Catch-22
by Joseph Heller
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Read in July, 2006
For so many of us growing up in the USA, our high school teachers assigned us Joseph Heller's "Catch-22" as required reading, and I was among those assignees. I'm not sure why the requirement, other than perhaps some Catch-22 type of logic that everyone else was assigning it, so there, must be great, must read. I don't particularly remember liking the novel then, perhaps with no more substantial of a reason than -- just not my style. Reading the novel now, in midlife, my opinion (or my...more
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Read in February, 2008
Yossarian, a bombardier, is terrified that thousands of people he doesn't know are trying to kill him while he serves on the Italian front. It is also about those that victimize for the sake of power and status and those that are victimized. The book begins en medias res in the hospital with Yossarian and his cohorts, all healthy soldiers feigning sickness in order to avoid more military action. The book follows their hapless missions as they are used by Colonel Peckham in order to improve his c...more
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Read in August, 2007
This book was utterly misrepresented to me before I read it. For some reason I'd always thought it had been published the same year as Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow and was considered as representing the other fork of post World War II American literature apart from Pynchon's--this the conventional, plot-driven one catering to stupid people. Some professor or some didact must have told me that, enrroenously as it turns out, once. Catch 22 predates the Pynchon masterpeice by 15 years, and is in sty...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
people who like to be bored.
Absurdist plays are one act for a reason.
Seriously, I know there were points to make about the repetitive ridiculousness of bureaucracy/war/capitalism/life, but over 450 pages of variations on the Catch-22 joke?
I did find myself more affected than I would have guessed by some of the deaths, and some of the lines were clearly awesome.
Underlined bits:
In a world in which success was the only virtue, he had resigned himself to failure.(277, about the Chaplain)
Because he n...more
Seriously, I know there were points to make about the repetitive ridiculousness of bureaucracy/war/capitalism/life, but over 450 pages of variations on the Catch-22 joke?
I did find myself more affected than I would have guessed by some of the deaths, and some of the lines were clearly awesome.
Underlined bits:
In a world in which success was the only virtue, he had resigned himself to failure.(277, about the Chaplain)
Because he n...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone
Yossarian, a bombardier, is terrified that thousands of people he doesn't know are trying to kill him while he serves on the Italian front. It is also about those that victimize for the sake of power and status and those that are victimized. The book begins en medias res in the hospital with Yossarian and his cohorts, all healthy soldiers feigning sickness in order to avoid more military action. The book follows their hapless missions as they are used by Colonel Peckham in order to improve his c...more
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Read in September, 2004
Catch-22 is a term I knew since I was pretty young; in the past, it was a mere term to me, and I have never associated it with a book (Or a movie, for that matter). I learned it from my father and did not know how did it come to be (He did not either; he learned it from someone else). Somehow I felt a special affinity towards this term; it was not a common one around here and nobody else, except my dad, seemed to know it; I explained it sometimes to friends of mine. To me, all it meant wa...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
Fans of Kurt Vonnegut, lit lovers, et al
“Immoral logic seemed to be confounding him at every turn,”
To immerse yourself in the WWII-era nightmare at the heart of Joseph Heller’s masterful novel is to lose yourself in a world where bureaucracy has run amuck, logic and sanity have become rare commodities, and the threat of imminent death permeates the very air. And yet, the only person who can see all of this is Yossarian, a bombardier who has the misfortune to be stuck in a war while being, as the dust-jacket points out, “...more
To immerse yourself in the WWII-era nightmare at the heart of Joseph Heller’s masterful novel is to lose yourself in a world where bureaucracy has run amuck, logic and sanity have become rare commodities, and the threat of imminent death permeates the very air. And yet, the only person who can see all of this is Yossarian, a bombardier who has the misfortune to be stuck in a war while being, as the dust-jacket points out, “...more
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Read in February, 2008
Paradoxes, especially those settled down in fun little hypothetical logic puzzles, are the domain of socially inept little boys (mostly) who were given books about Mensa as gifts from distant relatives who had no other clues about what sorts of presents would be well received. In Heller's novel, they're the domain of such boys all grown up, now finding themselves through some connection or another running a war in the Mediterranean. Colonel Cathcart, Colonel Korn, General Dreedle, et al., are th...more
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Read in January, 2007
If you have not read Catch 22, you’re in luck, because now you have something to look forward to. It is dry, it is wry, it is hilarious. It is not for the impatient. It took me forever to read, because frankly it is so easy to put down. Luckily, I found it equally easy to pick back up. I think a lot of people don’t like this book because they think it has no plot. In fact, a lot of avid plot-seekers probably never make it to the end. To them I say, wrong, it does have a plot. But even...more
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Read in August, 2005
"I really do admire you a bit. You're an intelligent person of great moral character who has taken a very courageous stand. I'm an intelligent person with no moral character at all, so I'm in an ideal position to appreciate it." - Colonel Cathcart, Catch-22
I really appreciate it when a book respects the intelligence of its readership. If a book is going to be "experimental" in any way, I love those that throw you into a world with no explanations - a literary baptism of f...more
I really appreciate it when a book respects the intelligence of its readership. If a book is going to be "experimental" in any way, I love those that throw you into a world with no explanations - a literary baptism of f...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
everyone
i absolutely loved this book. It took me all of august to read it. i usually rush through books. if they take one day, great, but a week gets to be too long. this took a month because i wanted it to, because i refused to let it go. sorry for stalling the book club, girls!
