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Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.

Writer

A modern-day Mark Twain, right down to the bushy mustache and black humor, Kurt Vonnegut wrote dozens of satirical novels whose central theme is life's cosmic joke on humanity. Vonnegut was often called a science fiction author, but it's well known that he used the cloak of sci-fi simply as a means to deliver his cranky-but-funny deliberations on the human condition. His best-known books include Cat's Cradle (1963), Welcome to the Monkey House (1968), Slaughterhouse-Five (1969), and Slapstick (1976). Many of his books featured a character named Kilgore Trout, a fictional author who is something of an alter-ego for Vonnegut himself. Vonnegut was the unwitting subject of a famous Internet hoax in 1997: a list of whimsical advice for college graduates was widely circulated via e-mail, identified as the text of a Vonnegut commencement address at MIT. In truth, Vonnegut had no connection with the essay, which was written by Chicago Tribune columnist Mary Schmich.

Extra credit: Kurt Vonnegut Jr.'s father was also named Kurt... Venus on the Half-Shell, a real-life 1975 novel "by" Kilgore Trout, was written not by Vonnegut but by Philip Jose Farmer.

Vonnegut appears with Gordon Sinclair in our loop on Legends of E-Mail.

Blog posts mentioning Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.:
Farewells of 2007

Four Good Links

Kurt Vonnegut Web

Comprehensive fan tribute

Vonnegut.com

His official site has background on his books and drawings

Kurt Vonnegut Interview

Audio interview from 1981

Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.

He's reflective in this 1999 conversation from Salon

Vital Stats

Birth

11 November 1922

Birthplace

Indianapolis, Indiana

Death

11 April 2007
(injuries from a fall, age 84)

Best Known As

The author of Slaughterhouse-Five