Home
Archive
Newsletters
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise

Reflections on Kurt Vonnegut, a Man of Funny Fearlessness

By Reverend Billy, AlterNet. Posted April 13, 2007.


In memory of Kurt Vonnegut, the novelist, socialist and humanist whose friendship and late-in-life peace activism should inspire us all.

Share and save this post:

      

      

Share on Facebook       

AlterNet Social Networks:
follow us on twitter
find us on Facebook

In Special Coverage

Belief:
Is Blind Faith in God and the Bible a Modern Invention?
Devilstower

Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Who's Paying for the Recession Most of All? Young Workers
Lizzy Ratner

DrugReporter:
Lies About Marijuana Drive People to a Much More Harmful Drug -- Booze
Steve Fox

Environment:
Why Max Baucus' 'No' Vote on the Climate Bill May Really Help Its Passage
Jeff Mcmahon

Food:
Soda Helps Make Americans Unhealthy and Fat -- Will Soda Tax Prevail Despite Pushback by Beverage Industry?
Christine Spolar, Joseph Eaton

Health and Wellness:
Do We Really Want to Enshrine Insurance Monopoly into Law? This and 5 Other Complaints About the Health Bill
John Nichols

Immigration:
NYC Marathon Raises Question of Who Is American Enough?
James E. Johnson, Jr.

Media and Technology:
How Biased Media Can Brainwash You
Melinda Burns

Movie Mix:
The Yes Men: Pranksters Out to Fix the World
Mark Engler

Politics:
4 Ways the Stupak Amendment Deprives Women of Access to Abortion
Jessica Arons

Reproductive Justice and Gender:
How the Stupak Amendment Radically Undermines Abortion Rights
Rachel Morris

Rights and Liberties:
"My Kids Want to Hide Their Identity; They're Scared Someone Will Attack Us": U.S. Muslims Being Targeted
Jaisal Noor

Sex and Relationships:
9 Silly Things People Say When They Hear You Don't Want Kids (And Ways to Counter Them)
Liz Langley

Take Action:
G-20 Meetings: Nothing Much Happened in the Suites, and There Was Too Much Punch in the Streets
Laura Flanders

Water:
Why Natural Gas Is Not a Clean Energy Panacea
Stan Cox

World:
10 Suicides a Month at Ft. Hood -- War Stress Is Taking Soldiers to the Brink
Dahr Jamail

More stories by Reverend Billy

Advertisement
Upcoming AlterNet stories on Digg

My friendship with Kurt Vonnegut blossomed in the last years and months of Kurt's life, after 9/11. He was a dedicated friend, all his friends knew it, and he taught me about the creativity of friendship, with his careful postcards and his rhythm of gifts. His first gift was always the funny fearlessness.

He encouraged us to sing and preach in Union Square in the week after 9/11. "Go! Just go!" Or he would tell us to "Go down to Ground Zero and preach the First Amendment!" And we'd say, "You come with, Kurt -- we'll send a car!" And he'd say, "I'll be with you in spirit. I'm tired." But he never seemed that tired to me. He had powerfully mixed feelings about ending life. As a child of a mother who took her life, he always talked about death as a choice.

But then, as he grew older and older, he was busily creative all the time. When he came to our shows, he would make up names for gods and saints with us. He thought hard about what post-religious worship was and would surprise us with disconcertingly basic questions. I see they unearthed his prayer to "Our Lady of Perpetual Astonishment" -- reprinted in the New York Times yesterday.

He came to our 9/11 anniversary service at St. Mark's, in September of 2002, where a ten year old boy read aloud from Slaughterhouse-Five. Mostly, though, we'd have our visits at his home, sit in the living room, or go to the girl-watching stoop, an old-fashioned high stoop fronting his East 48th Street home, and just let the talk go. He would bide his time, waiting to think, with utterly gracious descriptions of friends. Then gradually his visions took on their famous, off-the-cuff hallucinatory bite. In the time of these late wars - Kurt Vonnegut's response was something to behold. I don't complain that I didn't know him when he was younger. Now feel that I wasted time demanding his approval, which he lent until he couldn't, but I wish I had all those minutes and hours back. Because Kurt was on a roll. "Nietzsche got a raw deal! The puritans of course need to reject him. But let's read him again!" Or, "Would a President be so afraid of peace that he would imitate a psychotic until he WAS one? Bush is a psychotic on purpose. Consciously so. He calls it patriotism."

