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{{quote|Life is no way to treat an animal.|style={{opencite}}}}
= Kurt Vonnegut =
= Kurt Vonnegut =


'''''Kurt Vonnegut''''' ({{thisday|11|November|1922}}—†{{thisday|11|April|2007}}) is an American writer and a top-[[favourite]] author of [[Fabrice]].
'''''Kurt Vonnegut''''' ({{thisday|11|November|1922}}—†{{thisday|11|April|2007}}) is an American writer and a top-[[favourite]] author of [[Fabrice]].
<center><wz tip="Unknown artist's tribute to Vonnegut: fiction more real than reality, or bringing us to Jupiter, if there is something to see there.">[[File:KurtVonnegut-fiction.png|400px]]</wz></center>
<center><wz tip="Unknown artist's tribute to Vonnegut: fiction more real than reality, or bringing us to Jupiter, if there is something to see there.">[[File:KurtVonnegut-fiction.png|400px]]</wz></center>
Favourite works include the everybody's best-loved [[Slaughterhouse 5]], [[Cat's cradle]] and [[the Sirens of Titan]], but one cannot truly enjoy or even understand Vonnegut without reading his other works. Among those, {{I}} have special admiration for [[Breakfast of Champions]], [[Mother Night]], [[Jailbird]] and [[God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater]]. The first book {{I}} read was ''Cat's cradle'', c.&nbsp;[[2010]], which I did not fully understand then. The best first book to read of Vonnegut is probably Slaughterhouse 5 or the Sirens of Titan. I read again Cat's cradle during our [[Icelandic trip (2024)]] and it got me crying. I read [[Deadeye Dick]] and [[Galápagos]] on our long [[PLMCN25]] trip.
Favourite works include the everybody's best-loved [[Slaughterhouse 5]], [[Cat's cradle]] and [[the Sirens of Titan]], but one cannot truly enjoy or even understand Vonnegut without reading his other works. Among those, {{I}} have special admiration for [[Breakfast of Champions]], [[Mother Night]], [[Jailbird]] and [[God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater]]. The first book {{I}} read was ''Cat's cradle'', c.&nbsp;[[2010]], which I did not fully understand then. The best first book to read of Vonnegut is probably Slaughterhouse 5 or the Sirens of Titan. I read again Cat's cradle during our [[Icelandic trip (2024)]] and it got me crying. I read [[Deadeye Dick]] and [[Galápagos]] on our long [[PLMCN25]] trip. I read his final book, [[Timequake]], on my [[Medellin lectures]] trip. It moved me more than the plane that brought me from one continent to the other over the ocean. What a confession, what intimacy.


Vonnegut is often hailed for his dark humour, but this is missing the point entirely. Humour is in his work only because humour is everywhere of quality regarding human affairs that are deep enough. Vonnegut is really about humanity. His work describes the grip of man against everything that is inhumane: the violent, the ugly, the painful. For this reason, war has a particularly central role in his work, and his success (from Slaughterhouse 5) is largely due to the anti-war sentiment from the then ongoing Vietnam war, but as for the dark humour, war is an accessory or by-product only of his thinking. Vonnegut is much deeper than that. This is also why many of his novels have a [[science-fiction]] component. A technically minded person (as he was, having a background in biochemistry), he found the real world too narrow to capture the human spirit and had to stretch in both spiritual, religious and science-fiction dimensions to get closer to his subject. It is remarkable how he came to distrust machines and a society of robots (already evident from his very first novel, [[Payer piano]]). In this sense, Vonnegut belongs with Authors like [[Bernanos]], [[Giono]], [[Gheorgiu]] and to a lesser extent, [[Orwell]] and [[Burgess]].
Vonnegut is often hailed for his dark humour, but this is missing the point entirely. Humour is in his work only because humour is everywhere of quality regarding human affairs that are deep enough. Vonnegut is really about humanity. His work describes the grip of man against everything that is inhumane: the violent, the ugly, the painful. For this reason, war has a particularly central role in his work, and his success (from Slaughterhouse 5) is largely due to the anti-war sentiment from the then ongoing Vietnam war, but as for the dark humour, war is an accessory or by-product only of his thinking. Vonnegut is much deeper than that. This is also why many of his novels have a [[science-fiction]] component. A technically minded person (as he was, having a background in biochemistry), he found the real world too narrow to capture the human spirit and had to stretch in both spiritual, religious and scientific dimensions to get closer to his subject. It is remarkable how he came to distrust machines and a society of robots (already evident from his very first novel, [[Payer piano]]). In this sense, Vonnegut belongs with Authors like [[Bernanos]], [[Giono]], [[Gheorgiu]] and to a lesser extent, [[Orwell]] and [[Burgess]].


== Novels<ref>[https://www.amazon.es/Kurt-Vonnegut-Complete-Library-America/dp/1598535099/ref=sr_1_20?__mk_es_ES=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&crid=1NKMXW7EAFOXG&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.kmf--13lXClJvDS_rEGJahNr-8Mhbwt0qpNJnMsEpaGSG-b5wfqcNGh3yE2j7y6EiXCFe7yCEWAURiCndm_AaPMXsj3erNOPA8hBfjskDLWKeTNwGoYr6_0V15ZdiR2siwnxCmAoWwBBJpTCNA8uUEjauM68IWXZRrMxlvc04qwnwu4oHhZ9dFbrvA3hPF4zYL7e06huy5y6VDkTyJBjoK_5FTP4m7B8bSKxCh9CwmwShUNEY2MSiKVpCBg3Z15eLTJYnFxNOkmyqFovAzR32R6Jz4oxFX-LJU9LckKPFgM.b0wSNs1ikJde5BstxOmZPm5oDxF8q3c8twe8dV9yyFU&dib_tag=se&keywords=timequake&qid=1723983452&sprefix=timequake%2Caps%2C136&sr=8-20#customerReviews Exist as collected works] from the Library of America.</ref> ==
== Novels<ref>[https://www.amazon.es/Kurt-Vonnegut-Complete-Library-America/dp/1598535099/ref=sr_1_20?__mk_es_ES=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&crid=1NKMXW7EAFOXG&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.kmf--13lXClJvDS_rEGJahNr-8Mhbwt0qpNJnMsEpaGSG-b5wfqcNGh3yE2j7y6EiXCFe7yCEWAURiCndm_AaPMXsj3erNOPA8hBfjskDLWKeTNwGoYr6_0V15ZdiR2siwnxCmAoWwBBJpTCNA8uUEjauM68IWXZRrMxlvc04qwnwu4oHhZ9dFbrvA3hPF4zYL7e06huy5y6VDkTyJBjoK_5FTP4m7B8bSKxCh9CwmwShUNEY2MSiKVpCBg3Z15eLTJYnFxNOkmyqFovAzR32R6Jz4oxFX-LJU9LckKPFgM.b0wSNs1ikJde5BstxOmZPm5oDxF8q3c8twe8dV9yyFU&dib_tag=se&keywords=timequake&qid=1723983452&sprefix=timequake%2Caps%2C136&sr=8-20#customerReviews Exist as collected works] from the Library of America.</ref> ==
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* ''[[Hocus Pocus]]'' (1990)
* ''[[Hocus Pocus]]'' (1990)
* ''[[Timequake]]'' (1997)
* ''[[Timequake]]'' (1997)
== Novellas ==
* ''[[God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian]]'' (1999)


== Nonfiction ==
== Nonfiction ==


* ''[[Canary in a Cat House]]'' (1961)
* ''[[Wampeters, Foma and Granfalloons]]'' (1974) {{done|October 2024}}
* ''[[Wampeters, Foma and Granfalloons]]'' (1974) {{done|October 2024}}
* ''[[Palm Sunday]]'' (1981)
* ''[[Palm Sunday]]'' (1981)
* ''[[Nothing Is Lost Save Honor: Two Essays]]'' (1984)
* ''[[Nothing Is Lost Save Honor: Two Essays]]'' (1984)
* ''[[Fates Worse Than Death]]'' (1991)
* ''[[Fates Worse Than Death]]'' (1991)
* ''[[Like Shaking Hands with God]]'' (1999) Interview
* ''[[A Man Without a Country]]'' (2005) {{done}}
* ''[[A Man Without a Country]]'' (2005) {{done}}


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* ''[[Armageddon in Retrospect]]'' the first posthumous collection of his previously unpublished writing, possibly the most important one too
* ''[[Armageddon in Retrospect]]'' the first posthumous collection of his previously unpublished writing, possibly the most important one too
* ''[[Kurt Vonnegut: The Cornell Sun Years 1941–1943]]'' (2012)
* ''[[Kurt Vonnegut: The Cornell Sun Years 1941–1943]]'' (2012)
* ''[[We Are What We Pretend To Be]]'' (2013) -- compiles his first novella ''Basic Training'' and his unfinished (last) novel ''If God Were Alive Today''&nbsp;[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_Are_What_We_Pretend_to_Be:_The_First_and_Last_Works].
* ''[[If This Isn't Nice, What Is?: Advice to the Young]]'' (2013)
* ''[[If This Isn't Nice, What Is?: Advice to the Young]]'' (2013)
* ''[[Vonnegut by the Dozen]]'' (2013)
* ''[[Vonnegut by the Dozen]]'' (2013)
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* ''[[Love, Kurt: The Vonnegut Love Letters, 1941–1945]]'' (2020) Editor Edith Vonnegut
* ''[[Love, Kurt: The Vonnegut Love Letters, 1941–1945]]'' (2020) Editor Edith Vonnegut


There is a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complete_Stories_(Vonnegut) complete stories] collection (which we own), which content is well detailed on the [[Wikipedia]] (for instance it's missing two stories from [[Welcome to the Monkey House]] or one from [[Armageddon in Retrospect]])
There is a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complete_Stories_(Vonnegut) complete stories] collection (that we own), which content is well detailed on the [[Wikipedia]] (for instance, it is missing two stories from [[Welcome to the Monkey House]] and one from [[Armageddon in Retrospect]], making those necessary to possess in isolation).


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDvF-7SVMno Ranking of Vonnegut's novels by a fan] with an interesting remark regarding Vonnegut's own rating in Palm Sunday, inviting me to such a rating before reading about it.
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDvF-7SVMno Ranking of Vonnegut's novels by a fan] with an interesting remark regarding Vonnegut's own rating in [[Palm Sunday]], inviting me to such a rating before reading about it.

Latest revision as of 16:02, 28 October 2025

«Life is no way to treat an animal.»

Kurt Vonnegut

Kurt Vonnegut (11 November (1922)—†11 April (2007)) is an American writer and a top-favourite author of Fabrice.

Favourite works include the everybody's best-loved Slaughterhouse 5, Cat's cradle and the Sirens of Titan, but one cannot truly enjoy or even understand Vonnegut without reading his other works. Among those, I have special admiration for Breakfast of Champions, Mother Night, Jailbird and God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater. The first book I read was Cat's cradle, c. 2010, which I did not fully understand then. The best first book to read of Vonnegut is probably Slaughterhouse 5 or the Sirens of Titan. I read again Cat's cradle during our Icelandic trip (2024) and it got me crying. I read Deadeye Dick and Galápagos on our long PLMCN25 trip. I read his final book, Timequake, on my Medellin lectures trip. It moved me more than the plane that brought me from one continent to the other over the ocean. What a confession, what intimacy.

Vonnegut is often hailed for his dark humour, but this is missing the point entirely. Humour is in his work only because humour is everywhere of quality regarding human affairs that are deep enough. Vonnegut is really about humanity. His work describes the grip of man against everything that is inhumane: the violent, the ugly, the painful. For this reason, war has a particularly central role in his work, and his success (from Slaughterhouse 5) is largely due to the anti-war sentiment from the then ongoing Vietnam war, but as for the dark humour, war is an accessory or by-product only of his thinking. Vonnegut is much deeper than that. This is also why many of his novels have a science-fiction component. A technically minded person (as he was, having a background in biochemistry), he found the real world too narrow to capture the human spirit and had to stretch in both spiritual, religious and scientific dimensions to get closer to his subject. It is remarkable how he came to distrust machines and a society of robots (already evident from his very first novel, Payer piano). In this sense, Vonnegut belongs with Authors like Bernanos, Giono, Gheorgiu and to a lesser extent, Orwell and Burgess.

Novels[1]

Novellas

Nonfiction

Post mortem

There is a complete stories collection (that we own), which content is well detailed on the Wikipedia (for instance, it is missing two stories from Welcome to the Monkey House and one from Armageddon in Retrospect, making those necessary to possess in isolation).

References

  1. Exist as collected works from the Library of America.