Slaughterhouse 5
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How bad is it
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Duane
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Like Erich Maria Remarke's All Quiet on the Western Front and Anne Frank's Diary of a Young Girl, SH5 depicts war at an intimate personal level. By not dwelling on the reasons for war, Vonnegut conveys the helplessness he felt.
The reasons don't matter when you're in combat. It doesn't matter why you are there. All that matters is surviving, moment by moment. And what you have to endure leaves not just a physical toll on lives, fortune and the landscape, but a mental toll on the survivors and humankind in general.
"In four raids between 13 and 15 February 1945, 722 heavy bombers of the British Royal Air Force (RAF) and 527 of the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) dropped more than 3,900 tons of high-explosive bombs and incendiary devices on..." a center for art and culture that had no military significance, no bomb shelters, and had swelled in population from the influx of 300,000 war refugees and prisoners: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing...
The Allied military establishment was so embarrassed by what they had done that they classified for decades the horrific death toll, which has been estimated to be ten times the official politically-correct count of 25,000. The actual number of bodies could not be counted because they were inaccessible, covered by tons of rubble--an effective mass grave. But Dresden's estimated death toll exceeds Hroshima and Nagasaki combined.
SH5 cuts through war propaganda and brings us face-to-face with the grim realities of waging war. The hallucinations about Tralfamadore show how the mind can play tricks in order to give itself respite from the haunting memories of inhumanity, gore, death and destruction.
You never can find peace of mind, only a sense of acceptance, which is emphasized in the novel repeatedly.
https://www.google.com/search?q=hiros...

Conclusion: you've all been trolled, though not very well, and yet 54 responses later here we are anyway.

Conclusion: you've all been trolled, though not very well, and yet 54 responses later here we are anyway."
HMM... YOu gotta point dude... Especially from the looks of *this*
https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/4...
He/she/it better look out, after what happened to the Amanita space-fungus that was on here trying that stuff a while back... It was almost too horrible to describe


One of the best, funny, sad, horrifying books ever written.




totally agree. I don't think is a horrible book, however is not so good as most of the people claim. So it goes!


It's really too bad Nico doesn't qualify his opinion. I would love to hear why he thought it was horrible. It's certainly not on my favorite's list.


Someone should explain to him that disliking the main character doesn't make the book "horrible". That might make an interesting thread, though: Main characters you hated in books that you loved.



Of course he was trolling but there is a chance, though a remote one, that Nico would learn something through the comments of the serious and thoughtful readers like yourself. Of course anyone who would not read a book because of someone else's opinion - we'll just say that's short sighted.


Fair enough.
Nico wrote: "Who agrees that Slaughter house 5 is horrible?"
This is an old an inactive thread. Monsieur Nico, you may be reading above your educational or experiential level. This is a complex and multilayered metatextual book, and you are apparently unqualified to comment upon it, or were at the time of your original post. I admire your free expression of your opinion. You may say it again, you are free to say this again. You are also free to research and make a meaningful comment at a later date.
However, I no longer hold my tongue. When a book, recognized as complex and important is dismissed, I have to respond.
Perhaps by quoting Mr. Faber from Fahrenheit 451:
“Mr. Montag, you are looking at a coward. I saw the way things were going, a long time back. I said nothing. I’m one of the innocents who could have spoken up and out when no one would listen to the ‘guilty,’ but I did not speak and thus became guilty myself. And when finally they set the structure to burn the books, using the firemen, I grunted a few times and subsided, for there were no others grunting or yelling with me, by then. Now, it’s too late.”
― Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451
It is not too late, not yet, to save a book from firemen such as yourself. If you had put the least intellectual effort into your thread, I might have let it go.
Sorry. I hope you come back to Slaughterhouse-Five when you are ready to like it or dislike it for coherent reasons.
This is an old an inactive thread. Monsieur Nico, you may be reading above your educational or experiential level. This is a complex and multilayered metatextual book, and you are apparently unqualified to comment upon it, or were at the time of your original post. I admire your free expression of your opinion. You may say it again, you are free to say this again. You are also free to research and make a meaningful comment at a later date.
However, I no longer hold my tongue. When a book, recognized as complex and important is dismissed, I have to respond.
Perhaps by quoting Mr. Faber from Fahrenheit 451:
“Mr. Montag, you are looking at a coward. I saw the way things were going, a long time back. I said nothing. I’m one of the innocents who could have spoken up and out when no one would listen to the ‘guilty,’ but I did not speak and thus became guilty myself. And when finally they set the structure to burn the books, using the firemen, I grunted a few times and subsided, for there were no others grunting or yelling with me, by then. Now, it’s too late.”
― Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451
It is not too late, not yet, to save a book from firemen such as yourself. If you had put the least intellectual effort into your thread, I might have let it go.
Sorry. I hope you come back to Slaughterhouse-Five when you are ready to like it or dislike it for coherent reasons.