At the turn of the millennium he became the beloved old crank of American letters, and of the New York literary scene. Although he is always compared to Mark Twain, he was a bit more like the great writers who established New York as a literary center, Poe, Melville and Whitman. Like them, Kurt was an outsider, at odds with the stylish uptown of the salons, emerging as he did from the World Wrestling Association of the book world -- a science fiction writer from the Midwest. He was accepted here when he could no longer be resisted, and finally had the home on the sound and the townhouse, too. But the boldness never left him, because he practiced it in small ways every few minutes, as he painted, as he went to his stoop to watch the world. He always practiced his sneaky casual epigrams. Short sentences that had a quality of everyday modesty, but would then address all of our lives at once. "Reverend, we don't need your jazz riffs. Just say it plain. And no semi-colons!"

Suddenly when the World Trade Towers came down, he was among the only public people who knew what to say. There was a thorough absence of guidance toward peace. I remember only Susan Sontag, Joan Baez, and Lewis Lapham (Kurt's friend who used the phrase "American Jihad" in Harper's within a couple months of the attacks.) You will recall that this was a time when the New York Times and the New Yorker both, in those critical days of September, were ready to go to war. A peace march of 10,000 would be demoted to page 8 of the Metro section. The theaters were shuttered, much to their shame. The arts stopped, religion and the academy were dazed -- and Rudy and Bush rampaged. But Kurt Vonnegut was still down under the Dresden fire-bombing of all those jingoists. His bottom line was peace, and he was talking peace immediately after 9/11 -- really the great test for moral counsel, the test of our age.

Kurt lost his footing on the stoop in front of his home. Girl-watching again. Maybe he saw "Our Lady of Perpetual Astonishment" and became astonished with her. Kurt fell, and if he had the classic life-flash-before-the-eyes, the way they say it happens, then he fell and fell through so many pages, and so many open wonderings by Kilgore Trout, and so many unlikely inventions -- like those special bombers that sucked flames away from children and healed the countryside. ... Oh, think of all that hard-working healing in his 84 years - the impossible job of outwitting violent America.

Walking with him on 2nd Avenue, you could see that people would stop a block away and smile when his white head appeared. His unsentimental comedies created a kind of listening in his millions of readers. We felt a distinctive kind of listening and talk, a gentle back and forth of words, on matters of life and death. We all feel that we talked with Kurt, don't we? Which isn't very possible, but it is as necessary as peace.

Digg!    Share on facebook   submit to reddit    Bookmark on Delicious   Stumble This  

See more stories tagged with: kurt vonnegut

Reverend Billy is pastor of the Church of Stop Shopping and author of What Would Jesus Buy? Fabulous Prayers in the Face of the Shopocalypse.

Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from AlterNet! Sign up now »


Advertisement
Advertisement

 

Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
KV dead
Posted by: Monitor523 on Apr 13, 2007 7:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So it goes.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Socialists are intelligent.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Apr 13, 2007 8:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Though they might appear to be wrong, they can be incredibly intelligent and persuasive.

Witness Upton Sinclair's writings.

And witness KV's works, please.

All very enlightening, regardless whether one hold economic freedoms of individuals a boon or a bust.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Socialists are intelligent. Posted by: albrechtkrausse
It The Other Side's Turn
Posted by: NoPCZone on Apr 13, 2007 8:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ann Richards, Molly, now KV.

I wish nobody any ill, but could the next be from the other side?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

RIP Kurt. He knew that the two parties in the USA are one-in-the-same.
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Apr 13, 2007 9:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To wit:
In his appearance on NOW, Kurt Vonnegut gave his views on the contemporary state of American democracy:
"We have only a one party government. It's the winners. And then everybody else is the losers. And the winners divided into two parties. The Republicans and the Democrats. What a charade the combat between the Republicans and the Democrats is. It's rich kids...We had to choose between two members of Skull and Bones!"

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

So It Goes
Posted by: floridajudy on Apr 13, 2007 10:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I read of Vonnegut's death, I cried. I've reached an age when I read the obituaries, dreading to see the names of friends. But when your heroes die, it really hits you in the gut. His was a unique voice, cranky and compassionate.

God bless you Mr. Vonnegut. I'll always remember to avoid semicolons.

"Kurt is up in heaven now". And the world is a lesser place.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Good bye
Posted by: NeilDeal on Apr 13, 2007 11:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read Slaughterhouse 5 in high school. The teacher told us about Dresden but didn't tell us why Kurt wrote that book, in that way. Years later, in a college class I had to read it again. As a slightly older man I seemed to grasp more of what he said. I also finally read the forward to the book where he explained his reasons for writing Slaughterhouse 5 in the way that he did.

