The Eden Express Pdf, Epub, Ebook

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Eden Express Pdf, Epub, Ebook THE EDEN EXPRESS PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Mark Vonnegut | 288 pages | 01 Oct 1998 | DELTA | 9780440613930 | English | United States The Eden Express PDF Book I think The Eden Express is a terrific read based on real life events and real life is almost always more interesting than the made up stuff, with the exception of Kurt Vonnegut's made up stuff. Wilson Quarterly Archives. Quotes from The Eden Express Reveals a bit about Mark's relationship with his father Kurt, too. Showing Of feeling that it is ridiculous to care about who put what where and when, but still having feelings of betrayal and ownership over a person. Add a library card to your account to borrow titles, place holds, and add titles to your wish list. He met so many interesting and compassionate souls and bonded deeply with nature, but his chemistry still made him sort of an unstable time bomb. Mark is the son of the famous author Kurt Vonnegut author of Salughterhouse-Five. He was Mark the "real life prophet guru. Prior to spotting this book, I had no idea Kurt Vonnegut who I am in awe of had a son who wrote nonfiction. Biography Memoir. Mar 12, Mariam rated it really liked it. Read this wonderful memoir to experience the journey of a man through insanity and back to be moved about how much things can change in very little time. I found myself having to get up and go do something else for a couple of hours during some sections of the book, as I felt myself being drawn into the madness along with him and needed to sort it all out in my head before the next episode began. The timeline begins in — a turbulent time in America no doubt — but one young man by the name of Mark Vonnegut was feeling it more than most. Is it his madness, is it the drugs, is it the craziness in the outside world? Sign in. The edition I read also contains a letter from Vonnegut to a friend suffering from schizophrenia. See details. Kurt Vonnegut is one of my favorite authors of all time. Kevorkian, Vonnegut skips back and forth between life and the He has a really hard time figuring out if he's discovered the meaning of life, has taken too many drugs, or is going insane. As he relates his thoughts and actions during the times tha I was drawn to this one because I'm a big Kurt Vonnegut fan; in his memoirs KV mentions his son Mark's struggle with, and subsequent recovery from, schizophrenia in the early '70's. Welcome back. Other offers may also be available. Through this journey he has several mental breakdowns and has to be institutionalized, but he overcomes his disease and become a successful pediatrician after attending Harvard Medical School. For brave honesty, read "Letter from Birmingham Jail," not this pseudopsychiatric memoir full of wimpy, whiny flower children. The difficulty of explaining abstract concepts. There was just so much about it that was absolutely perfect, and I'll never forget the experience. He writes wonderfully and accurately about mental illness. The book charted Mark's descent into schizophrenia. The part of the book concerning his treatment is far more palatable and informative. Just prior to each breakdown in the book, Mark was trying to reach out to people. I found his voice to be enjoyable and his experience to be captivating, as I too found myself losing grip on reality a few years back while in my early 20's. I actually had to stop reading it for a couple of days because I was living in the book instead of real life. Maybe I was unconsciously saving this for the right moment, and just maybe that moment is now. Security vs. Vonnegut, in Written from the perspective of someone caught in the grip of schizophrenia, The Eden Express is, for the most part, very difficult to read. The Eden Express is an autobiographical account of Mark's years immediately after college, his thoughts, experiences and descent into and eventual emergence from mental illness. The Eden Express Writer It certainly seems like the right time, so I'm actually starting my re-reading-of-Vonnegut journey with something new! Given the chance, once should take the journey too. Taxes may be applicable at checkout. Meine Mediathek Hilfe Erweiterte Buchsuche. Timequake By Kurt Vonnegut. If you've ever felt overwhelmed, read this and know that you are far from overwhelmed. Contact the seller - opens in a new window or tab and request a shipping