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Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut

12 Apr 07 - 12:58 AM (#2022873)
Subject: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Amos

Kurt Vonnegut, whose dark comic talent and urgent moral vision in novels like "Slaughterhouse-Five," "Cat's Cradle" and "God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater" caught the temper of his times and the imagination of a generation, died last night in Manhattan. He was 84 and had homes in Manhattan and in Sagaponack on Long Island.


Mr. Vonnegut suffered irreversible brain injuries as a result of a fall several weeks ago, according to his wife, Jill Krementz.

Mr. Vonnegut wrote plays, essays and short fiction. But it was his novels that became classics of the American counterculture, making him a literary idol, particularly to students in the 1960s and '70s. Dog-eared paperback copies of his books could be found in the back pockets of blue jeans and in dorm rooms on campuses throughout the United States.


12 Apr 07 - 01:11 AM (#2022875)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Bee-dubya-ell

"So it goes."


12 Apr 07 - 01:17 AM (#2022878)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Peace

"Those who believe in telekinetics, raise my hand."


12 Apr 07 - 01:43 AM (#2022889)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Lonesome EJ

A true original. One of the authors that was required reading in my college years. Farewell to Kilgore Trout...


12 Apr 07 - 01:43 AM (#2022891)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: mrdux

". . . the big trouble with dumb bastards is that they are too dumb to believe there is such a thing as being smart."

                      -- from The Sirens of Titan (1959)


12 Apr 07 - 01:45 AM (#2022892)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: catspaw49

......wow........One of those you know is always around and now he's not. The only sci-fi I could read and enjoy was his and Adams'. I think jis stories were down my alley as they were tales combining weirdness and great humor. How could you not love that?

Spaw


12 Apr 07 - 01:46 AM (#2022893)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Ernest

"This is no disgrace. A lot of good people can`t make it on the outside" (Jailbird)


12 Apr 07 - 02:28 AM (#2022900)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Amergin

Holy shit...he was one of my most favourite authors....I think I will have to reread his stories again...


12 Apr 07 - 02:54 AM (#2022907)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: mrdux

I had just reread a couple of them . . . they've aged gracefully.


12 Apr 07 - 04:13 AM (#2022925)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: s&r

Harrison Bergeron IV(?) was more predictive than 1984 IMO

That was a Doozy

Stu


12 Apr 07 - 06:02 AM (#2022968)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: alanabit

He was a compassionate and decent man - a survivor of the war, who used his time well.


12 Apr 07 - 06:18 AM (#2022973)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: George Papavgeris

A great mind, a great thinker, a great humanist - and a bloody good writer to boot.

I am now so glad that I introduced my daughter to his books 4 months ago and she just finished reading the last one last week. She at least had the chance to see him on some of his interview excerpts on youTube.

The bad chemicals got him, or his wiring got faulty, I guess. But at least he's with Kilgore Trout now.


12 Apr 07 - 06:41 AM (#2022983)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: avrosimones

he was (and still is!) my favourite writer. A big loss.


12 Apr 07 - 08:21 AM (#2023034)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: John of the Hill

God Bless You, Mr. Vonnegut


12 Apr 07 - 08:59 AM (#2023066)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: dwditty

I had the great fortune to live next door to the Vonneguts on Cape Cod. This was back when his son, Mark, and I were schoolmates and Kurt was selling a strange new car called a Saab - late 50's. Later, when their family doubled in size overnight, the Vonnegut household was the place for all to congregate. Kurt would be right there, leading a group of 20 or so 5-6th graders on a tromp through the marshes - sinking in mud up to our waist. Other times, he did things like play Santa on Cristmas eve for the 3 or 4 families that gathered. He would often read us poetry (James Tate - The Lost Pilot comes to mind), as we all gathered around the giant round coffee table in the candle lit living room. It wasn't much later that we all found out that Kurt had gone and made himself a famous author. He was not always an easy person for a kid to be around - he did not let "wrong thinking" go by unchallenged. Other times stand out with amazing clarity even now - almost 50 years later.

Bee-dubya-ell, got it right above.....and so it goes.

dw


12 Apr 07 - 09:05 AM (#2023074)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Wesley S

Thanks for the story dwditty. Please feel free to share more of them. He was one of my favorite authors too. He had an amazing life - a survivor of the Dresden bombings.


