smoke inhalation after a fire at his home. Vonnegut had tried to extinguish the flames with a blanket. The fire broke out on the top floor of his townhouse at East 48th Street where he reportedly had been watching the Super Bowl in his study. Kurt Vonnegut died on April 11 2007 in Manhattan New York after suffering irreversible brain injuries as a result of a fall at his home.
Some rights reserved Petri Liukkonen (author) & Ari Pesonen. Kuusankosken kaupunginkirjasto 2008
'"You know - we've had to imagine the war here and we have imagined that it was being fought by aging men like ourselves. We had forgotten that the wars were fought by babies. When I saw those freshly shaved faces it was a shock. "My God my God – " I said to myself "it's the Children's Crusade."' (in Slaughterhouse Five)
Kurt Vonnegut Jr. was born in Indianapolis. His father Kurt Sr. was a architect. In Galápagos (1985) Vonnegut wrote: "When I got to be sixteen though I myself had arrived at the conclusion my mother and the neighbors had reached so long ago: that my father was a repellent failure his work appearing only in the most disreputable publications which paid him almost nothing. He was an insult to life itself I thought when he went on doing nothing with it but writing and smoking all the time – and I mean all the time."
For the ten years before World War II Vonnegut's father was almost constantly unemployed and anti-German feelings and cultural prejudices were later seen in Vonnegut's novel Slapstick or Lonesome No More! (1976). Vonnegut himself was proud of his German heritage. When Charles Lindbergh caused a controversy with his claim that three groups are pressing the U.S. toward war the British the Jewish and the Roosevelt Administration Vonnegut defended him in 1941 in a column: "The mud-slingers are good. They'd have to be good to get people hating a loyal and sincere patriot. On second thought Lindbergh is no patriot – to hell with the word it lost it's [sic] meaning after the Revolutionary War." (The Cornell Daily Sun October 13 1941)
In 1940 Vonnegut started to study biochemistry at Cornell; his father who funded his education had recommend that he should study chemistry rather that the humanities. However Vonnegut also wrote satirical anti-war articles for the student newspaper Cornell Sun. When Japan attacked Pearl Harbor Vonnegut volunteered in 1943 for military service. "Good! They will teach you to be neat!" his father said.
Vonnegut was sent to Europe. He was taken as a prisoner in the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944. After being transported to Dresden an old cultural town he worked there making a diet supplement for pregnant women. Between February 13 and 14 the Royal Air Force and United States Air Force made heavy raids on Dresden. At that time Vonnegut was a prisoner in a meat-locker under a slaughterhouse and was among the few people to survive the total destruction of the city. Later he was employed by the Germans to dig out corpses. Dresden was occupied in 1945 by Soviet troops and Vonnegut was repatriated to the United States.
After the war Vonnegut studied anthropology at Chicago University from 1944 to 1947 but his M.A. thesis 'Fluctuations Between Good and Evil in Simple Tales' was rejected. However in 1971 the anthropological department accepted his novel Cat's Cradle (1963) in lieu of a thesis and Vonnegut war awarded the degree. In the book Vonnegut explores destructive rationality of Western science and the turn towards mysticism which was just then beginning to take hold among students in the USA and Europe. In 1945 Vonnegut married a childhood friend. They had two daughters and a son and also adopted the three children of Vonnegut's sister who died of cancer in 1958.
Vonnegut worked for over three years as a public relations man for General Electric's research laboratory. His first science fiction story 'Report on the Barnhouse Effect' was published in Collier's Weekly in September 1950. After selling also other stories Vonnegut quit his "goddam nightmare job" as he described it in a letter to his father and moved with his family to Cape Cod (the Cape) Massachusetts. Between 1950 and 1963 Vonnegut published 45 stories which appeared in such publications as The Saturday Evening Post Cosmopolitan Esquire and the Ladies' Home Journal. "During most of my freelancing" Vonnegut recalled in 1969 in an interview "I made what I would have made in charge of the cafeteria at a pretty good junior-high school." Actually the magazines paid well for short fiction in the 1950s. Vonnegut's stories has been collected in Canary in a Cathouse (1961) Welcome to the Monkey House (1968) Bagombo Snuff Box (1999) and While Mortals Sleep (2011).
Vonnegut's first novel Player Piano (1952) was a tale of black humour. The story is set in the future where scientists and engineers of vast corporations attempt to automate everything. As a result the functions of human beings are gradually taken over by machines. Noteworthy Vonnegut also prophesied the collapse of the Soviet Union under the impact of American know-how. This work labelled Vonnegut as a sciece-fiction writer although the author himself though that he had written a novel about people and machines. Noteworthy Mother Night originally published in paperback in 1961 and republished in 1965 in hardcover was a non-sf novel about the "true" identity of a double agent.