Even though he served bravely as an army scout, he chose to portray the main character of the book as a frail chaplain's assistant. He did this after hearing the concerns of the wife of his army buddy. She was afraid that he was going to write a book that glorified war. She didn't want him to write a story in the fashion of the war movies that were made after WWII. A story that would make naive young boys want to go to war.

What an amazing message. I am saddened that he is gone. Who could possibly fill his shoes?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Adios Kurt
Posted by: talkville on Apr 13, 2007 11:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the eulogy. Indeed a singular, flesh and blood comrade, struggling to the last. Let the labor continue. A rich "estate" has been left to us, each and all.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Well said talkville Posted by: citizen chump
HST and now KV
Posted by: dadanbetty on Apr 14, 2007 6:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was just starting or rather trying to get over the death of HST and now 25+ months later Kurt decided to move into the next dimension. I need some good, mind soothing drugs!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: HST and now KV Posted by: Zarquan
» I'm a dope Posted by: Zarquan
» You're not a dope, Zarquan Posted by: citizen chump
Harrison Bergeron
Posted by: jefhadist on Apr 14, 2007 6:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My class reread "Harrison Bergeron" yesterday. And a generally rowdy bunch of me-firstering adolescents were stunned into a silent awe. There couldn't be a more fitting example of Kurt's power to get us to transcend...at least I can't think of one.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

God Made Mud
Posted by: tsb713 on Apr 14, 2007 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As best as I can remember, without going and finding the passage from "Cat's Cradle", here is what I would consider the epitome of Vonnegut................

God made mud to sit up.

Mud sat up, looked around and asked,"What is the purpose?"

God asked, "Must there be a purpose?"

Mud said, "Yes"

God said, "Then I leave you to think of it."

And God went away.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: God Made Mud Posted by: lessbread
À bientôt and thank you
Posted by: Knowmad on Apr 14, 2007 8:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm so glad you were a writer, so I can visit you when I miss you.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Memories of Kurt Vonnegut
Posted by: omatravel on Apr 14, 2007 9:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was a field representative for the Alabama Education Association when, in the 1980s in Haleyville, Al, among the reasons given for firing a young teacher was that he had included Slaughterhouse Five in an optional reading list for his students. When the ACLU took his case, Vonnegut learned that one of his books was involved and called the teacher; the young man was so surprised that he thought it was a prank call. But he soon learned of Vonnegut's fidelity to justice as he was the recipient of Vonnegut's largesse in the form of subsistence pay during his hearings; Vonneugt paid an amount equal to the discharged teacher's salary for months.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Origin of Kilgore Trout
Posted by: diogenes on Apr 14, 2007 10:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is an apocryphal anecdote, and maybe somebody knows a truer source of the name but what I learned was this: Kilgore is the name of a commode and the "Trout" part referred to turds that hadn't been flushed. Be sure to read the extract from Kurt Vonnegut's forthcoming memoirs linked here: Custodians of chaos, and so it goes. RIP, Mr. V.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Origin of Kilgore Trout Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Origin of Kilgore Trout Posted by: diogenes
Fare the Well, Kurt
Posted by: kk33deg on Apr 14, 2007 10:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
His books changed my life.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Kurt Vonnegut Was a Friend of Mine
Posted by: red maple on Apr 14, 2007 11:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Kurt Vonnegut once wrote that that people who lived in New York were allowed to say that other such people were their "friends” even if they had met only once, however briefly - perhaps just by nodding and mumbling in a reception line or at a supermarket check-out.

I worried some about his stipulation that this convenience was available only to actual New Yorkers. I was also unsure about his meaning. Perhaps it was a comment on the superficiality of friendship, especially among Gotham’s literati. Perhaps not.

I talked with him only once. It was almost twenty years ago. We sat side-by-side on the steps of the side entrance to a church in Toronto, where he was scheduled to give a speech. He smoked his Pall Malls as I wondered aloud if he he had not succumbed to "American exceptionalism," or worse, Manhattan snobbery - even in the service of sweet satire.

Why couldn’t we expand the application of the word “friend” and maybe increase - however slightly and subtly - the fact of friendship? Why not, I added, imagine that this device could be made mandatory, and not used just by people who wished to inflate their reputations by claiming association with their great and noble "friends." After all, I went on, if everyone to whom we had ever uttered a word - even in resentment or in rage - immediately became our friend, the murder rate might decline markedly, and wars would become much more difficult to wage.

