![]() |
Discussion: Slaughterhouse Five by Kurk Vonnegut (spoilers)
What did you all think of the August Book Club selection, Slaughterhouse Five by Kurk Vonnegut?
|
Meh! It was a waste of time reading it.
|
Can you elaborate? What did you dislike about it? The plot? The characters? The writing style?
|
Nothing about the story grabbed my interest, I felt nothing for any character in the book. There was not much in the way of a plot in the book and that "so it goes..." was most annoying. Ten minutes after finishing it I couldn't of told you much of anything about the book.
A Few weeks after reading it all I remember was he was a captive of war, the English captives thought they were better then everyone else and he may or may not have been time traveling (maybe he was just crazy) I don't even remember how it ended. |
Vonnegut always makes me laugh... in that "I may as well laugh so I don't cry" sort of way. So in that way, Slaughterhouse Five had me in stitches. Billy Pilgrim was obviously Vonnegut himself; "time-traveling" to avoid (or buy time to assimilate) the various atrocities he witnessed in WWII—both as a soldier and a prisoner of war. Poignant and darkly humorous, his telling of the firebombing of Dresden by the allies alone makes the story worthwhile to me. I know it wasn't in any of the history texts I was forced to read in the first 17 years of my life. I admit it, though: I love everything Vonnegut has ever written—even the stuff he didn't care for himself (I believe he gave himself a C- on Cat's Cradle)—and I'll miss him greatly. A true American literary icon.
NOTE: for those who just can't seem to relate to his disjointed, ofttimes vulgar style, I would suggest reading some of his various memoirs first. They help to put a lot of his fiction into perspective. Science Fiction fans (a label Vonnegut wan't nuts about his work being classified under, btw) would do best starting with a novel like The Sirens of Titan to warm up to his style. Slaughterhouse Five is one of the handful of books that I'll re-read from time to time. |
I was wondering if any of the time-travel and extraterrestrial visits were intended to be real or a product of Billy Pilgrim's deluded mind. Billy Pilgrim was a real person, according to Kurt Vonnegut. His name was Edward R. Crone, Jr., and he was one of Vonnegut's fellow-prisoners in Dresden. Crone, who was not cut out for being a soldier, gave up completely on life and eventually died in that POW camp. He refused to eat, wouldn't talk, and spent his dying days staring at a wall. Surely Vonnegut's ideas for this novel came about as he pondered what mysterious thoughts must have been going on in the mind of his fellow prisoner in those days.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
The book is structured like a Tralfamadorean novel:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
Disjointed, confusing, annoying and characters not worth caring about. That's the summary. |
"So it goes" seemed to me to always mark death in any form. Due to the constant repetition it is like an exclamation mark to make the reader notice just how often dying happens, but on the other hand it also says: so what, let's move on.
The use of it reminded me of "The Road", in which there also was a constant repetition of the same short phrases (I'm scared. I know, I'm sorry ). Overall I found it to be an interesting read with a certain off-humor. |
I liked the "so it goes" because of it's minimisation of death. The whole Tralfamadorean philosophy taken on by Billy seemed to be a way of coping with attrocity and death.
To me there was no question that the time travel was actually occurring. I took it completely as a delusion, a psychotic break. I thought the novel was clever and well written. I agree that the author provided no characters with which you could draw any personal connection. But this was quite deliberate - even stated within the story itself. To me, this had the effect of again minimising what was happening to the characters (much like stating "so it goes" after every reference to death). What BenG states about the structure is an astute observation. But what I find interesting is that the stated beauty of the Tralfamadorean is just not that beautiful. It still remained bleak, depressing. Even a Tralfamadorean point of view does not make the horror of war any prettier or more satisfying. To me, this is the point of the book. Despite all attempts to minimise, the reality can not be portrayed in a pleasing way. Anyway - this is what I felt about the book. I could be completely off-base as I haven't read any critiques on it. |
Yes, "so it goes" is the Tralfamadorean philosophy. Vonnegut is not saying it should be a human philosophy. Billy Pilgrim uses it as a coping mechanism but the "powers that be" and the warmakers use it more cynically, excusing wartime atrocities.
|
One of my favorite parts of the book is the war in reverse passage.
|
I disliked the book. There seemed to be no coherent plot, no storyline. Some incidents are described well, but that's not enough for me.
The Tralfadorians and the time travelling, looking back at the book, must be delusions. If they were real, there's no proper exploration of the effects there would really be. I suspect that their reality is intentionally ambiguious, which I don't like. If the novel is speculative fiction, then they should be 'real' in the novel. If it's not speculative fiction, then they're poor delusions, and over-emphasized. I disliked the book. |
It was a book that took some concentration to read. I'm usually a pretty fast reader, but this realtively short book (less than 150 pages) took me several days opposed to the xiuple of hours many other books that size. I had to read it in small chunks (and have other books running too).
Someone said in the "vote threat" it was almost like poetry, and I agree with that. The repeated "so it goes" fits well with poetry, and I liked it. While reading I thought about the time travel and why it was there. It seems to me too that it's some sort of coping mechanism, from the days before post-war-this-and-that. The Trafalmadore episodes (when actually there, not just the time travel), including the gorgeous lady, had me thinking "what was he smoking?!" I liked the book! |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
It would be nice if all wars were played in reverse that way. |
Certain themes were repeated in a way that led me to suppose their repetition was the product of Billy's fantasizing. One was Weary's pornographic picture of a woman and a Shetland pony that showed up later in a bookstore that incidentally had books by Kilgore Trout. Another was the barber/barbershop motif. Billy's father was a barber. On the plane that crashed, there was a barbershop quartet. After the Dresden bombing the dazed guards "looked like a silent film of a barbershop quartet". Then there was the close resemblance between Billy Pilgrim's Tralfamadorian experiences and the writings of Kilgore Trout. Such repetitions and coincidences convince me that Billy Pilgrim no more left Dresden than did his real life counterpart.
|
Still reading, I had a crazy month :-(
|
Slaughterhouse Five didn't do much for me. I'm not sure why. It reminded me a lot of A Catcher in the Rye.
|
Quote:
|
This doesn't seem to be drawing much discussion. :(
|
What a coincidence!
I've just read the book a week ago without being aware of the pick by the book club. I like the style as it was very easy to follow the plot. Loved the characters and as others said the "so it goes" philosophy of removing the significance of death and of course adding the comic relief(reacting to deaths in that way was really amusing). The thing that I was mostly interested in, after reading the book, was if the first chapter was fictional since it wasn't an introduction but a chapter of a book. :D There's not much to "analyse". I've liked the book and it encouraged me to get other works from its author :) |
I read the book several months ago. I liked it well enough; it was refreshing. I wasn't born at that time, so reading it gave me a different perspective, even though I have to admit I wasn't as affected as I would have liked to be. I understand it and do appreciate it, but it really is different when you're a different generation. I almost seem detached, in a way.
|
Yeah, you have to remember that this was written at the height of the Vietnam War.
Ixt, I would suggest reading Cat's Cradle next. It's my favorite and it's probably his most accessible book. If you liked the first chapter then you may want to read his non-fiction books, which are mainly collections of essays and articles: Wampeters, Foma and Granfalloons, Palm Sunday, Armageddon in Retrospect, and A Man without a Country. |
Quote:
I actually prefer his non-fiction stuff over his fiction--but certainly not by a whopping amount or anything. ;) |
Want to enjoy the book even more? Look at some well detailed aerial photos of Dresden after the bombing then go back and re-read the book. It really does make a world of difference to have that image firmly embedded in your mind... at least it did for me.
I loved the book the first time I read it. And the second time, third time, etc. As for the Tralfamadorian's, they were real. What's real is real whether others are aware of the reality or not is a moot point. |
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:59 PM. |
Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 3.8.5, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
MobileRead.com is a privately owned, operated and funded community.