Slaughterhouse-Five, or The Children’s Crusade, A Duty-Dance With Death.
“People aren’t supposed to look back. I’m certainly not going to do it anymore": 25th anniversary edition of Slaughterhouse-Five; Signed by Kurt Vonnegut
Slaughterhouse-Five, or The Children’s Crusade, A Duty-Dance With Death.
VONNEGUT, Kurt.
$975.00
Item Number: 148433
New York: Delacorte Press, 1994.
First edition, early printing of the 25th anniversary edition of Vonnegut’s masterpiece. Octavo, original black half-cloth, pictorial endpapers. Boldly signed by Kurt Vonnegut on the front free endpaper. Fine in a fine dust jacket, name to the half-title page. Local newspaper clipping with a mini-interview of Vonnegut when he went to Pittsburgh to give a book reading laid in. Author photograph by Jill Krementz.
"Slaughterhouse-Five, perhaps Vonneguts most powerful novel, presents two characters who can see beneath the surface to the tragic realities of human history but make no attempt to bring about change The central event is the destruction of Dresden by bombs and fire storma catastrophe that Vonnegut himself witnessed as a prisoner of war" (Vinson, 1414-15). "Kurt Vonnegut knows all the tricks of the writing game. So he has not even tried to describe the bombing. Instead he has written around it in a highly imaginative, often funny, nearly psychedelic story. The story is sandwiched between an autobiographical introduction and epilogue" (The New York Times). It is the basis for the 1972 film bearing the same name. The screenplay written by Stephen Geller and directed by George Roy Hill. It stars Michael Sacks, Ron Leibman, and Valerie Perrine, and features Eugene Roche, Sharon Gans, Holly Near, and Perry King. Listed by Modern Library as one of the 100 greatest novels of the twentieth century.