method to your location. The writing during this first thir The Eden Express was written by Kurt Vonnegut's son Mark, and is a memoir of his struggles with schizophrenia, or his struggles with, what he once called, " apocalypse, shit storms, and eternal truths. Not only am I dealing with my own mental health "stuff," but I have been having some trouble with this whole "life in general" thing. Little by little it sank in. May 24, Noelle Kukenas rated it it was amazing. This is an amazing memoir, and I'm very glad I read it. Makes a nice pairing with Krakauer's "Into the Wild. Please enter a valid ZIP Code. Longtime member. Perfect for someone making a big life change, especially if that includes travelling or moving somewhere else. Spine may show signs of wear. Not very brave, not completely honest, Mark Vonnegut never paid much of a price for the s. But, oops, along the way he goes nuts! Vonnegut never comes to life. Mark did that, and so did I. The Eden Express : A Memoir of Insanity Seven Stories Press , - Seiten 1 Rezension The Eden Express describes from the inside Mark Vonnegut's experience in the late '60s and early '70s —a recent college grad; in love; living communally on a farm, with a famous and doting father, cherished dog, and prized jalopy—and then the nervous breakdowns in all their slow-motion intimacy, the taste of mortality and opportunity for humor they provided, and the grim despair they afforded as well. The last part of your Myspace URL. Special financing available Select PayPal Credit at checkout to have the option to pay over time. Sometimes it was hard for me to read and relate to the hippiedom that he was describing, so the reading was a bit slow at the start, but reading further in the book, i wished i had cherished that part more because it got stressful fast but difficult to put I'd describe this book as a "heavy" read. Release Dates. My inability to effectively express my thoughts is driving me crazy. Numbers, dots and dashes are ok, too. ISBN : Then the trees were angry at him. If you're still having trouble, follow these steps to sign in. Coping with a loved one's incurable illness. Guillaume Respect. Get the item you ordered or get your money back. Written from the perspective of someone caught in the grip of schizophrenia, The Eden Express is, for the most part, very difficult to read. The heart pounding, the hypersensitivity, delusions, world ending panic, extreme paranoia, the suicide attempts, talking to the demon, his girlfriend is dead, his father is dead, everyone-is-dead-including-Mark, the conspiracies, naked runs of catch-me-if-you-can, lost sense of time, the transcendence and going beyond, breaking windows, blackouts, good versus evil, life or death for himself, life or death for the entire species -- all of it up to him, all of it in his head -- all of it articulated in an enlightening manner. What the disease does to the diseased, the consequences it has on friends and family, social and cultural implications Jan 20, PM. More Details If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading. The s word is only spoken right for the end of the book, thus giving you a glimpse of the thoughts and behaviour contained within a person, but never giving you a label to pin on it, which was exactly what they were all on the Farm to escape from. Jul 25, Jessica Rose rated it liked it. ThriftBooks Store thrift. The Eden Express Reviews Clean me, clean clothes. Many years on, when I found myself in those shoes, and I began to read the book, it felt as though I had written it — in one of the periods when I felt separated from myself I had been writing it all down and now here it was in front of me, or else someone else had written the book just for me, to tell me I was not alone. Report item - opens in a new window or tab. Verified purchase: Yes Condition: Pre- owned. Seven Stories Press Amazon. Sometimes it was hard for me to read and relate to the hippiedom that he was describing, so the reading was a bit slow at the start, but reading further in the book, i wished i had cherished that part more because it got stressful fast but difficult to put it down. Meine Mediathek Hilfe Erweiterte Buchsuche. Sign in to see the full collection. If you are from BC, you will especially like this, as it takes place on a commune near Powell River, and in Vancouver. New other. View 1 comment. He started up, per usual, being enthusiastic about how far out I was. Brave, honest, and true, they paid a price.
Recommended publications
  • A Discourse of Redemption in Three of Kurt Vonnegut's Novels
    Tutton Parker 1 What’s in the Potato Barn: A Discourse of Redemption in Three of Kurt Vonnegut’s Novels A Thesis Submitted to The Faculty of the College of Arts and Science in Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Arts and English By Rebecca Tutton Parker April 2018 Tutton Parker 2 Liberty University College of Arts and Sciences Master of Arts in English Student Name: Rebecca Tutton Parker Thesis Chair Date First Reader Date Second Reader Date Tutton Parker 3 Table of Contents Chapter One: Introduction………………………………………………………………………...4 Chapter Two: Redemption in Slaughterhouse-Five and Bluebeard…………………………..…23 Chapter Three: Rabo Karabekian’s Path to Redemption in Breakfast of Champions…………...42 Chapter Four: How Rabo Karabekian Brings Redemption to Kurt Vonnegut…………………..54 Chapter Five: Conclusion………………………………………………………………………..72 Works Cited……………………………………………………………………………………..75 Tutton Parker 4 Chapter One: Introduction The Bluebeard folktale has been recorded since the seventeenth century with historical roots even further back in history. What is most commonly referred to as Bluebeard, however, started as a Mother Goose tale transcribed by Charles Perrault in 1697. The story is about a man with a blue beard who had many wives and told them not to go into a certain room of his castle (Hermansson ix). Inevitably when each wife was given the golden key to the room and a chance alone in the house, she would always open the door and find the dead bodies of past wives. She would then meet her own death at the hands of her husband. According to Casie Hermansson, the tale was very popular in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, which spurred many literary figures to adapt it, including James Boswell, Charles Dickens, Herman Melville, and Thomas Carlyle (x).
    [Show full text]
  • Open HONORS FINAL.Pdf
    THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY SCHREYER’S HONORS COLLEGE DIVISION OF ARTS AND HUMANITIES MENTAL ILLNESS IN FAMILY MEMOIRS: AN INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDY EXAMINING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MENTALLY ILL PARENTS AND THEIR CHILDREN BRANDON CHERRY SPRING 2016 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a baccalaureate degree in English with honors in Letters, Arts, and Sciences Reviewed and approved* by the following: Ellen Knodt Professor of English Thesis Supervisor Karen Weekes Associate Professor of English and Women’s Studies Faculty Reader *Signatures are on file in the Schreyer’s Honors College. i Abstract This project explores the relationship between mentally ill parents and their children in the memoir form. These family memoirs offer insights into the effects of mentally ill parents on their children. The family memoirs of three famous twentieth century writers are studied to analyze the effects of mental illness in the written form, because a wide majority of the population does not have the privilege or skills to write about events effectively. Further psychological research also demonstrates how the coping mechanisms that children of mentally ill parents employ impact their development into adult life. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract………………………………………………….i Acknowledgements……………………………………..iii Introduction……………………………………………....1 i. Memoirs and Authors……………………………1 ii. Background of Mental Illnesses………………...6 iii. Link Between creativity and mental Illness.........8 The Hemingway Family: Strange Tribe……………………12 The Styron Family: Darkness Visible and Reading my Father ………………………………………21 The Vonnegut Family: The Eden Express and Just Like Someone Without Mental Illness Only More So…………………………………………………………26 Conclusion………………………………………………..36 Bibliography………………………………………………38 Academic Vita…………………………………………….41 iii Acknowledgements Thank you to Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Kurt Vonnegut Transcript [Opening Music] Susan Neville
    Kurt Vonnegut Transcript [Opening Music] Susan Neville: Hello, and welcome to Naptown. I'm your host, Susan Neville, and our guest for this initial series of interviews is writer Dan Wakefield. Mr. Wakefield is the author of nine non-fiction books, two memoirs, five novels, including the best-selling Going​ All the Way. Bill​ Moyers called Dan's memoir, Returning,​ A Spiritual Journey,​ “One of the most important memoirs of the spirit I've ever read.” In his book Island​ in the City: The World of Spanish Harlem,​ James Baldwin wrote, “Dan Wakefield is a remarkable combination of humility and tough mindedness, it makes these streets and these struggling people come alive.” Over the next few episodes, we'll be talking to Mr. Wakefield about his life, including his deep friendships with writers such as Baldwin, Anne Sexton, Joan Didion, and Kurt Vonnegut, and his interviews as a staff writer for The​ Nation,​ the Atlantic​ Monthly,​ the New​ York Times,​ and other newspapers and magazines, with such luminaries as Bobby Kennedy, C. Wright Mills, Dorothy Day, Adam Clayton Powell, Joan Baez, and Golda Meir, some of whom became good friends. Again, I'm your host, Susan Neville, welcome Mr. Wakefield back to Naptown. [Transitional Music] Dan Wakefield: Kurt​ Vonnegut, Christ-Loving Atheist When​ I came home from King's Chapel on the Sunday, I published an article called “Returning to Church” in the New York Times magazine in 1985 I had a message from Kurt Vonnegut on my answering machine, "This is Kurt," his voice said. "I forgive you." My becoming a Christian again in mid-life after many years of post-collegiate atheism and Vonnegut's humanist views became a running and always good-natured series of jibes between us.
    [Show full text]
  • Just Like Someone Without Mental Illness Only More So: a Memoir / Mark Vonnegut
    Flowers and Fish, 2005 (Painting by Mark Vonnegut) Just Like Someone Without Mental Illness Only More So is a work of nonfiction. Some names and identifying details have been changed. Copyright © 2010 by Mark Vonnegut, M.D. All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Delacorte Press, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. DELACORTE PRESS is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc., and the colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Vonnegut, Mark. Just like someone without mental illness only more so: a memoir / Mark Vonnegut. p. cm. eISBN: 978-0-440-33977-9 1. Vonnegut, Mark. 2. Pediatricians—Massachusetts—Boston—Biography. 3. Schizophrenics—Massachusetts—Boston—Biography. 4. Children of celebrities—Massachusetts—Boston—Biography. I. Title. RJ43.V66A3 2010 618.92’8980092—dc22 2010009765 [B] www.bantamdell.com v3.1 The other day I found the final version—along with several drafts—of the note below: Dear Santa, Can you please get me the large set of Pickett’s Charge (soldiers, horses, cannons, fences, trees, and a hill)? From Oliver Living with a seven-year-old who asks Santa for a 470-piece Civil War battle replica play set is a great joy and privilege. Yesterday he asked me, “So what happened to the slaves after the Emancipation Proclamation?” This book is dedicated to all seven-year-olds … and their seven-year-olds and their seven-year-olds and so forth and so on. Contents Cover Title Page Copyright Dedication A
    [Show full text]
  • Virágvasárnap Virágvasárnap Önéletrajzi Jegyzetek a Fordítás Az Alábbi Kiadás Alapján Készült: Kurt Vonnegut: Palm Sunday
    Virágvasárnap Virágvasárnap Önéletrajzi jegyzetek A fordítás az alábbi kiadás alapján készült: Kurt Vonnegut: Palm Sunday. An Autobiographical Collage Published by Delacorte Press, New York Copyright © 1981 by The Ramjac Corporation This translation is published by arrangement with Dial Press, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc. Jacket photograph copyright © 1980 by Jill Krementz Fordította: Borbás Mária és Szántó György Tibor Második kiadás A fedélen Jill Krementz fotója Fedéltipográfia: Somos Péter Hungarian translation © by Borbás Mária, Szántó György Tibor, 2002, 2009 Hungarian edition ©by Maecenas Könyvkiadó, 2002, 2009 honlap: www.maecenaskiado.hu Elõszó a második kiadáshoz A kalitka most éppen üres ugyan, de ennek nincs jelentõsége. Kurt Vonnegut ma népszerûbb, mint valaha. A világ nyolcvan- négy országában jelent meg posztumusz kötete, az Ördögcsapda (Armageddon in Retrospect). Sokan már a folytatást várják. Vá- rakozásuk nem is lesz hiábavaló, mert az író fia, Mark Vonnegut igen intenzíven kutakodik. Állítólag aki keres, talál. Jelen gyûjtemény természetesen szintén nem hiányozhat egy magára adó Vonnegut-olvasó polcáról. Mindent megtudhatunk arról, hogy az író miképpen vélekedett önmagáról, mesterségé- rõl, a világról, az emberi nem perspektíváiról, Jézusról, satöbbi. Az elõzõ kiadás 2002-ben jelent meg. Hét év telt el. Adatokat kellett pontosítanunk, és ha már belepiszkáltunk a szövegbe, javítottuk a hibákat is. Akadt egy-kettõ. Látni fogják, hogy Vonnegut így kezdi önéletrajzi jegyzeteit: „Jelen könyv egy amerikai zseni remekmûve.” Új mûfaji minõ- ségnek új elnevezés jár, hiszen a remekmû szûkmarkúan jelle- mezné a fenomenális alkotás kozmikus erényeit. Ezen új mûfaji meghatározás a „blivit”. Jelentése: „…két kiló szar egykilós ta- sakban”. Emelkedett szórakozást kívánunk hatalmas családunk min- den egyes tagjának, Kurt Vonnegut hûséges olvasóinak! Maecenas Könyvkiadó, 2009 5 Unokatestvéreimnek, a de St.
    [Show full text]
  • Kurt Vonnegut, Jr
    KURT VONNEGUT, JR. KURT VONNEGUT Kenzaburo Oe visited Hiroshima, and has truly learned its lesson. Kurt Vonnegut visited Dresden, and has truly learned its lesson.1 1. There may be other less famous cases of which we are currently unaware (for instance, after WWII certain select German government officials were treated by the Allies to a tour of former concentration camp sites). HDT WHAT? INDEX KURT VONNEGUT KURT VONNEGUT 1753 April 3: Kurt Vonnegut, the immortal author of FATES WORSE THAN DEATH, has designated this to have been the first, the original, “Writer’s Day.” We shall celebrate the anniversary of this April 3d because Samuel Johnson, who was working up his DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE, recorded a prayer in his diary on this day: O God who has hitherto supported me, enable me to proceed in this labor & in the whole task of my present state that when I shall render up at the last day an account of the talent committed to me I may receive pardon for the sake of Jesus Christ. 1848 Clemens Vonnegut, Sr. emigrated to North America. (It is a total coincidence, that this man who would become an ancestor of Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. was emigrating to the New World just at the point at which the war technology of aerial bombardment of human population centers was first being experimented with! The ancestor’s attitudes toward aerial bombardment of civilian families, if he had any such attitudes, are totally unknown!) NOT A BIG FAN OF AERIAL BOMBARDMENT 1913 November 22: Edward Benjamin Britten was born in Lowestoft, Suffolk, the youngest of four children born to Robert Victor Britten, a dental surgeon, and Edith Rhoda Hockey, an amateur pianist and singer.
    [Show full text]
  • Principles of Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy in the Works Of
    The Accidental Practitioner: Principles of Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy in the Works of Kurt Vonnegut by Joseph J. Ward A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Department of English College of Arts and Sciences University of South Florida Major Professor: Lawrence Broer, Ph.D. Phillip Sipiora, Ph.D. Elizabeth Metzger, Ph.D. Date of Approval: July 1, 2010 Keywords: Brain, Absurdity, Human, Condition, Psychotherapy, Philosophy, Literature Copyright © 2010, Joseph J. Ward DEDICATION This thesis is dedicated to Jen, my amazing wife whose support and understanding enabled me to attend countless night classes after lengthy workdays, semester after semester after semester. Throughout the process, she faced long work days of her own, yet somehow managed to hold down the fort with one, then two, then three little Indians running amok at home. I will always appreciate the sacrifices she made so that this thesis could be possible. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS It is with great appreciation that I acknowledge and thank the members of my thesis committee: Drs. Lawrence Broer, Phillip Sipiora, and Elizabeth Metzger. I owe a debt of gratitude in particular to my Major Professor, Dr. Broer, whose Modern American Fiction course stimulated my interest in Vonnegut’s work, and whose expertise in all things Vonnegut increased my own awareness of what this kindly writer had to say. I also wish to thank Bill Bilenky, Esq., and Jack Pepper, Esq., for their support (and my continued full-time employment) while completing my program of study. Last, but certainly not least, my friend, Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Vonnegut on the Art of Writing, Susan Farrell, College of Charleston
    1 Susan Farrell English Department College of Charleston Charleston, SC 29424 Vonnegut on the Art of Writing In Kurt Vonnegut’s eleventh novel, Galápagos, Leon Trout, son of ubiquitous science fiction writer Kilgore Trout, repeatedly asserts that human beings’ big brains are responsible for most of the tragedy in the world. Thus, he insists that that the de-evolution of human beings to small-brained seal-like creatures—which is depicted as occurring over the course of a million years in the novel—is a good thing, an improvement in human character. Yet, at the same time, the novel offers moments that suggest the loss of our big brains might be a tragedy rather than the triumph Leon Trout claims it is. One of the novel’s most touching moments occurs when biology teacher Mary Hepburn’s husband, Roy, is on his deathbed. A few seconds after Roy seems to have expired, his lips move again, and he whispers his final words to Mary: “I’ll tell you what the human soul is, Mary,” he whispered, his eyes closed. “Animals don’t have one. It’s the part of you that knows when your brain isn’t working right. I always knew, Mary. There wasn’t anything I could do about it, but I always knew.” (45) 2 Roy asserts here that human beings’ self-consciousness is what sets people apart from the animals, what gives us a soul and makes us fully human. Vonnegut takes this dictum to heart in his own writing. Throughout his body of work, he remains self-consciously aware of his own position as a writer, frequently using metafictive techniques in his novels to comment on the nature of storytelling and narrative at the same time that he tells stories, and frequently discussing the art of the writer in his many essays and speeches.
    [Show full text]
  • Armageddon in Retrospect
    ALSO BY KURT VONNEGUT A Man Without a Country Bagombo Snuff Box Timequake Fates Worse Than Death Hocus Pocus Bluebeard Galápagos Deadeye Dick Palm Sunday Jailbird Slapstick Wampeters, Foma & Granfalloons Breakfast of Champions Happy Birthday, Wanda June Slaughterhouse-Five Welcome to the Monkey House God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater Cat’s Cradle Mother Night The Sirens of Titan Player Piano Armageddon in Retrospect And Other New and Unpublished Writings on War and Peace Kurt Vonnegut G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS NEW YORK G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS Publishers Since 1838 Published by the Penguin Group Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA · Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada (a division of Pearson Canada Inc.) · Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England · Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd) · Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd) · Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi–110 017, India · Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd) · Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa · Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England Copyright © 2008 by The Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Trust Introduction © 2008 by Mark Vonnegut Frontispiece and images on pages 14, 47, 48, 71, 91, 103, 115, 137, 143, 153, 181, 207, and 233 copyright © 2008 by Kurt Vonnegut & Origami Express LLC (www.vonnegut.com).
    [Show full text]
  • Kurt Vonnegut
    Kurt Vonnegut KÉKSZAKÁLL BLUEBEARD Kurt Vonnegut KÉKSZAKÁLL BLUEBEARD A fordítás az alábbi kiadás alapján készült: Kurt Vonnegut: Bluebeard Delacorte Press, New York, 1987 This translation is published by arrangement with Dial Press, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc. Copyright © 1987 by Kurt Vonnegut Author’s photograph copyright © 1987 by Jill Krementz Cover art © Dustin Harbin Fordította Kappanyos András A borítót Dustin Harbin Rabo Karabekian címû alkotásának felhasználásával Somos Péter tervezte Fedél sorozatterv: Bibor Gábor A hátsó borítón Jill Krementz fotója Negyedik kiadás Hungarian translation © by Kappanyos András, 1991, 1998, 2004, 2011 Hungarian edition © by Maecenas Könyvkiadó, 1991, 1998, 2004, 2011 Honlap: www.maecenaskiado.hu A SZERZÕ JEGYZETE Ez egy regény, s mint ilyen, álönéletrajz. Nem tekinthetõ az absztrakt expresszionista festõiskola, az Amerikai Egyesült Álla- mokból kiindult elsõ jelentõs mûvészeti mozgalom kritikai tör- ténetének. Nem története semmi másnak, csak saját egyéni véle- ményemnek errõl-amarról. Rabo Karabekian sosem létezett, sem Terry Kitchen, sem Circe Berman, sem Paul Slazinger, sem Dan Gregory, sem Edith Taft, sem Marilee Kemp, sem e könyv bármely más fõbb szereplõje. Ami az általam említett valóságos vagy híres személyeket illeti: könyvemben nem tesznek semmi olyat, amit azonos körülmé- nyek között a valóságban nem tettek volna. Azt is elmondhatom, hogy mindazt, amit ebben a könyvben összehordtam, azok a groteszk árak ihlették, amelyeket letûnõ századunkban kifizettek némely mûalkotásokért. Az irdatlan tö- megû értékpapír néhány személy és intézmény számára lehe- tõvé tette, hogy az emberi játékosság bizonyos formáit szükség- telen s ezért lehangoló komolyságba burkolják. Nemcsak a mû- vészet homoktortáira gondolok, hanem a gyermekjátékokra is, mint a futkározás, az ugrálás, a fogócska, a labdázás.
