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Kurt Vonnegut, Hocus Pocus, & other Vonnegut works
mipadi
post Mar 17 2009, 01:32 PM
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I just finished reading Kurt Vonnegut's Hocus Pocus a couple days ago, and it was, in a word, amazing -- so good that I read it in a week. It was really eye-opening, too, and put a lot of things in perspective. Vonnegut writes in a definitively post-modern style, so it's hard to nail down what the book is really about, or what the plot is, but the work, as a whole, is really delicious fodder for thought.

One of the major points of the novel is the dehumanizing aspect of war. Vonnegut was, of course, a prisoner of war in World War II, and was held at a prison in Dresden (Slaughterhouse-Five). In short, he survived the fire-bombing of Dresden, which clearly shaped his outlook on war. The main character of Hocus Pocus is a Vietnam War veteran. There's a great line in the book in which the character says that he would've given anything to have died in a war as meaningful as World War II. In light of the two wars we're fighting right now, I think this line brings our current conflicts into a different light.

The book also provides a haunting critique of the American "ruling class" which is even more profound given our current economic problems, and the follies that brought us where we are.

Anyway, the only other Vonnegut work I've read is Timequake, and that was eight years ago, before I could really appreciate Vonnegut's work fully. I'd like to read his other works now, though, since Hocus Pocus was so amazing.
 
 
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mipadi
post Mar 17 2009, 03:56 PM
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Hocus Pocus is full of provocative passages, but one of my favorites appears on the second page of the book:


During those 14 years [in the army] I would have killed Jesus Christ Himself or Herself or Itself or Whatever, if ordered to do so by a superior officer. At the abrupt and humiliating and dishonorable end of the Vietnam War, I was a Lieutenant Colonel, with 1,000s and 1,000s of my own inferiors.

During that war, which was about nothing but the ammunition business, there was a microscopic possibility, I suppose, that I called in a white-phosphorus barrage or a napalm air strike on a returning Jesus Christ.

 

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