NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY Newsweek/The Daily Beast
• The Huffington Post • Kansas City Star • Time Out New York •
Kirkus Reviews This extraordinary collection of personal
correspondence has all the hallmarks of Kurt Vonnegut’s fiction.
Written over a sixty-year period, these letters, the vast majority of
them never before published, are funny, moving, and full of the same
uncanny wisdom that has endeared his work to readers worldwide.
Included in this comprehensive volume: the letter a
twenty-two-year-old Vonnegut wrote home immediately upon being freed
from a German POW camp, recounting the ghastly firebombing of Dresden
that would be the subject of his masterpiece Slaughterhouse-Five; wry
dispatches from Vonnegut’s years as a struggling writer slowly
finding an audience and then dealing with sudden international fame in
middle age; righteously angry letters of protest to local school
boards that tried to ban his work; intimate remembrances penned to
high school classmates, fellow veterans, friends, and family; and
letters of commiseration and encouragement to such contemporaries as
Gail Godwin, Günter Grass, and Bernard Malamud. Vonnegut’s
unmediated observations on science, art, and commerce prove to be just
as inventive as any found in his novels—from a crackpot scheme for
manufacturing “atomic” bow ties to a tongue-in-cheek proposal that
publishers be allowed to trade authors like baseball players.
(“Knopf, for example, might give John Updike’s contract to Simon
and Schuster, and receive Joan Didion’s contract in return.”)
Taken together, these letters add considerable depth to our
understanding of this one-of-a-kind literary icon, in both his public
and private lives. Each letter brims with the mordant humor and
openhearted humanism upon which he built his legend. And virtually
every page contains a quotable nugget that will make its way into the
permanent Vonnegut lexicon. • On a job he had as a young man:
“Hell is running an elevator throughout eternity in a building with
only six floors.” • To a relative who calls him a “great
literary figure”: “I am an American fad—of a slightly higher
order than the hula hoop.” • To his daughter Nanny: “Most
letters from a parent contain a parent’s own lost dreams disguised
as good advice.” • To Norman Mailer: “I am cuter than you
are.” Sometimes biting and ironical, sometimes achingly sweet,
and always alive with the unique point of view that made him the true
cultural heir to Mark Twain, these letters comprise the autobiography
Kurt Vonnegut never wrote. Praise for Kurt Vonnegut: Letters
“Splendidly assembled . . . familiar, funny, cranky . . .
chronicling [Vonnegut’s] life in real time.”—Kurt Andersen, The
New York Times Book Review “[This collection is] by turns
hilarious, heartbreaking and mundane. . . . Vonnegut himself is a
near-perfect example of the same flawed, wonderful humanity that he
loved and despaired over his entire life.”—NPR “Congenial,
whimsical and often insightful missives . . . one of [Vonnegut’s]
very best.”—Newsday “These letters display all the hallmarks
of Vonnegut’s fiction—smart, hilarious and heartbreaking.”—The
New York Times Book Review
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Letters
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780345535399
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter