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Slaughterhouse-Five

Slaughterhouse-FiveOr the Children's Crusade: A Duty Dance with Death

Written by

Kurt Vonnegut

Narrated by

Ethan Hawke

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Avg: 4.0 (29 ratings)

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Audiobook Download Information

Edition:
Unabridged (HarperAudio)
Length:
6 hours, 2 minutes
File Size:
165 MB (5 files)
Published:
November 2003

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Review by Scott Esposito, eMusic

When Kurt Vonnegut told a friend Slaughterhouse-Five was an anti-war novel, the friend replied that he might as well write an anti-glacier book. The friend's dark humor seems outdated in a world obsessed with global warming, but that is about the only element of this striking, riveting story that hasn't aged well.

Slaughterhouse-Five centers around Billy Pilgrim, a New York optometrist who is drafted to fight the Nazis and ends up filling the lowly role of chaplain's assistant. After being captured by the Nazis, marching painfully through Germany, and finally witnessing the horrific firebombing of Dresden (as did Vonnegut), Pilgrim finally returns home, but the war memories are too much for him and he becomes "unstuck in time" (Vonnegut's elegant way of saying the war drove Pilgrim mad). From there on a very ironic Vonnegut take us on a kaleidoscopic tour of Pilgrim's life: one moment he's walking over the cratered, sterile land that was once Dresden, the next he's imagining that he's in an alien zoo being asked to copulate for the audience's enjoyment.

If Slaughterhouse-Five sounds lurid and fantastic, that's because it is, but it's also rich with emotion and the mundane struggle for a normal life. Essentially the story of one man scarred by World War II, the book wrestles with some big questions: the inevitability of war, free will, the line between sanity and insanity. Its evocation of Dresden remains vital and makes for a good counterpoint to contemporary WWII books, like Nicholson Baker's recent and controversial Human Smoke. Befitting Vonnegut, reader Ethan Hawke is wry but sincere, sounding at times like Jack Nicholson and others like Quentin Tarantino. Hearing him read the novel's oft-repeated mantra, "So it goes," in tones varying from sad to bemused to wistful, it's clear Vonnegut is in good hands.

Quotes from the Critics

"What I...applaud is the marvelous comic scenes with the British prisoners of war; the control in the war scenes; the understated bitterness with which he handles the American soldiers....When Vonnegut stops preaching and is funny, I take him very seriously." - Washington Post Book World

"Serious critics have shown some reluctance to acknowledge that Vonnegut is among the best writers of his generation. He is, I suspect, both too funny and too intelligent for many, who confused muddled earnestness with profundity. Vonnegut is not confused. He sees all too clearly....Only Billy's time-warped perspective could do justice to the cosmic absurdity of his life, which is Vonnegut's life and our lives." - New York Times Book Review

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