World History
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marble falls
(62,047 posts)dotymed
(5,610 posts)Kurt was a fellow Hoosier that made a huge impression on me, beginning in the early '70's.
His book "Slaughterhouse Five or (as I prefer) The Children's Crusade" is one of my all-time favorites.
What a real person, full of compassion, he was.
Billy Pilgrim traveling through time, made such an impact on an eighth grade mind....
mgc1961
(1,263 posts)For some of you, this sermon is now beginning. For others, there are a couple of brief paragraphs first, before the sermon begins. I have designed these opening words for those of you who are avid fans of Kurt Vonneguts writing, and familiar with his curious literary eccentricities. For the rest of you, the sermon begins in about a minute. Ill let you know.
Like Billy Pilgrim, Kurt Vonnegut has now, thankfully, come unstuck in time. Though he didnt believe in an afterlife, Im sure he wasnt too surprised last week when he awakened to find himself on the planet Tralfamadore. He was greeted there, no doubt, by a joyous granfalloon of other sardonic humorists and iconoclastic curmudgeons, such as his hero Mark Twain, along with H.L. Menken, Ambrose Bierce, and fellow Hoosier Kin Hubbard. Included in that granfalloon was Abraham Lincoln, who also had a dry sense of humor with a biting critique of the world he found himself in.
Back here on earth his opus of writing remains to enlighten and amuse. His books are filled with foma. Like all the best religions in history, foma offers us shameless lies that serve to comfort, and offer far more comfort than mere truth can offer. Foma also helps when facing lifes finitude. And so it goes.
http://www.allsoulsuuindy.org/ser20070422.htm