my first impression was that it reminded me of the tv show mash. it is very funny in a this-shouldn't-be-funny sort of way. it is complete and utter nonsense, and way too relevant today. i swear bush must have gotten quotes ...more
my first impression was that it reminded me of the tv show mash. it is very funny in a this-shouldn't-be-funny sort of way. it is complete and utter nonsense, and way too relevant today. i swear bush must have gotten quotes ...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
no one
So, I really hated this book. I was very excited to read it because I had heard it was different and funny but it turned out to be slow and pointless. But I understand that it was one of the first books that showed that war was not just a romanticized getaway, it showed war was awful and everyone was treated badly. So I understand this book was significant.
I am thinking the protagonist is supposed to be Yossarian but I do not really see how he is a protagonist. He was not particularly a g...more
I am thinking the protagonist is supposed to be Yossarian but I do not really see how he is a protagonist. He was not particularly a g...more
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Read in March, 2008
While "Catch-22" is a military farce, anyone who has worked in any large organization has dealt with policies like the novel's namesake Catch-22 rule and people like Colonel Catchcart and Colonel Korn. While we all like to think of ourselves as Yossarians (or at least Milo Minderbinders) in these situations, most of us are really Major Danbys and Havermeyers.
If you haven't read "Catch-22," this may whet the appetite:
If you haven't read "Catch-22," this may whet the appetite:
Colonel Scheisskopf was all ears. "What are bomb patterns?"
...more
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recommends it for:
All
An extremely profound book which most people dismiss as a humorous book.Catch 22 is an intense black comedy which gives you an insight into what people do when faced with imminent danger/death. All the characters are unique in their own ways and yet you can relate to them in some way or the other. Major Major is a hated guy only because he is a non-conformist, which encompasses being good to people, being polite, honourable and being a devout Christian. The book brings about quite lucidly...more
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Read in February, 2008
I tried reading Catch-22 once in college, but ultimately set it aside and forgot about it. Partly this was due to a lack of time, trying to keep up with course assignments in order to graduate on time - Catch-22 wasn't something on the syllabus for any of my classes, it was just something I felt like I should read for my own benefit. Another factor that doomed this first attempt was the fact that it has kind of an odd rhythm to it, which is hard to get into at first.
But I gave it another g...more
But I gave it another g...more
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recommends it for:
everyone and anyone
This is my all time favorite book, and I am firmly of the belief that it is one of (if not THE) the most important works of 20th century literature. It is filled with datk humor and atrocities beyond belief. True, it is a work of fiction, but like all the great works, it contains many truths and many important lessons. Heller was really onto something when he wrote this novel. He paints a clear view of the evils of bureaucracy, especially when coupled with the military. In this book we have Milo...more
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Read in November, 2007
This is the story of Captain Yossarian, who is serving in World War II as a navigator on a bomber and who is based in Italy. Yossarian is caught in a "Catch-22" where he can only get out of flying more missions if he's crazy, but if he was crazy, he wouldn't mind flying missions. The book really skips around, so that you're never quite sure whether you're reading something that happened in the past, or if the story has now moved forward from the beginning point. But it's not really ...more
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Read in March, 2008
The journey of a man from anti-hero to moral standard-bearer is at the heart, and heartbreak, of Catch-22.
Yossarian, one of the great fictional characters, begins the book by lamenting that thousands of people are trying to kill him and checking into the field hospital to avoid flying combat missions. At journey’s end, he is sole voice of reason amidst a maddening, bureaucrat mess. If ever there was a model for Hawkeye Pearce, it is Yossarian. (Surely the creators of M*A*S*H owe a huge de...more
Yossarian, one of the great fictional characters, begins the book by lamenting that thousands of people are trying to kill him and checking into the field hospital to avoid flying combat missions. At journey’s end, he is sole voice of reason amidst a maddening, bureaucrat mess. If ever there was a model for Hawkeye Pearce, it is Yossarian. (Surely the creators of M*A*S*H owe a huge de...more
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Read in March, 2006
recommends it for:
Everyone
Hands-down the most accurate military book ever written (I say this tongue-in-cheek: don't read this book if you want a bunch of jargon and tactical insiderism). The book is so funny and absurd at times that you occasionally forget the seriousness of the war against which it is set, but Heller is careful to bring you back every so often. The main character, Yossarian, is a disillusioned bomber pilot who is about to fly his last required mission and who has taken to walking backwards around the...more
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