Question:
Which of these Vonnegut's have you read.
Option 1: Player Piano
votes: 4
Option 2: The Sirens of Titan
votes: 5
Option 3: Canary in a Cathouse
votes: 1
Option 4: Mother Night
votes: 2
Option 5: Cat's Cradle
votes: 7
Option 6: God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater
votes: 3
Option 7: Welcome to the Monkey House
votes: 4
Option 8: Slaughterhouse - Five
votes: 9
Option 9: Happy Birthday, Wanda June
votes: 2
Option 10: Between Time and Timbuktu
votes: 2
Option 11: Breakfast of Champions
votes: 7
Option 12: Wampeters, Foma, and Granfalloons
votes: 3
Option 13: Slapstick
votes: 3
Option 14: Jailbird
votes: 1
Option 15: Palm Sunday
votes: 1
Option 16: Deadeye Dick
votes: 2
Option 17: Galapagos
votes: 2
Option 18: Bluebeard
votes: 4
Option 19: Hocus Pocus
votes: 2
Option 20: Fates Worse Than Death
votes: 1
Option 21: Timequake
votes: 3
Option 22: Bagombo Snuff Box
votes: 1
Option 23: God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian
votes: 1
Option 24: A Man Without A Country
votes: 2
Option 25: Armageddon in Retrospect
votes: 1
Option 26: Look at the Birdie
votes: 1
Option 27: While Mortals Sleep
votes: 1
Option 28: None
votes: 0
I was looking in the 'what are you reading?' thread and realised that there were an awful lot of Vonnegut readers out there in Susanland.
Now, I adore Vonnegut, have read em all at least twice and my favourite few innumerable times - I tend to use them as palate cleansers between big, heavy books. Sirens of Titan is my fave, but it used to be Bluebeard, and before then Slapstick and before then Hocus Pocus.
I thought this would be a nice thread to talk about Vonnegut and to see which of his books have had the most readers.
I really loved Kurt when I was in college. Ate it up. Of all of them I think I like (and I'm sure I'll be the only one here) I like Wampeters, Foma and Granfalloons the most and still read that. Though Cat's Cradle was a critical touchstone in my understanding of both the promise and damnation of science and technology, as well as doing such an excellent job of point out the basic immorality of both on their own (without control or oversight).
But it was Slaughterhouse 5 that really rocked my world when I first read it my senior year in HS. It's on a very short list of stuff that I've read that really changed my views, my outlook and my life.1 It solidified my anti-war views as well as my 'secular humanist' outlook and touched something very deep in me. It shook me all night long.
I suppose I should go back and re-read some of them, particularly Sirens of Titan, which I don't think I got when I read it.
1. Dorothy Day, The Long Loneliness, Thomas Merton, The Seven Story Mountain, Herman Hess, Siddhartha, Charles and Mary Bead, An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution, Barbra Tucuman's The Pursuit of Folly and August 1914, and Eric Hoffer's two books The True Believer and The Ordeal of Change along with the Tao Te Ching and the Karma Sutra are the rest of that short list - if you wanted to know.