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S'està carregant… Esmorzar de campions (1973)de Kurt Vonnegut
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» 38 més Metafiction (24) Favourite Books (540) Books Read in 2015 (265) Best Satire (62) Readable Classics (45) Books Read in 2021 (451) Books Read in 2018 (491) 1970s (81) Books Read in 2016 (3,606) Books Read in 2013 (918) Overdue Podcast (234) Penguin Random House (27) Great American Novels (112) 20th Century Literature (991) My Favourite Books (32) Swinging Seventies (64) Read (132) Unread books (828) No hi ha cap discussió a Converses sobre aquesta obra. I probably would have liked this better had I read it when I was 13 or 14, but now, while I can spot much that is clever in it, this book feels dated and too geared towards adolescent boys. I will still try Cat's Cradle, though not for awhile. ( ![]() Vonnegut's second piece I'm getting around to (after Slaughterhouse Five) is a witty and satirical post-modernist piece that is about nothing and everything. The prose takes time to get used to, there is little to no plot to speak of, and there's no point to the novel, which Vonnegut himself indirectly admits at one point, telling us that the worst books are one which do have a lesson - because there's no such thing in real life. BoC follows a uniquely original medley of characters and backstories who live in a town colloquially known as "the asshole of America", as they go about their everyday lives. The satire ranges from Trout's stories poking fun at how seriously we take our arbitrary notions, to pointing out ingrained and internalised sexism, racism, consumerism and even some throwaway discussions on the environment. Vonnegut's self-insertion, the amateurish drawings on display (always prefaced with "they look something like this"), and his warped worldview make for quite the ride. Even though I can understand why some might deride this, it made for brutal, maximalist and hilariously poignant reading. You go from "how the fuck did someone think of this?" to "yeah, I'm going to hell for laughing at this" in five seconds flat, and those are the best kinds of novels, as we all know. And so on. https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/top-books-of-1973-2-breakfast-of-champions-by-ku... The book is about a science fiction writer, Kilgore Trout, on his way to a literary convention in a town which may or may not be Vonnegut’s original home, Indianapolis, and his violent encounter with a deranged local automobile dealer. The author himself features as an anonymous first-person viewpoint minor character, though one with godlike powers over the other characters. It’s a frustarting book, because it combines some very incisive social commentary with some very regrettable tics; the body measurements of female characters and penis sizes of male characters are all cited, and the n-word is freely thrown around to an extent that was surely already unacceptable in 1973. Vonnegut illustrates it with hs own drawing, which are frankly childish. There are some serious messages lurking there, and some good questions asked about what it is we really expect from fictional narratives, but the book as a whole is just self-indulgent. When I looked up this book to provide a review, I found I had already given it five stars. I must have got it confused with something else when I first created a Goodreads account (possibly Bluebeard?) because I had never read this before in my life. It rollicks along at a good pace, but I wonder if Vonnegut has lost some of his shine for me. Once upon a time I thought his capacity to tell the truth and to make sense of things by defiantly not making sense of them was groundbreaking, but I think now it's infiltrated our culture so far that this book seems a little bit...dated. He's no longer saying what no one else is brave enough to say, he's just saying stuff that comes up on Twitter all the time. Even the very sweet stuff about the human condition is pretty widely understood by politically, intellectually and socially engaged folks. The book still stands, though, on the quality of its characters - Kilgore Trout is so sympathetic - its situations and its sense of fun. Can you believe.... this is 50 years old this year? I just happened to notice. And what an influence I'm sure it has been on so many writers. Also, I believe Vonnegut was 50 years old when he wrote this. I love the nuggets of story ideas from Kilgore Trout. It especially brings to mind the genius of Douglas Adams. I bet he loved Kurt Vonnegut. But this book is meta! It's hilarious! I love meta hilariousness! I love that Vonnegut seems to tie himself to his own books, gets so personal (even if he is using the name Philboyd Studge.) The only thing I didn't love was his use of stereotypes, especially regarding race, regardless if it is "satire" or not. If Flannery O'Connor is considered racist for writing racist characters (though to be honest, I know nothing about O'Connor's personal life), then Vonnegut would definitely be considered racist here. Certain racist words just grated after so many times, and I didn't see the point of it within the book. I also love his drawings. Especially the animals. I'm not a tattoo person, but I bet all of these drawings have existed as tattoos at some point. But also wish he had included a drawing of the 1962 Cadillac limo with a truckbed that was mentioned. I mean... this needs illustration. This is the seventh Vonnegut I have read annnnddd.... *Book #132 I have read of the '1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die' Sense ressenyes | afegeix-hi una ressenya
Contingut aNovels & Stories, 1963-1973: Cat's Cradle / God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater / Slaughterhouse-Five / Breakfast of Champions / Stories de Kurt Vonnegut Té una guia d'estudi per a estudiantsPremisDistincionsLlistes notables
Fiction.
Literature.
HTML:Breakfast of Champions is vintage Vonnegut. One of his favorite characters, aging writer Kilgore Trout, finds to his horror that a Midwest car dealer is taking his fiction as truth. The result is murderously funny satire as Vonnegut looks at war, sex, racism, success, politics, and pollution in America and reminds us how to see the truth. No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
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![]() GèneresClassificació Decimal de Dewey (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LCC (Clas. Bibl. Congrés EUA)ValoracióMitjana:![]()
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