Before his breakthrough novel Slaughterhouse Five Vonnegut wrote The Sirens of Titan (1959). It featured a character for whom the events of history take place simultaneously. Cat's Craddle his fourth novel which also gained attention among the broad readership was about a scientist a Nobel laureate named Felix Hoenikker who has created a chemical Ice-Nine that turns all water into ice. Absentmindedly he is responsible for the end of the world. The English writer Douglas Adams a fan of Vonnegut took the comedy of apocalypse a few steps further in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1979) in which Earth is demolished to make way for a hyperspace bypass.
Slaughterhouse Five combined historical facts and science fiction. At the time of its publication and even to this day it is a rare American novel that presented Germans as victims of war. Vonnegut also placed the atrocity in the larger context of human history. "Thank God I was in Dresden when it was burned down" Vonnegut once said meaning he had something to write about that he had experienced himself. Vonnegut depicts the Allied firebombing of Dresden seen through the eyes of Billy Pilgrim a kind of descendant of Voltaire's Candide. Billy finds peace of mind after being kidnapped by Tralfamadorians. He learns that time is not necessarily moving in a liner fashion and that the secret of life is to live only in the happy moments. Billy lives on Earth and on the distant planet Tralfamadore responding to events with the resignated slogan "So it goes".
For roughly twenty years from 1950 to 1970 Vonnegut led much as his fictional alter ego Kilgore Trout the anonymous life of a drugstore-rack writer who is said to have been modelled on the science fiction writer Theodore Sturgeon. A novel attributed to Kilgore Trout written by Philip José Farmer was published in 1975 under the title Venus on the Half-Shell. In 1979 Vonnegut divorced his first wife and married the photographer Jill Krementz. An innate pessimism central to Vonnegut's oeuvre did not make the author's later years any easier. In 1984 he made a suicide attempt. Vonnegut did not specify the culprit responsible for the ills of the world but viewed misfortunes as a part of our common nature or coming by chance.
Happy Birthday Wanda June (1971) was loosely based on the last book of Homer's Odyssey. The novel grew from a play entitled Penelope in which Harold Ryan a big game hunter and male chauvinist the "Odysseus" was modelled after Ernest Hemingway. Since Breakfast of Champions or Goodbye Blue Monday (1973) Vonnegut used self-consciously and mockingly his public personality as the author-narrator. Robert Altman planned to film the book in the mid-1950s Alan Rudolph wrote the script for him but they never got it made and lost the right. Eventually Rudolp's adaptation in which Bruce Willis played the suicidal Pontiac dealer Dwayne Hoover and Albert Finney was Kilgore Trout was released in 1999. The film failed both critically and commercially.
In Jailbird (1979) and Deadeye Dick (1983) Vonnegut explored idealized Mid-western middle-class values and the social and political course of American history in this century. Vonnegut's commandments for a better world were deceitfully simple: honor the Sermon of the Mount stop exploiting and killing people be kind to everyone. Sometimes Vonnegut turned against his radical reputation and made chauvinist statements: "Educating a beautiful woman is like pouring honey into a fine Swiss watch: everything stops."
Vonnegut's later novels received mixed reviews and he was accused of recycling essentially the same ideas. "And what is literature Rabo" he argued on the art of writing in Bluebeard (1987) "but an insider's newsletters about affairs relating to molecules of no importance to anything in the Universe but a few molecules who have the disease called 'thought.'" Hocus Pocus (1990) the author's thirteenth novel was set in the years following the defeat of the Vietnam war. With Timequake (1997) Vonnegut struggled for ten years. Instead of throwing it away the author published it with fragments of autobiography. The novel was again about Kilgore Trout thrown into a world set back ten years from February 13 2001 to February 17 1991. Inside the story Vonnegut makes comments on all kinds of matters between heaven and earth.
Vonnegut's other works include plays essays critics and TV plays. Although Vonnegut announced that Timequake would be his last book he started again another novel If God Were Alive Today about a stand-up comedian. His essays written after Timequake Vonnegut collected in A Man Without a Country (2005). On January 2000 Vonnegut was hospitalized for smoke inhalation after a fire at his home. Vonnegut had tried to extinguish the flames with a blanket. The fire broke out on the top floor of his townhouse at East 48th Street where he reportedly had been watching the Super Bowl in his study. Kurt Vonnegut died on April 11 2007 in Manhattan New York after suffering irreversible brain injuries as a result of a fall at his home.
Some rights reserved Petri Liukkonen (author) & Ari Pesonen. Kuusankosken kaupunginkirjasto 2008
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