12 Apr 07 - 09:14 AM (#2023080)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: GUEST,Shimrod

Rest in peace, Kurt. Although I've never really forgiven you for renouncing your origins in Science Fiction once you became famous.


12 Apr 07 - 09:40 AM (#2023102)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Amos

dwd, thanks for a wonderful, if brief, recitation, What a priveleged accident that was, being his neighbor!! I would be gratified to hear of other memories of his life if any come to mind.

Vonnegut was as much of a role model as I ever had among writers. I loved his whackiness, but I loved more his growling insistence on making human thought worthwhile, on popping the granfaloons of life, his sharp nose for the authentic. I loved that he built wild, out-of-bounds, alien fiction that somehow always came home at the end to deeply human issues. I loved that he would put his heart down in the first paragraph.

A


12 Apr 07 - 09:53 AM (#2023118)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: katlaughing

Farewell, sir.


12 Apr 07 - 09:55 AM (#2023122)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: katlaughing

An August 2006 article reported:

    He has stalled finishing his highly anticipated novel If God Were Alive Today - or so he claims. "I've given up on it ... It won't happen. ... The Army kept me on because I could type, so I was typing other people's discharges and stuff. And my feeling was, 'Please, I've done everything I was supposed to do. Can I go home now?' That's what I feel right now. I've written books. Lots of them. Please, I've done everything I'm supposed to do. Can I go home now?"


12 Apr 07 - 10:16 AM (#2023146)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: bobad

If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC

    * Vonnegut's Blues For America 07 January, 2006 Sunday Herald


12 Apr 07 - 10:38 AM (#2023170)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Folk Form # 1

One of the few decent men on this planet. I remember in my late teens, he had a profound effect on my life. His book, Slaughtehouse 5, will remain his legacy. Rest in peace, Kurt, you will be missed.


12 Apr 07 - 10:47 AM (#2023186)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: dwditty

Yes, Wesley, this is certainly a day of memories. Just before I shipped out to Vietnam, Kurt gave me a galley-proof copy of his then unpublished Slaughterhouse...I read it on the flight over, and I credit the book with helping me get through that next year.

dw


12 Apr 07 - 11:06 AM (#2023209)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: GUEST,TIA

From 'Spaw up above:

"I think jis stories were down my alley..."

Boy does that give an unwanted visual.

Oh yeah, and Vonnegut: he gave me a line that I must use 20 times a day...

"So it goes."


12 Apr 07 - 11:15 AM (#2023213)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Bee-dubya-ell

I was going to say something about how much I'd love to see what Vonnegut-in-his-prime would have written about today's world, when I realized he probably wouldn't have said it much differently than he did fifty years ago. "No damned cat. No damned cradle."


12 Apr 07 - 11:23 AM (#2023221)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Bill D

and a serious realignment of some karass today....the wampeter is gone.


The Final Sentence
"If I were a younger man, I would write a history of human stupidity; and I would climb to the top of Mount McCabe and lie down on my back with my history for a pillow; and I would take from the ground some of the blue-white poison that makes statues of men; and I would make a statue of myself, lying on my back, grinning horribly, and thumbing my nose at You Know Who"


12 Apr 07 - 11:31 AM (#2023228)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: EBarnacle

There was a presentation of one of his antiwar speeches as the opener on the Brian Lehrer show this morning. It will probably be posted shortly.


12 Apr 07 - 11:54 AM (#2023238)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: dwditty

There is also a great Vonnegut interview on You Tube that was done on Second Life.


12 Apr 07 - 12:10 PM (#2023256)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Amos

The Fifty-third Calypso [ 2 ]

Oh, a sleeping drunkard
Up in Central Park,
And a lion-hunter
In the jungle dark,
And a Chinese dentist,
And a British queen--
All fit together
In the same machine.
Nice, nice, very nice;
Nice, nice, very nice;
Nice, nice, very nice--
So many different people
In the same device.


12 Apr 07 - 02:06 PM (#2023372)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Big Al Whittle

Sue you have seen.......


12 Apr 07 - 02:32 PM (#2023405)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: EBarnacle

That earlier note should have included at wnyc.org


12 Apr 07 - 03:18 PM (#2023446)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: RangerSteve

A friend of mine in high school recommended "Mr. Rosewater", and after I read it, I was hooked. While I was in the Navy (1969-73), I noticed a lot of people reading his books, and for years after, too. Even people who normally wouldn't read a book if it wasn't assiged in school willing read Vonnegut. I believe he did for adult literature what the Harry Potter books did for kids. I'm trying to think of any other fiction writers whose books I've read over and over, and I can only think of Mr. Vonnegut. Sometimes I'd find myself reading the same passages over and over, just because they were so well written. I don't understand how anyone can have a favorite Vonnegut book. Each one was great in its own way.


12 Apr 07 - 03:44 PM (#2023470)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: GUEST,Art Thieme

A favorite line from a thing he wrote called "Between Time And Timbuktu" (a paraphrase--from a dramatized TV version of it.):

"Whenever I begin to feel the least bit self important, I think of all the dirt that never did have a chance to sit up and look around."

Art Thieme


12 Apr 07 - 04:28 PM (#2023501)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Micca

At a time (40-45 years ago) when one couldnt openly admit to being Wiccan, if I had to fill in a form , under Religion I would put Bokononism, I very much enjoyed Vonneguts writing Thanks to my brother introducing me to him at the beginning of the 60's I will now trawl through the book shelves and see what I still have, but apart from Cats cradle the most memorable was Slaughterhouse 5 RIP Mr V


12 Apr 07 - 04:49 PM (#2023516)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: MaineDog

Great authors never die, they simply move on to the next page.
MD


12 Apr 07 - 05:06 PM (#2023537)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: open mike

I seem to recall hearing of a fire that damaged or destroyed his apartment some years ago..perhaps in New York?

here are some other links..an NPR story with Renee Montagne:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1426772

a Salon web page which features Kurt reading:
http://archive.salon.com/audio/fiction/2001/02/20/vonnegut/index

HE WAS HOSPITALIZED IN 2000 WITH SMOKE INHALATION AFTER A CIGARETTE
STARTED A FIRE IN HIS APARTMENT (caps lock un-intentional)
http://www.vonnegutweb.com/vonnegutia/interviews/int_crimson.html

more:
http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/tuvonnegut.html

Author Kurt Vonnegut dies;

WWII vet saw absurdity of war

NEW YORK - Kurt Vonnegut, the satirical novelist and World War II veteran who captured the absurdity of war and questioned the advances of science in darkly humorous works such as "Slaughterhouse-Five" and "Cat's Cradle," died yesterday at age 84, his wife said.

Vonnegut, who often marveled that he had lived so long despite his lifelong smoking habit, had suffered brain injuries after a fall at his Manhattan home weeks ago, said his wife, photographer Jill Krementz.

The author of at least 19 novels, many of them best-sellers, as well as dozens of short stories, essays and plays, Vonnegut relished the role of a social critic. He lectured regularly, exhorting audiences to think for themselves and delighting in barbed commentary against the institutions he felt were dehumanizing people.

a biography/timeline: http://www.millikin.edu/aci/crow/chronology/vonnegutbio.html


in this article it is mentioned how he and his wife adopted
several nephews and nieces when their parents died within
days of each other..this must be what is meant by the former
poster who said the family doubled in size over night...
(i thought they had twins or triplets!)
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070411/LOCAL/704110581

family plans private service:
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070412/LOCAL/704120576/0/BUSINESS


12 Apr 07 - 05:13 PM (#2023553)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Mrrzy

What an author. I have to go to a used bookstore now...


12 Apr 07 - 05:18 PM (#2023562)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: vectis

I devoured his books for years.
He was an original...
Sadly missed


12 Apr 07 - 06:01 PM (#2023604)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Big Al Whittle

did they taste different from say......... The Bible or jeffrey Archer?


12 Apr 07 - 08:02 PM (#2023674)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Bobert

Not to fear folks, Kurt has a plan...

He, Tim Leary and Carlos Castinada all enetered into a ***freeze pact*** and will be sent up to an asteriod to join Ken Keasey, Jeack Keroack and Jeri Garcia where they will all be thawed and begin work on their debut "The Asteriods" CD entiltled "Ouuta This World" which will be out in in late summer but, hey...

... it get better!!!

Woodstock III, August, 2008!!!

Get yer tickets early...

B;)


12 Apr 07 - 08:16 PM (#2023679)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Joybell

Save me a ticket Bobert. I want to be there.
Joy


12 Apr 07 - 08:16 PM (#2023680)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Bobert

Yer on, Joy...


12 Apr 07 - 09:59 PM (#2023747)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Joe_F

I read his first novel, _Player Piano_, when I was in high school and it was new. I think it has worn well, all the more so for being out of date. The computer revolution as GE would have done it!

I am also grateful for _Mother Night_ (especially the quotation from Goethe), Slaughterhouse Five, and (I also have a lot of bad chemicals) Breakfast of Champions.


12 Apr 07 - 11:11 PM (#2023798)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: GUEST,punkfolkrocker

his books were immense influence in my mid teens back in the 70's..

cant remember much about them now..

but in one of the books.. something about freezing water maybe ????

was a description of an old married couple on an aeroplane..

cant remember why..
but at that time..
something about the way he wrote about them affected and amused me deeply..

now i guess in all possibility..

me and the mrs may have become that couple ..


weird old world !!!??


12 Apr 07 - 11:45 PM (#2023813)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: RangerSteve

The freezing water was probably Ice Nine - a form of ice that never thaws and freezes anything it touches. I believe that was "Cats Cradle", but I could be wrong.


13 Apr 07 - 04:22 AM (#2023924)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Wilfried Schaum

MESSAGE
to Kurt Vonnegut, Jr
Infantryman, Scout, POW in Germany


Listen
So it goes
An on and on
Imagine that!

Peace

252053 A dec 87

written on a Xmas evening after having read some of his works again ...
and again ...


13 Apr 07 - 08:26 AM (#2024062)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: clueless don

Something he said in an article has stayed with me. I can't remember the exact words, but a close paraphrase is:

I write about the things that are of concern to a college sophomore. College sophomores are concerned about things like "Is there a God?" and "Do we have free will?" But older people always act as if these questions have been resolved.

To my mind, those questions are still of interest. Rest in peace, Mr. Vonnegut.

Don


13 Apr 07 - 08:28 AM (#2024068)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Donuel

Kurt's freezing weapon was something the DID was fascinated with at one time.

one drop would freeze any body of water...ad infinitum which eneded up freeaing all water on Earth.


13 Apr 07 - 09:56 AM (#2024169)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Greg F.

from A Man Without A Country by Kurt Vonnegut, 2005:

    Many years ago I was so innocent I still considered it possible that we could become the humane and reasonable America so many members of my generation used to dream of. We dreamed of such an America during the Great Depression, when there were no jobs. And then we fought and often died for that dream during the Second World War, when there was no peace.

    But I know now that there is not a chance in hell of America becoming humane and reasonable. Because power corrupts us, and absolute power corrupts us absolutely. Human beings are chimpanzees who get crazy drunk on power. By saying that our leaders are power-drunk chimpanzees, am I in danger of wrecking the morale of our soldiers fighting and dying in the Middle East? Their morale, like so many lifeless bodies, is already shot to pieces. They are being treated, as I never was, like toys a rich kid got for Christmas.

....

    For some reason, the most vocal Christians among us never mention the Beatitudes. But, often with tears in their eyes, they demand that the Ten Commandments be posted in public buildings. And of course that's Moses, not Jesus. I haven't heard one of them demand that the Sermon on the Mount, the Beatitudes, be posted anywhere.
     "Blessed are the merciful" in a courtroom.? "Blessed are the peacemakers" in the Pentagon?
    Give me a break!

....

    Albert Einstein and Mark Twain gave up on the human race at the end of their lives, even though Twain hadn't even seen the First World War. War is now a form of TV entertainment, and what made the First World War so particularly entertaining were two American inventions, barbed wire and the machine gun.

    Like my distinct betters Einstein and Twain, I now give up on people, too. I am a veteran of the SecOnd World War and I have to say this is not the first time I have surrendered to a pitiless war machine.
    My last words? "Life is no way to treat an animal, not even a mouse."
    Napalm came from Harvard. Veritas!
    Our president is a Christian? So was Adolf Hitler.

    What can be said to our young people, now that psychopathic personalities, which is to say persons without consciences, without senses of pity or shame, have taken all the money in the treasuries of our government and corporations, and made it all their own?

...



REQUIEM

The crucified planet Earth,
should it find a voice
and a sense of irony,
might now well say
of our abuse of it,
"Forgive them, Father,
They know not what they do."

The irony would be
that we know
what we are doing.

When the last living thing
has died on account of us,
how poetical it would be
if Earth could say,
in a voice floating up
perhaps
from the floor
of the Grand Canyon,
"It is done."
People did not like it here.




14 Apr 07 - 07:01 PM (#2025501)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: katlaughing

There's a neat article at Salon about him.


14 Apr 07 - 09:47 PM (#2025600)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Donuel

HE IS STILL ALIVE !!!!!!!!!!!! in a way

I just heard him read his interviews that he did from beyond the grave.

In this work...

What he did was hire Kevorkian to send him into the light, somehere between the blue light and the Pearly Gates and interviewed people who had already died. He interviewed people like Eugene Debs.

The interviews are priceless.

I heard them read by Kurt himself just today on NPR.


14 Apr 07 - 11:32 PM (#2025660)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: robomatic

When I was very young and determined to read all the science fiction books in the Needham Public Library I happened upon Player Piano which was a real mind stretcher because while it was very readable it was thoroughly unconventional.

I admire Kurt Vonnegut the man, what he stood for, what he would not stand for, and for those he admired and to some extent resembled(Mark Twain).

I was also moved by his son Mark's book Eden Express.

And So It Goes


15 Apr 07 - 12:57 AM (#2025700)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: BK Lick

Many links to audio and video archival material about Vonnegut can be found on this NPR page Click me!.


15 Apr 07 - 12:32 PM (#2025987)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Amos

The man was a master of BS of the most humane sort.

A brief example from an interview:

ONNEGUT Yes. The Shortridge Daily Echo. There was a print shop right in the school. Students wrote the paper. Students set the type. I've always found it easy to write. Also, I learned to write for peers rather than for teachers. Most beginning writers don't
get to write for peers - to catch hell from peers.

INTERVIEWER So every afternoon you would go to the Echo office -

VONNEGUT Yeah. And one time, while I was writing, I happened to sniff my armpits absentmindedly. Several people saw me do it, and thought it was funny - and ever after that I was given the name "Snarf". In the annual for my graduating class, the class of
1940, I'm listed as "Kurt Snarfield Vonnegut, Jr." Technically, I wasn't really a snarf. A snarf was a person who went around sniffing girls' bicycle saddles. I didn't do that. Twerp also had a very specific meaning, which few people know now. Through careless
usage, twerp is a pretty formless insult now.

INTERVIEWER What is a twerp in the strictest sense, in the original sense?

VONNEGUT It's a person who inserts a set of false teeth between the cheeks of his ass.

INTERVIEWER I see.

VONNEGUT I beg your pardon; between the cheeks of his or her ass. I'm always offending feminists that way.

INTERVIEWER I don't quite understand why someone would do that with false teeth.

VONNEGUT In order to bite the buttons off the backseats of taxicabs. That's the only reason twerps do it. It's all that turns them on. ...


15 Apr 07 - 01:39 PM (#2026031)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Bill D

Saw an edited set of interviews with Vonnegut on the Charley Rose show. He was interesting in that when Rose asked him about a new book, he explained that he had really said all he had to say. He said "all my books are still in print" and that he saw no need to just 'write for the sake of writing'. He was quite willing to explain and reminisce about his writings...but just laughed when urged to produce more.


18 Apr 07 - 08:39 PM (#2029452)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Uncle_DaveO

"Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before. He is full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without having come by their ignorance the hard way."

- KURT VONNEGUT, 1922-2007


19 Apr 07 - 04:30 AM (#2029746)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Wordsmith

I adore Vonnegut. I feel blessed for having had the ability to read and, then, to have been privileged, as all above in this thread, to have read his books. He was a man of true wisdom, who had no qualms about sharing it. I just came from what's left of the Virginia Tech thread. The juxtaposition is mind-blowing. What would Vonnegut have thought of that? Actually, it's all in his work already. Rest, peacefully!


19 Apr 07 - 10:34 AM (#2029973)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: 282RA

Did you know that his brother invented the process of seeding clouds with silver iodide to induce rain?

That's why he says his brother invented rain in Breakfast of Champions. That was my first Vonnegut novel. I've since read most of them. My fave is Sirens of Titan.

Him and Burroughs were my favorite authors. Between them all of the great American novels were produced.

Rented a tent a tent a tent. Rented a tent a tent a tent. Rented a tent, rented a tent. Rented a rented a tent.


20 Apr 07 - 02:03 AM (#2030751)
Subject: RE: Obit: Farewell, Kurt Vonnegut
From: Wilfried Schaum

... and his uncle invented the panic bars