He smiled warmly. I have never lived in New York. My friend's smile was endorsement enough.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

"Life is no way to treat an animal." —Kilgore Trout
Posted by: Philip Newton on Apr 14, 2007 11:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph: The only proof he needed for the existence of God was music."
—Kurt Vonnegut, A Man Without a County

"And if I should ever die, God forbid, I hope you will say, 'Kurt is up in heaven now.' That's my favorite joke."
—Kurt Vonnegut, the same

http://backwardscity.blogspot.com/

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Donald The Anarchist
Posted by: dbarber on Apr 15, 2007 1:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can't believe I was just talking with a friend of mine about him last week. He was always one of those writers that inspires conversation. I guess that's all a writer can hope for, although I know his hopes ranged wider than that. I know he would like to think that something he said or wrote made someone act kinder or just more thoughtfully. I hope so too. Whaddya say, Repubs? Can this be a Year of Living Decently? It's not too late...

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

GOD BLESS YOU, DR. VONNEGUT - PART I
Posted by: Ullern on Apr 15, 2007 7:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ullern, 22. June 2003


Dear Kurt Vonnegut,

Reading your Kevorkian blessings today. Just wanted to say thank you for being in my life for the past 27 years. – Albeit a quarter globe away across the Atlantic (– the deepest water we have). I’ve been in it, never across it (– it feels that way too). I’m 44 now. Norwegian still.

First met you in 1976, through a presentation in the pages of Dagbladet, our third biggest daily. I was 17 then. They coupled you with Charles Bukowski, as “new American writers”. Always eager for the latest countercultural goodies I went to Tanum, Oslo’s biggest English book carrying bookstore. Although the title put me off a bit, they convinced me to choose “Slaughterhouse 5”. It hooked me. Tnx. Over the next weeks I kept hitting the store for more titles, until they ran out. As the years piled up, I’ve always been alert for more from you. It was a reminder of my own approaching middle age, when you announced ”Timequake” to be your last novel, you being an old man. I didn’t like it (i.e. for that to be your last novel – the novel itself I loved), but I concede your point. You’re my father’s age, early 1920’ies-editions. He’s been a drinking man too. Me not. Still alive, I’m happy to say. My father, that is. And me. Anyway you sound young, as ever. Good going.

I reckon I’ve got all your books now. I’ve even got the great “The Eden express” by your son Mark. Loved it for the wide vistas of land and mind. Done my own bout of psychedelics and altered states (mostly psychotechnology-induced, yoga-meditation, fasting & such). “The Eden express” didn’t put me off. Quite the contrary, it sounded like important exploration. Came with the territory – countercultural, radical, psychedelic. Honest searchers. Even Mark came back, famously. Quite decent, most of us, whence we got the hang of it.

I’ve also got the book by your friend Kilgore Trout “Venus on a half-shell”. Good romp. Don’t know whether this pleases you, but in it I found your style to be well approached.

What I particularly love about your stories is the message of common decency and reciprocity you always land us in, entering from the weirdest, most humorous and imaginative angels (spelling intended) of experience. The bad things in the world don’t seem so bad then, when we can trust in the existence of the notion of common decency. Tnx again. Of course, I’m also greatly enamoured of your very personal touch in your fabulous forewords. As I’m sure many of us readers experience them, they’ve been like intermittent personal letters over the years, telling us first-hand the proceeding story of your life – up and down, and the round-abouts. Always landing in a decency of attitude. Good showing.

It’s the longest day of the year here. Mid-summer. That’s good near Oslo, Norway. It stays sunset until sunrise. The interval between day and day consists of some magical hours of bluish shades in weightless suspension of day, night not reached.

Sun’s out just now, after a rain-squall earlier. Brilliant diamond-drops on the leaves of bushes and trees. Tiny rainbows shimmering everywhere. From the farmhouse I’m looking out over lush fields in all shades of edible green, to distant blue hills under white-blue skies. Blue-green planet indeed. If this isn’t nice, I don’t know what is. What does happiness look like? – A lot like this, I must conclude. Else I would be stupid – and we can’t have that.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

GOD BLESS YOU, DR. VONNEGUT - PART II
Posted by: Ullern on Apr 15, 2007 7:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Elsewhere in the world over the horizon, e.g. in Iraq, U.S.-troops are conducting up-scale highway-robbery. My government collude the best they can: near-surreptitiously, to avoid being too overtly in breach of our beloved but often hypocritical social-democratic values. That makes me complicit in the robberies and murders. But the mould is straining. Here too. Even if a cracking will be more survivable here than a cracking in fabric of the huge political forces now unleashed over in your country. Too many people dying too fast too painfully too predictably too callously caused all over the world, except in the rich and sunny spots. I’m ashamed of being born into this complicity.

