Wampeters, Foma & Granfalloons

by Kurt Vonnegut

Book

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Genres

Collection

Description

Reviews, essays and speeches on the phenomena of this and other ages.

User reviews

LibraryThing member dczapka
In an interview with Playboy that appears at the end of this book, Vonnegut claims that he's "so unlike my books or my reputation." He also claims, earlier in the same interview, "You understand, of course, that everything I say is horseshit."

The interesting thing is that this book creates such a
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clear picture of Vonnegut as an artist, a thinker, and a person, and that it does so in a manner that is so consistent with his fiction that the contradiction above must be somewhere between a joke and a non sequitur. The many short missives, essays, and speeches reprinted here, which take up the first 235 pages, are wonderful pieces of the mind of Vonnegut, though they tend to run together if you read them in any sort of rhythm.

That all changes with the last 52 pages, a lengthy interview with Playboy that answers nearly every question you might have about the man at that time. His thoughts on fame, writing, depression, lonesomeness, politics, and the state of America are not too far off from the way things work today, and his prescience in seeing those issues (even if they have not yet been resolved) is incredible.

Not every piece in this text is a winner, but the closing interview is among the most introspective work Vonnegut has done and alone makes this book worth the read.
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LibraryThing member 5hrdrive
Good Lord we need this man back, now more than ever. Stupid Pall Malls. Terrific collection of essays, speeches and interviews. Biafra: A People Betrayed will break your heart.
LibraryThing member TheCrow2
Although this book is unmistakably Vonnegut, you can find everything in it why we love the Master, somehow I understand why it wasn't translated into Hungarian until now. Of course it's a must for fans but try not to read this first from him.
LibraryThing member DanielSTJ
This was a nice little assortment of non-fiction pieces by Kurt Vonnegut. It touched on a lot of different themes and the range of the pieces varied in intensity and magnitude. Overall, I was impressed by this. Previously, I had read Fates Worse Than Death and this turned me on to Vonnegut's
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non-fiction. I have read a lot of Vonnegut's fiction and this is a nice little supplement to it.
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LibraryThing member Darrol
Although the contributions are somewhat uneven, this is a better collection that Fates Worse Than Death. A somewhat uncritical essay on Madame Blavatsky. A good essay on the over valuation of Hermann Hesse. A moving essay on the Biafran war; it makes me want to learn more about that conflict and
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the people who tried to make a nation.
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LibraryThing member wombatdeamor
This book was interesting, in that it was a collection of opinions from one of my favorite writers. However, it was also really uninteresting due to the fact that it was mostly nonfiction, and didn't have as much of Vonnegut's signature wit and randomness. Reading some of his opinions before
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reading his next book was a fun experience, however, in that I got to see the ideas develop from a mental fetus to a full born novel.

All in all, this is better than Armageddon in retrospect, because the author was alive to have input.

Read it if you've read everything else and are sad there's nothing left.
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LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
A selection of magazine pieces. They are not particularly interesting as thought, but there are some interesting turns of phrase.

Original publication date

1974-05
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