Yep, gave it a 2-1/2 star. And I am broke ass. No oil baron, war-monger etc.



It's a bit advanced for most readers, especially those who are not Literature or Creative Writing majors.
That said, it has substantial significance in that it reveals truths about the bombing of Dresden that are so repugnant that they are withheld from official history books--chiefly that the war machine incinerated overnight more innocent civilians than the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The book could have gone much further, for example, by illustrating the war machinery that caused the bombing--what Vonnegut later called "bureaucratic inertia." (Joseph Heller did this admirably in Catch-22. Someone needs to do it for the Viet Nam war.)
Reiterating, the principal value of SH5 is in its depiction of the inhumanity of war. Vonnegut presents this through a kaleidoscope of imaginative fantasy that distracts us from the gore and suffering, making it less traumatizing and thereby more memorable and accessible. Its one of those books you cannot forget, no matter how hard one may try.

i have to read it again because i read it to feel cool in middle school and understood/remember none of it.

Estimated by whom? I was under the impression that 20-25,000 was considered to be a reasonably accurate estimate, and that higher figures were based on German propaganda issued at the time.

In fact, it's hard to empathize with the characters in this book because they are all one dimensional caricatures with hardly any trace of realistic, human qualities. Many people, noticing this, are correspondingly dissatisfied with this book, regardless of their stance on war.
I'm sure most of the people reading this book believe war is a terrible thing, whether they end up liking the book or not. Wouldn't it be pathetically simple-minded to love a book just because you endorse the message behind it? You believe war is bad, and you've heard that the message of this book is "War is bad", so you read it and conclude, "What a great book!" There's no thought in that.
The merits of the message have nothing to do with the quality of the storytelling. We can be critical of the delivery while still endorsing the message, and if fact, we rather ought to be, if we really care about the message. Because nothing is more detrimental to a good message than an inept messenger.
Vonnegut is a terrible messenger. His book is a mess. It may have good intentions, and it may be based on horrific events he experienced that are important for us to understand, but it's still poorly written. He wrote a book filled with wooden characters, gimmicky, repetitive prose, trite ideas, and casual, pointless vulgarity. It's too bad, too, because he did have such direct experience of those events, that he didn't write a better book.
Again, the merit of the message does not imbue the book with literary quality. Bad books can have good messages, and well-written books can have bad messages. A critical reader can separate the two.

I liked it, and I think I would have liked it even if it wasn't about the war. It's a strange way to tell a story, but it worked for me.

Implying that people like this book only because of the message is also fairly simplistic. Practically asserting that the novel has
no literary quality because you did not engage with it and treating people who did as not being critical readers also seems rather pretentious and disdainful. Everyone has their own opinion about the books they read and disrespecting their views because they do not align with yours is not right because you do not hold the absolute truth. Nothing is inherently "bad literature", just literature that you did not enjoy.
I understand that you do not find the novel to be compelling, but, for me, it was an absolute masterpiece. The writing style conveyed the confusion and trauma inside Billy's head perfectly. The narrative may seem disjointed, but that's the point. I honestly think that this book would not be as good if it had been written in a more conventional way.