    [Show full text]
  • Charles J. Shields Research Collection, 1939–2012
    Collection # M 1155 OM 0591 CT 2320–2342 F 1876 FD 0001–0002 CHARLES J. SHIELDS RESEARCH COLLECTION, 1939–2012 Collection Information Biographical Sketch Scope and Content Note Series Contents Processed by Kathleen S. Clark February, 2014 Manuscript and Visual Collections Department William Henry Smith Memorial Library Indiana Historical Society 450 West Ohio Street Indianapolis, IN 46202-3269 www.indianahistory.org COLLECTION INFORMATION VOLUME OF 15 manuscript boxes; 4 oversize manuscript folders; 1 box COLLECTION: photographs; 23 cassette tapes; 12 DVD's; 1 reel microfilm; 2 flash drives. COLLECTION 1939–2012 DATES: PROVENANCE: Charles J. Shields, Charlottesville, Virginia, 2014 RESTRICTIONS: None COPYRIGHT: REPRODUCTION Permission to reproduce or publish material in this collection RIGHTS: must be obtained from the Indiana Historical Society. ALTERNATE FORMATS: RELATED SC 1509 Kurt Vonnegut Collection HOLDINGS: ACCESSION 2014.0188 NUMBER: NOTES: BIOGRAPAHICAL SKETCH Charles J. Shields grew up in the Midwest and in 1997 left a career as a high school teacher and administrator in a rural, central Illinois school to focus on independent writing. Over the next several years he published twenty histories and biographies for young people. His first biography for adults, Mockingbird: A Portrait of Harper Lee, became a New York Times bestseller in 2006. Two years later, Shields published a young adult version of his Harper Lee biography, I Am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee, which received several awards for young non-fiction. Shields contacted Kurt Vonnegut in 2006 for permission to write a biography on the Indianapolis native and American author. Although Vonnegut initially refused, Shields persisted and eventually received a post card from Vonnegut on which the writer had sketched a self portrait and the letters "OK." Shields met and corresponded with Vonnegut often over the next year until when Vonnegut passed away resulting from a fall at his home.
    [Show full text]
  • Kurt Vonnegut
    Kurt Vonnegut’s Wrestling Match with God Last Sunday I said that Jack Kerouac was one of several writers and novelists whose works are especially meaningful to me. He’s not the only one. Kurt Vonnegut is another writer whose writings have greatly influenced me. He died ten years ago this spring at the age of 84. Recently I got drawn into a Facebook inquiry that listed what were said to be the top 50 (or maybe it was 100) novels of the 20th century; and you clicked the ones you’d read. I don’t know decided which novels made the list, but among them were Kerouac’s “On the Road” and Vonnegut’s “Slaughterhouse Five.” I don’t remember my score, but I didn’t do too badly. Among the many novels and collections of essays Kurt Vonnegut published over the course of his lifetime was one that came out in 1991 titled Fates Worse Than Death. It included a talk he gave, as the annual Ware Lecturer, at our Unitarian Universalist Association’s 1986 General Assembly. The Ware Lecture is the “celebrity event” at our GAs, where someone whose name recognition goes beyond UU circles comes in and makes a presentation. In Fates Worse Than Death Vonnegut introduced the text of his Ware Lecture presentation in this way: “In order not to seem a spiritual quadriplegic to strangers trying to get a fix on me, I sometimes say I’m a Unitarian Universalist.” I’ve heard all kinds of reasons as to why people become UUs, but Vonnegut is the only one who ever said it was to avoid the fate of being a “spiritual quadriplegic.” Anyway, there you have it.
    [Show full text]