His sister also died of cancer two days after her husband died in a freak train accident. My memory was they didn’t tell his sister that her husband had just died. My memory is also he took in her children after they lost both parents within a two day span. Dude had a lot of trauma in his life.
His parents were ruined by Prohibition and the Depression, they were abusive. He had a particularly bad year starting in May 1944, when he came home on Mother’s Day to find his mother had killed herself. A few months later he’s deployed to Europe. December 1944, he’s captured in the Battle of the Bulge. February 1945, he’s in the firebombing of Dresden. Repatriated May 1945.
His books touch on all of it to some degree. My impression was Dresden was the bit he found most horrifying. More importantly, though, it was the best setup for a sarcastic comment about Slaughterhouse Five.
To be fair to the person who you replied to - I didn’t know that Vonnegut was a POW in Dresden and survived the firebombing until after I had finished the novel. While reading it I just attributed it to his fantastic imagination and assumed it was all metaphor. Then I learned how much of it was not, in fact, metaphor.
Maybe it was when he was a POW in Dresden, and survived the firebombing inside the basement of a slaughterhouse?
His sister also died of cancer two days after her husband died in a freak train accident. My memory was they didn’t tell his sister that her husband had just died. My memory is also he took in her children after they lost both parents within a two day span. Dude had a lot of trauma in his life.
His parents were ruined by Prohibition and the Depression, they were abusive. He had a particularly bad year starting in May 1944, when he came home on Mother’s Day to find his mother had killed herself. A few months later he’s deployed to Europe. December 1944, he’s captured in the Battle of the Bulge. February 1945, he’s in the firebombing of Dresden. Repatriated May 1945.
His books touch on all of it to some degree. My impression was Dresden was the bit he found most horrifying. More importantly, though, it was the best setup for a sarcastic comment about Slaughterhouse Five.
Nah, pretty sure he would have mentioned that
To be fair to the person who you replied to - I didn’t know that Vonnegut was a POW in Dresden and survived the firebombing until after I had finished the novel. While reading it I just attributed it to his fantastic imagination and assumed it was all metaphor. Then I learned how much of it was not, in fact, metaphor.