You accuse me of showing disrespect to other readers, but in fact I was more on the defensive against sweeping and disrespectful attacks on people who disliked this book in the previous comments. So, please be fair, and consider my remarks in context.
Also in those comments, there seemed to me to be too much emphasis on Vonnegut's message and his experience in the war as the justification for this book's status as a classic, and hence my assertion that a critical reader should be able to separate such things. I still stand by that statement.
By the way, I did not dislike the book because the narrative was "disjointed" (though I've seen many people make this complaint). I understand that was part of the point. I just don't agree that it was well done.

Of course, I see your point and respect that you think it was not well-done. I just wanted to point out that this particular reasoning didn't work for me.

I didn't make an exhaustive study of it; my comment was based on something Vonnegut mentioned in a video and was backed up by one other source on the web discussing the controversy over how to estimate the number of dead from the Dresden bombing.
It's been years now since I read the book, but as I recall, Vonnegut was among the crew of people who were sent down under the rubble to look for survivors and bodies. After several days of smelling corpses and hauling out decaying body parts, they gave up. The rubble was eventually packed down and paved over, making a third of Dresden a vast burial ground.
During the war, the city's population had swelled because of a huge influx of refugees, 300,000 I think Vonnegut said. The "official" count of 25-40,000 fatalities (or whatever the number is) was based on verified bodies, but the vast uncounted majority lie even today under the rubble.
According to the web link below, the number is closer to 600,000. I don't have time to read it all, and suspect it could be neo-Nazi propaganda. But even so it could be half right:
https://thegreateststorynevertold.tv/...
Here's a quote from it:
It was known as a show-place of culture. It had no military bases, no major communication centers or heavy industry. It had no air defense. In the last months of the war, it was known as “Die Lazarettstadt” – it had been declared a hospital town. It was also known as the “Fluechtlingsstadt” – the City of the Refugees.Who's going to excavate to get the count right? The true number will never be known. You can learn more, but you'll have to do some digging. Histories of war are written by those who win them. I learned just enough when I was researching it to have strong doubts about the official number.
Norman Stone, Professor of Modern History at Oxford, wrote in the Daily Mail:
“ALREADY, BY 1944, IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN CLEAR TO MOST PEOPLE IN THE GOVERNMENT THAT WE WOULD HAVE TO DEAL WITH . . . GERMANS ONCE VICTORY HAD BEEN WON .
WE WENT ON BOMBING GERMAN CITIES MONTHS AND MONTHS AFTER IT HAD BEEN CLEAR THAT WE WOULD WIN, AND THAT STALIN WOULD BE AS POTENTIALLY DEADLY AN ENEMY. SOME OF THE BOMBING WAS JUST POINTLESS. IN THE LAST DAYS OF THE WAR, WE STRUCK AT THE OLD GINGERBREAD TOWNS SOUTH OF WURZBURG, WHERE THERE WAS NO MILITARY TARGET AT ALL . . . JUST REFUGEES, WOMEN AND CHILDREN. OF THESE ACTS OF GRATUITOUS SADISM, THE WORST WAS THE BOMBING OF DRESDEN.”

According to Wikipedia, initial German estimates were in the 20,000s, and they added a zero for propaganda reasons. Post war German estimates confirmed the initial ones, but it seems the inflated figures had already been absorbed by the world, including Vonnegut.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing...
Even 10,000 would have been a massive number, in my opinion, and I'm not surprised Vonnegut was deeply affected by what he saw.



I hated this book. I'm glad that Vonnegut refused to jump on the bandwagon and glorify war. I saw John Wayne's Green Berets and cringed constantly through the whole thing. But Catch-22 did a much better job of conveying Slaughterhouse 5's message, and I couldn't even do more than browse that book.
To me, the best part of Slaughterhouse 5 was the summaries of the books written by Billy Pilgrim's favorite author - the guy whose books wound up in the porno shop so the store owner could claim that they sold real literature and not just smut.
It wasn't that I hated Billy Pilgrim. He seemed like he was mostly okay. But he sure didn't seem to care much about what was happening in his life, what had happened in his life, or what was going to happen in his life, and that made it pretty hard for me to care.
So yeah, I'm one of the people who cannot see any reason for this book to be so popular beyond its message and the fact that it's "different".

