Wolfpac 08 said:
Slaughterhouse Five - Kurt Vonnegut
Re-read of one of my favorite novels by one of my favorite authors.
I just finished Slaughterhouse Five. I'd like to hear anyone else's thoughts on it.
If you're not familiar with the book, the next few paragraphs are going to be really confusing, if not interest piquing.
It seemed more like a long, stream-of-conciousness essay than a novel. I don't think there was a plot. I'd guess that the aliens represented something, but I'm not sure what. There was some serious references to Christianity, one of which seemed very pro, which is surprising. While reading as an anti-war essay, there is also the strong ideat that time doesn't exist in the way humans see it. I'm still pondering that.
At the end of the audiobook, there is a snippet from an interview where Kurt Vonnegut is talking to an old war buddy. They're talking about the horrors of war, destruction, POWs, and death like it was a football game from 20 years ago. Kurt Vonnegut was a POW, and this book was somewhat autobiographical. They laughed! I think that's incredible and a great statement to end the book with. Sometimes life really sucks, like World War II sucks, but eventually, life does go on and there are good things in it.