I had an email from a friend earlier this am, letting me know that Kurt Vonnegut had died. Many others will write more eloquently on the subject, than me. I am just sorta speechless right now. Kurt Vonnegut has been one of my favorite authors since college. How it took me so long to get into him I will never know.
A friend, John Ownens, the one kid at my small Christian college who had a Joy Division and Bauhaus t-shirt lent me Breakfast of Champions. From then I was hooked. I mean in that book he showed me what an asshole looked like. I would have no idea if it wasn't for his illustration. And now I know.
After that I read Bluebeard and remember crying. I remember my senior quote in my college yearbook was attributed to Rabo Karabekian.
I remember reading Mother Night one extremely stormy afternoon in my apartment. I remember for some reason I had Massive Attack's Mezzanine cd playing. I remember I was certain the world was coming to an end, or at least my apartment was getting smaller.
When I moved to Indianapolis, I remember searching out Indianapolis streets and street corners from some of his books. Vonnegut lived in New York at the end of his life, but, I think there are few of those in Indy whom have read his books that don't in a way consider him ours. Not in a selfish sense, but just in a sense of civic pride. And moreso than that, probably gratitude.
I'm not an enormous fan of short stories. But I gobbled up short stories by Vonnegut and J.D Salanger. There is a short story by Vonnegut that to this day remains possibly my favorite short story ever. In my mix tape making days I remember very badly wanting to make a tape for a girl and label one side "through leaves" and the other side "over bridges." I still want to make that tape. I just need to find that girl. I hope she has a cassette player still. She will.
That story was A Long Walk To Forever. Take the time to read it if you haven't already. If you have read it before, read it again.
Thank you, Kurt Vonnegut.
You were wrong about others being more eloquent on the subject. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI tried to write my own tribute the other day, but I stopped. I couldn't. It was too personal for me. I am sure I will one day after it is all settled within me, but I cannot right now.
i apologize. i told you i didn't read your post when we talked at the coffee shop, but i did. sorry, just trying to save face.
ReplyDeleteAwesome post! I give props for the people who have the courage to white. I can't do this because I am always afraid I am going to spill something on myself and ruin my outfit..
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