killgore Trout was here.
killgore Trout was here.
Kurt Vonnegut died last night. Let us all mourn.
"I just want to disappear"
A buddy of mine played the Pilgrim/Vonnegut character in the premier of the stage adaptation of Slaughterhouse 5 at Steppenwolf. He got to met Kurt and talk about the book/play and Kurt's experiences that led to writing the book. Pretty amazing.
I've been hearing a lot of interviews with Vonnegut - the one that really struck me was him talking about getting home after being in Dresden. There was no media coverage of the fire bombing and the deaths of 30,000 people. Kurt said something to the effect that, well, maybe it never happened and he made it all up. Good to know that today's media haven't slipped that far from the 'good old days.'
I've been hearing a lot of interviews with Vonnegut - the one that really struck me was him talking about getting home after being in Dresden. There was no media coverage of the fire bombing and the deaths of 30,000 people. Kurt said something to the effect that, well, maybe it never happened and he made it all up. Good to know that today's media haven't slipped that far from the 'good old days.'
Kurt Vonnegut wrote:I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around, and don't let anybody tell you different.
Bacon is meat candy.
I went to a lecture he gave at IUPUI. I was all excited about revealing that I suspected him of being Kilgore Trout during the question-answer period. He killed that fantasy right off the bat by openly discussing his Trout books during the lecture.
I read a few of his books, God Bless You Mr. Rosewater and Slaughterhouse Five. I didn't much care for them. I loved Venus on the Halfshell, though.
ZSpiddy
I read a few of his books, God Bless You Mr. Rosewater and Slaughterhouse Five. I didn't much care for them. I loved Venus on the Halfshell, though.
ZSpiddy
http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:qg ... =firefox-a
Edited to so you can see google's cache of the Wilco tribute to Vonnegut.....
Edited to so you can see google's cache of the Wilco tribute to Vonnegut.....
Last edited by charlie on Mon Apr 16, 2007 2:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Kurt Vonnegut
http://www.nndb.com/people/928/000022862/
was one of my favorite atheists. He was brilliant. I think this is brilliant too.
http://www.kurtvonnegut.com/
http://www.nndb.com/people/928/000022862/
was one of my favorite atheists. He was brilliant. I think this is brilliant too.
http://www.kurtvonnegut.com/
"I am downgrading this thing even though I don't send on TR." Blake while on TR
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I started reading Vonnegut when I was around 16. It was a perfect time in my life to be hooked on Vonnegut. His books can be read in a single sitting, which I love. His books are ridiculous, thus funny, apocalyptic and political in nature.
Plus, he's always making fun of the Hoosiers. I dig that in Vonnegut world, Hoosiers are kind of like another species.
Vonnegut also wrote a piece for the Rolling Stone in 1998 about the coming of the millenium; it was around the time I was graduating from high school. I cut it out and still have it saved in a box full of memories from my liberal idealistic youth.
And so it goes.
Plus, he's always making fun of the Hoosiers. I dig that in Vonnegut world, Hoosiers are kind of like another species.
Vonnegut also wrote a piece for the Rolling Stone in 1998 about the coming of the millenium; it was around the time I was graduating from high school. I cut it out and still have it saved in a box full of memories from my liberal idealistic youth.
And so it goes.
"Birth and death are easy. Life is hard." -Tom Robbins in Jitterbug Perfume