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This American short story writer, novelist, and critic writes:
"I am the son and grandson of Indianapolis architects, who were also good
painters, so it was natural that I should go into the arts. I am a product
of the Indianapolis public schools, which were superb during the Great Depression.
I was told by my father to be anything but an architect. He had been made
gloomy by years and years of very little work. And, when my brother, Bernard,
began to do very well as a chemist, I was given more or less direct order
to become a chemist, too. So I kept away from the arts, which were made to
seem silly and weak, and studied chemistry for three years at Cornell University.
I was delighted to catch pneumonia during my third year and, upon recovery,
to forget everything I ever learned about chemistry and go to war."
"I was a battalion scout and was easily captured. The most interesting
thing I saw during the war, I suppose, was the destruction of Dresden, the
largest single massacre in European history. I was a prisoner of war in a
meat locker under a slaughterhouse when the worst of the firestorm was going
on. After that I worked as a miner of corpses, breaking into cellars where
over a hundred thousand Hansels and Gretels were baked like gingerbread men."
"After the war...I went to the University of Chicago, where they
allowed me to be a graduate student in anthropology, even though I had
no degree. I stayed there for three years, also working as a police
reporter for the Chicago City News Bureau. I went broke and hired out
as a flack for the research laboratory of the General Electric Company
where my brother was doing remarkable work with respect to cloud
physics. I hated it there, but curiously made the closest friends I've
ever had. At the end of my third year I began to sell short stories to Collier's and the Saturday Evening Post
as well as other magazines that were then very fat. I made what seemed
like a lot of money so I began a novel that mocked General Electric,
quit my job, threw a party that was stopped by the police, and moved to
Cape Cod."
Since that time (1951), Mr. Vonnegut's career has encompassed a variety
of similarly varied experiences. His freelance writing has been interspersed
with activities such as "serving as the SAAB dealer for Cape Cod" and "acting
as the entire English department in a school for disturbed children." He
was a lecturer at the University of Iowa Writer's Workshop from 1965-67;
lecturer in English at Harvard University in 1970 and Distinguished Professor
at the City College of New York from 1973-1974. A member of the National
Institute of Arts and Letters, he was the recipient of their literary award
in 1970. In 1971, he received an MA in Anthropology from the University of
Chicago. Kurt Vonnegut currently resides in New York City.
Slaughterhouse Five,
which became a best seller and was made into a film, made Kurt Vonnegut
a literary celebrity. Several of his novels are now required reading at
several universities. Cat's Cradle and The Sirens of Titan
have sold nearly two hundred thousand copies each. Very much in demand
as a lecturer, Mr. Vonnegut has also established himself in the movie
industry with his company, Sourdough Productions. He remains a casual
and unpretentious person. "Over six feet tall, rumpled and shaggy . . .
fourth generation German-American with a drooping moustache, a brow
chevroned like a sergeant major's sleeve, and the eyes of a sacrificial
altar-bound virgin caught in mid-shrug," he says he has "worried some
about why I write books when presidents and generals do not read them."
He concludes that the trick is to catch them at school, "before they
become generals and senators and presidents and poison their minds with
humanity." When asked what sort of writer he would most like to be
known as, Kurt Vonnegut replies, "George Orwell."
In
Kurt Vonnegut's work, characters make frequent encore performances. Science
fiction writer Kilgore Trout first surfaces in God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater, then returns for Breakfast of Champions,
while his son narrates Galapagos. All of Kurt Vonnegut's 17 novels and assorted
nonfiction seems to be taking place in the same loopy universe. Now a 693-page
"authorized compendium," The Vonnegut Encyclopedia,
by Marc Leeds (Greenwood Press) summarizes plots, identifies both fictional
and real-life folks and explains Vonnegutian concepts like "wampeter," which
is any object that unites otherwise unrelated lives.
In 1996, Mother Night went to the silver screen, starring Nick Nolte, Alan Arkin, John Goodman, and a cameo appearance by Mr. Vonnegut himself.
Timequake (Putnam), which the publisher calls Vonnegut's "first full-length work of fiction in seven years (since the novel Hocus Pocus),"
was published in 1997. In Kurt Vonnegut’s presentation, "How to Get a
Job Like Mine," he discusses his own work in a whimsical manner,
touches on current events, his philosophy on everything from the state
of the family, and relationships, war, censorship, perhaps a current
event, and gives the best advice he can to those who would like to
become writers. Book List: Player Piano (1951) Sirens of Titan (1959) Canary in a Cathouse (1961) Mother Night (1962) Cat's Cradle (1963) God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater (1965) Welcome to the Monkey House (1968) Slaughterhouse Five (1969) Happy Birthday Wanda June (1970) Breakfast of Champions (1973) Slapstick, or Lonesome No More (1976) Deadeye Dick (1982) Galapagos (1985) Bluebeard (1987) Hocus Pocus (1990) Fates Worse Than Death (1991) Timequake (1997) Bagombo Snuff Box (1999) God Bless You Dr. Kevorkian (1999)
Scott Poole | Kurt Vonnegut | Jennifer Davis | Garrison Keillor | Sarah Vowell | Dave Barry | Lynda Barry | Christopher Howell | Chris Crutcher | Jonathan Johnson | Joseph Millar | Dorianne Laux | Paul Zimmer | Nance Van Winckel | Natalie Kusz | Terry Davis | Gregory Spatz | Joelean Copeland | John Keeble | William Kittrdge | Annick Smith | John Whalen | Tom I. Davis | Libby Wagner | Harvey Pekar | Phil Condon | Claire Davis | Pete Fromm | Linda Lawrence Hunt | Amanda Lumry | Teri Hein | Greg Delzer | Dan Morris | Fionn Meade | John Reischmann and the Jaybirds | Terry Bain | Jennifer Reid | Kit Seatons
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