According to Kurt Vonnegut‚ “...there would always be wars... they were as easy to stop as glaciers” (Vonnegut 3). And from these wars come the stories of those who struggled through them. Night by Elie Wiesel‚ Maus by Art Spiegelman‚ and Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut all show how the choices people make when they are in danger are generally selfish‚ attempting to save their own lives and rarely aiding anyone else. People are selfish by nature and will only look out for their own interests
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Slaughterhouse Five Kurt Vonnegut Critics of Kurt Vonnegut’s are unable to agree on what the main theme of his novel Slaughterhouse Five may be. Although Vonnegut’s novels are satirical‚ ironical‚ and extremely wise‚ they have almost no plot structure‚ so it is hard to find a constant theme. From the many people that the main character Billy Pilgrim meets‚ and the places that he takes us‚ readers are able to discern that Vonnegut is trying to send the message that there will always be death‚ there
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Breakfast of Champions Have you ever read a book and enjoyed it‚ but once you were finished you wondered what it was really about? You wondered if the book had a deep meaning that you had to sit and think about or if the book was just for entertainment purposes only and had no meaning whatsoever. For me‚ Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. was this type of book. Breakfast of Champions is a story about two men who are going to eventually meet each other at a festival for the arts
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My knowledge of World War One was solely built on the works of European writers‚ which I had a chance to read in high school and university. The books such as All Quiet on the Western Front by German writer Erich Maria Remarque‚ Death of a Hero by English poet Richard Aldington‚ Doctor Zhivago by Russian novelist Boris Pasternak and The Good Soldier Švejk by Czech satirist Jaroslav Hašek shaped my view on the subject‚ giving me a chance to see the history from many different perspectives. However
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Dreadful Destruction of Dresden Slaughter-House-Five written by Kurt Vonnegut is a novel about a character named Billy Pilgrim‚ who was a Prisoner of War in WWII who fought during the bombing of Dresden in Germany. Since the war Billy has never been the same returning home. He constantly travels back in time to the memories of being in Dresden and how horrible the war was. Billy has insane time travel stories throughout the book making readers believe he is crazy. Kurt Vonnegut himself was a
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In The Five People You Meet in Heaven‚ the novelist Mitch Albom says‚ “In order to move on‚ you must understand why you felt what you did and why you no longer need to feel it.” His quote has a connection to the novel The Things They Carried. Titled “The Man I Killed”. One of the characters defames an innocent Vietcong soldier by killing him with a grenade. Even though it is a war‚ murder fills Tim with feelings of guilt and shock. To ensure readers Fathom these emotions‚ the author uses various
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Once There Was a War picks up with the author recalling the tragic bombing of a theater. In the writer’s next report he details the relationship between the British and the Americans. Furthermore‚ The writers describes Private Big Train Mulligan in two correspondences. The author visits a hospital where he meets a soldier has received a hand injury. The soldier is scared he will be crippled for life: however‚ while the author is there he accidentally moves his hand. Next‚ the writer describes a trip
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Kurt Vonnegut. I’ve never heard of him‚ at least ‘til this point in my life. I don’t know how‚ because he seems like the kind of author we’d of learned about or even have read some of his pieces by now. I like his style. He’s one of those writers that talks to the reader as opposed to talking above them. He uses those simple words that Stephen King was talking about in Toolbox‚ a cut and dry vocabulary. No fluff like that Ralph Waldo Emerson. Based off of How to Write With Style alone‚ it’s easy
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1. 2. At one point in the novel‚ Billy’s time-jumps stabilize for a moment. Vonnegut writes‚ “This was when Billy first came unstuck in time. His attention began to swing grandly through the full arc of his life‚ passing into death‚ which was violet light. There wasn’t anybody else there‚ or [sic]any thing. There was just violet light- and a hum.” (Vonnegut 43) In this scene‚ he continues to “swing” through stages‚ back into life‚ until “he was in pre-birth‚ which was red light” (43). These two colors
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Melanie Music Professor Rose English 1302 02 February 2011 2BRO2B‚ WTF? “2BRO2B” by Kurt Vonnegut‚ Jr. is about a first-time father named Edward K. Wehling‚ Jr. that is about to have triplets and must decide which one of them will live. During this period‚ population control was practiced. Being that Wehling was having triplets‚ he had to chose a child to live while deciding which family member would die in order to bring in this new life. As he is waiting for the babies to be delivered
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