"
Probably any Texas oil baron Republican who owns stock in Halliburton and Lockheed or some other part of the Oil/Military-Industrial Complex would hate it.
People who profit from war might be sickened by a book that shows the gory truth or satirizes war. They probably hate M*A*S*H as well. And All Quiet on the Western Front.
"
Hmmmm.... I'm not a Republican. M*A*S*H* is one of the best TV series of all time. All Quiet on the Western Front" is an excellent book. My father was in WWII and his view was: "That was not a pleasant time. We did what we had to do." And he wouldn't say much more about it.
Agree with Nico, SH5 is a terrible book. Beats you to death with "your life is meaningless and there is nothing you can do about it." Suggest contrast that basic philosophy of this book with Winston Churchill. The basis of the book is absurd, hence, meaningless. Can there be anything worse?


I read it due to it being on Kindle unlimited without knowing much about it and I loved it.

The structure of the novel allows Vonnegut to capture the fundamental nature of being human: the ability to reflect on the past, contemplate the future, and lose sight of the present. Focusing on this disconnect makes it easier for Vonnegut to explore the profound themes he raises in this story.
I thought it was well executed.

The structure of the novel allows Vonnegut to capture the fundamenta..."
I'm sorry, but bouncing around in time is not part of the "fundamental nature of being human". Of course if someone actually were bouncing around in time, that certainly might lead to his feeling disconnected from the present, but such an impossible scenario has absolutely nothing to do with how ordinary people can worry about the future, dwell on the past, and lose sight of the present.
If Vonnegut wanted to write about something fundamental in human nature, he should have stuck with possibilities instead of writing about something so wildly impossible that even a reflective, careful reader cannot produce any sympathetic understanding of what his character is supposedly experiencing. Not even Vonnegut's own character seemed to have much sympathetic understanding of what he was experiencing. He wasn't dwelling on his past or worrying about his future; he was disconnected from ALL of it. The way I remember it, Billy was pretty much just going with the flow and waiting for his life to be over. And there's a tremendous difference between losing sight of the present while focusing on the past or future and not actually caring all that much where you are in your life or what's happening or when it's all going to end. Indifference to your life is not the same as forgetting where to focus your energies.
This novel tells us nothing about the essential human experience. That's exactly why I couldn't care about it.

While one may fairly disagree with Vonnegut's views, it nevertheless remains possible to appreciate his use of narrative structure to express those views. While the average person may feel so invested in his or her own life and the perceived ability to control their destiny that they cannot relate to Billy Pilgrim, Vonnegut's writing allows the reader to experience the world through the eyes of someone subjected to its darkest aspects.
Indifference to one's own fate may be the only logical response to a scenario in which one is deprived of autonomy and subjected to the whims and caprices of one's worst enemy. I think the non-linear narrative of the novel does an excellent job of expressing the fear, anxiety, and horror the average person would experience when subjected to the nightmare scenario that Pilgrim experiences.
In this sense, I believe that Vonnegut's story is more realistic because of its surreal narrative structure and that it speaks to deep truths about human nature.

While one may fairly disagree with Vonnegut's views, it nevertheless remains possible to appreciate his use of narrative structure to express those views. While the a..."
What deep truths?
I've already said that I can see how Billy Pilgrim might come to feel disconnected from his own life under the circumstances. That's not the issue. The issue is that what Billy is experiencing is so far outside the realm of possibility that we can only guess wildly at how we or anyone would react under those circumstances. And that's not a narrative structure that expresses much of anything except confusion, and it's a confusion that has no relation to the realistic confusion of ordinary people.
And who is this "worst enemy"? I don't recall the novel ever explaining why Billy was bouncing around in time, let alone attributing it to a plot by his worst enemy.
You're being inconsistent. In the exact same paragraph that you speak of being indifferent to one's fate as being possibly the only logical response to Billy's peculiar circumstances, you then go on to talk of fear, anxiety, and horror. But Vonnegut isn't depicting fear, anxiety, and horror. He's depicting numb indifference. He isn't expressing any of the things you're attributing to this work.
And that isn't just a matter of perspective.
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