Fergus, Quondam Happy Face's Reviews > Slaughterhouse-Five
Slaughterhouse-Five
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Life can be so unutterably sad.
That in a nutshell was my early life; and Kurt Vonnegut’s life.
And young Billy’s too.
But Vonnegut was American, and so was I (by birth at least) - and so is Billy Pilgrim.
And Americans always jazz up their sadness.
And that’s what they all did to get themselves through the War. Big Bands became the perfect anodyne to stark terror.
And zany behaviour - my own, Vonnegut’s and Billy’s - became the preferred personal way for American bullied innocents to jazz up their sadness.
***
Living in a meat cooler under a city while your country is Decimating that city can only leave a traumatic scar.
BIG TIME.
So you jazz it up big time yourself - you start to prefer your mini-vacations on Trafalmador over more mundane hot spots.
Like, for example, foxholes.
So it goes, with Kurt and Billy, and me, and with cringing, bullied kids like us EVERYWHERE. Because where there is carrion like us there the crows gather. And crows don’t even chew you before swallowing.
And they have gizzards to take care of your bones.
You know, had Kurt Vonnegut been a believer he might have considerably mollified his trauma.
Or even reading books by and about declared Aspies, like I do now, may have helped do the trick.
But alas, dear Kurt, back then they shot first and asked questions later.
If they’d have heard you were an Aspie back then they would have leered and just told you to keep marching and shut up.
No wonder their Jazz was in as much demand as a good, stiff drink back then.
For you too, Kurt - you picked up their old-time jazzy zaniness...
And just marched on into doomed Dresden -
Dreaming of long-lost Tralfamador.
That in a nutshell was my early life; and Kurt Vonnegut’s life.
And young Billy’s too.
But Vonnegut was American, and so was I (by birth at least) - and so is Billy Pilgrim.
And Americans always jazz up their sadness.
And that’s what they all did to get themselves through the War. Big Bands became the perfect anodyne to stark terror.
And zany behaviour - my own, Vonnegut’s and Billy’s - became the preferred personal way for American bullied innocents to jazz up their sadness.
***
Living in a meat cooler under a city while your country is Decimating that city can only leave a traumatic scar.
BIG TIME.
So you jazz it up big time yourself - you start to prefer your mini-vacations on Trafalmador over more mundane hot spots.
Like, for example, foxholes.
So it goes, with Kurt and Billy, and me, and with cringing, bullied kids like us EVERYWHERE. Because where there is carrion like us there the crows gather. And crows don’t even chew you before swallowing.
And they have gizzards to take care of your bones.
You know, had Kurt Vonnegut been a believer he might have considerably mollified his trauma.
Or even reading books by and about declared Aspies, like I do now, may have helped do the trick.
But alas, dear Kurt, back then they shot first and asked questions later.
If they’d have heard you were an Aspie back then they would have leered and just told you to keep marching and shut up.
No wonder their Jazz was in as much demand as a good, stiff drink back then.
For you too, Kurt - you picked up their old-time jazzy zaniness...
And just marched on into doomed Dresden -
Dreaming of long-lost Tralfamador.
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July 10, 2020
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Jul 11, 2020 02:26PM
Jazzing up our sadness, maybe not just restricted to Americans Fergus, I reckon we all dabble in that, more or less. Great review mate.
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I stand corrected, Mark! Somehow I had the mistaken feeling the blues weren’t everywhere. It’s all the nonstop hype!
If you mean Music, I know my first favourite ragtime group was the Firehouse Five. Those boys gave a new meaning to the word Zany!
If you’re a jazz purist, Theodore, you’ll dig the extensive predilection for Miles and Coltrane shared by my better half and moi-même at the time we round pegs moved to the square groove of suburbia. ‘In a Silent Way’ harmonized well with a dram of spirits on ice! My nonconformity grew more mollified as a result...
Thank you for the review. Yes, one of my favourite books, an important book to me when I was a young man.
Vonnegut was a big favourite of mine in my younger years. I was totally freaking out in the seventies as a perfect storm of utter absurdities engulfed my young mind, and Kurt’s utterly manic absurdity fit me like a glove. I could really relate ten years later when I read his son’s book, The Eden Express, because he was like me when his famous dad’s books gave me refuge from my storm!
It’s a fairly well-written odyssey of a still-young hippie gone to seed. That part made me shrink - the part I loved was when his Dad drives coast-to-coast in his lemonade excuse for a car to rescue Mark from his mad hallucinations! I guess I should now review it.
Oh, it’s great! Great, but rather sad… first, Billy Pilgrim is a prisoner of the Nazis; then he’s liberated, but the trauma of the war has unglued him from space and time, so he falls into a Trafalmadorian prison. He just can’t win!
Actually, it's a zoo where aliens go to see exotic beasts! And most Tralfamadorians have never seen a human before. It's hilarious!
Well, as a lifetime Aspie (your equation is correct!) that's my interpretation. If you're a square peg in a round hole you recognize yourself in kindred spirits! Asperger's Syndrome is often triggered by trauma similar to mine in 1952 when our car crashed and Mom went through the windshield. My lifetime identification with her thereafter shows me that her brain neurons afterwards misfired, the same way as did mine.
I loved this review, Fergus. I didn’t get around to reading it until last year but I loved it, a true classic. And a very happy new year, my friend!
How nice of you to say that - and the book helped make me, too, what I am! The seeds planted in our formative years are like that.
I loved reading this book. It opened my eyes to how one can tell a story. Great book, great review, Fergus.
Well, many thanks, Calista! And I was just as entranced by the film as I had been by the book. Isn't it incredible how the creative subconscious can drive a writer into ways of worldmaking as fun and bizarre as the parallel world of Tralfamador?
Fergus, Quondam Happy Face wrote: "Well, many thanks, Calista! And I was just as entranced by the film as I had been by the book. Isn't it incredible how the creative subconscious can drive a writer into ways of worldmaking as fun a..."
I might need to look for that movie. It would be interesting to see.
I might need to look for that movie. It would be interesting to see.
You know, it's really good - but for me the icing on the cake was its amazing musical soundtrack - which was the brainchild of the Canadian pianist, Glenn Gould.