Thus my own life-task is defined, left to me to take seriously: improving harmony between the extremes of what I experience and perceive. Deep reciprocity applied, on all levels, is the method: the Golden Rule of Ethics. I couldn’t agree with you more there. – Besides, over the years you’ve participated well in teaching me and reaffirming that. Even with your dark streaks, and of course because of your humorous handlings of them in your works, you’ve been one of the staunch supports in the world to me. These are deeply moral as well as practical tasks that I can see we rich yet justice-alert westerners are constantly handed. Rich man’s burden. Only harmonizing will do. Improve proportions, to increase local and global equality. Keep finding ecological, sociological, psychological sanity, as defined by harmony. Harmony listened for and understood in musical terms, interpreted in the specific mathematical ratios, and then conferred onto all material conditions. Harmony treated as a concrete spiritual tool. Singing pure, beautiful overtones of harmony in our selves and our activities. Then the dark conditions will supply only raw material and energy for the harmonious songs we sing, until the excess darkness is depleted and transformed into sunny shades.

Oh yes, I do love my high horse – what a panoramic view it gives!

Meanwhile the sun still shines. Some big gulls have landed in the sprouting fresh-green fields of oats, grazing on our oat-sprouts. Scavenging our mono-cultures. Ok, so they’re entitled. Plus they give me something to wonder if I should be annoyed about, eating the crops. Big, fat animals those gulls are, these flying dinosaur-descendants. I could be looking at a parallel to our own descendants, once we’re finally dinosaurs, in ecological terms. Maybe we'll become rat-sized winged humans, scurring for the crops of some worms evolved into intelligent, nimble, 10-foot nematodes?

Never mind. I just needed to write myself away from the dark corners and back into a laugh.

Thanks so much for doing exactly that kind of mood-swinging adjustments to us all over the years. We need to both get in there, touch factual reality, and get out again.

Eventually I tried Bukowski too. Not quite enough optimistic buoyancy.

When you make your definite trip through the blue tunnel, no return, be sure to take my blessings with you. They may be a good thing to carry, where not a lot may be carried. Pls carry my blessings around meanwhile, too: God bless you, Dr. Vonnegut.

Take the best of care with those dark currents of yours, making sure not to drop your contact with them, but pls safely nuance them away from the valuable tender currents right next to them, somewhere under the rib-cage (aka. heart).

The world sure is full of darkness needing to be recognized, not slipped into and neither denied away - if for no other reason than somewhere to apply the loving decency we can muster.

That’s our boon – we get to feel the merciful decency when we apply it.

Love,
Smiles &
Devotion

– with high regards

Ole Ullern

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

KV Jr- the wizard
Posted by: rah on Apr 15, 2007 12:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
yes it truly does seem like KV Jr. talks directly to me through his writings. in fact, just reading KV Jr gives me a false and selfish sense of privelege and pride, like no one else reads KV Jr, like he writes just for me! thankfully KV Jr makes and will make other people glow.
___

maybe you would like to read david hoppe's story about KV Jr at nuvo.net

___

maybe you would also like to include langston hughes to the mark twain-kv jr comparison... i thnk all of them write about groups/communities with a similar humanistic quality- or something.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Sirens of Titian
Posted by: cfuz7 on Apr 15, 2007 8:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An overlooked great piece. Read it several times in various states of awareness, and yes some of them warped by substances in my youth (ok, have kids in their 30's now, started young). I recommend this to any KV fans, should you have missed this one. Dang, I don't have a copy now...most characters go through every sort of abasement and end up sorta noble and kind.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Sirens of TITAN - nm Posted by: zipper696
So it goes
Posted by: Tom Degan on Apr 16, 2007 2:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please, folks, when you're finished reading all of the excellent tributes to Kurt Vonnegut here on AlterNet, have a look at the tribute that I composed on my blog:
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

Hi ho.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

the punchline of all punchlines
Posted by: sunspot on Apr 17, 2007 12:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
TING-A-LING, YOU SON OF A BITCH!
-Timequake

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Reflections on Kurt Vonnegut, a Man of Funny Fearlessness
Posted by: dobbs on May 12, 2007 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Reflections on Kurt Vonnegut, a Man of Funny Fearlessnessebony gay pics - lesbian porn black cocks free mature hardcore action GEFFEDEVS766GERTT9009ED older naked gay men - hardcore gallery their admirers mature woman porn mature horse hardcore - free animal free animal sex animal porn girls fucking dating thai women - hardcore sex of thailand one night in bangkok the american older naked gay men - hardcore gallery their admirers mature woman porn mature black sex - lesbian sex free amateur supermassive black in these movies ebony stockings - regular price stockings and seamed stockings free hardcore tgirl com - looking for chicks with dicks al comentario shemale pics

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement