Slaughterhouse-Five - A Novel
Verlag | Penguin Random House |
Auflage | 1999 |
Seiten | 288 |
Format | 13,3 x 20,3 x 1,6 cm |
C-Format | |
Gewicht | 208 g |
Artikeltyp | Englisches Buch |
ISBN-10 | 0385333846 |
EAN | 9780385333849 |
Bestell-Nr | 38533384EA |
Kurt Vonnegut s masterpiece, Slaughterhouse-Five is a desperate, painfully honest attempt to confront the monstrous crimes of the twentieth century (Time).
Selected by the Modern Library as one of the 100 best novels of all time
Slaughterhouse-Five, an American classic, is one of the world s great antiwar books. Centering on the infamous World War II firebombing of Dresden, the novel is the result of what Kurt Vonnegut described as a twenty-three-year struggle to write a book about what he had witnessed as an American prisoner of war. It combines historical fiction, science fiction, autobiography, and satire in an account of the life of Billy Pilgrim, a barber s son turned draftee turned optometrist turned alien abductee. As Vonnegut had, Billy experiences the destruction of Dresden as a POW. Unlike Vonnegut, he experiences time travel, or coming unstuck in time.
An instant bestseller, Slaughterhouse-Five made Kurt Vonnegut a cult hero in American lite rature, a reputation that only strengthened over time, despite his being banned and censored by some libraries and schools for content and language. But it was precisely those elements of Vonnegut s writing the political edginess, the genre-bending inventiveness, the frank violence, the transgressive wit that have inspired generations of readers not just to look differently at the world around them but to find the confidence to say something about it. Authors as wide-ranging as Norman Mailer, John Irving, Michael Crichton, Tim O Brien, Margaret Atwood, Elizabeth Strout, David Sedaris, Jennifer Egan, and J. K. Rowling have all found inspiration in Vonnegut s words. Jonathan Safran Foer has described Vonnegut as the kind of writer who made people young people especially want to write. George Saunders has declared Vonnegut to be the great, urgent, passionate American writer of our century, who offers us . . . a model of the kind of compassionate thinking that might yet save us fro m ourselves.
More than fifty years after its initial publication at the height of the Vietnam War, Vonnegut s portrayal of political disillusionment, PTSD, and postwar anxiety feels as relevant, darkly humorous, and profoundly affecting as ever, an enduring beacon through our own era s uncertainties.
Rezension:
Poignant and hilarious, threaded with compassion and, behind everything, the cataract of a thundering moral statement. The Boston Globe
Very tough and very funny . . . sad and delightful . . . very Vonnegut. The New York Times
Splendid . . . a funny book at which you are not permitted to laugh, a sad book without tears. Life
Funny, satirical, compelling, outrageous, fanciful, mordant, fecund . . . It s too good to be science fiction, [the critics] would say. But Vonnegut doesn t care, and you won t care, either, because this is a writer who leaps over genres. Los Angeles Times