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Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five

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Kurt Vonnegut Jr. was born on November 11, 1922, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Vonnegut graduated from Shortridge High and later continued his studies at Cornell University before being drafted into World War Two. He was sent to Europe and then captured in the Battle of the Bulge shortly after arriving. When Dresden, Germany was firebombed by the Allied Forces, Vonnegut and other POWs were safe underground in an airtight slaughterhouse. When the war was over, Vonnegut married Jane Cox and had three children: Mark, Edith, and Nanette. In 1952, his first novel, Player Piano, was published. A few years after his first major publication, Vonnegut’s sister Alice Adams died of cancer. Him and his wife then took in Alice’s three children. Approximately 12 years after the Vonnegut family took the children in, his famous Dresden novel, Slaughterhouse-Five, was published. So it goes. This is the common phrase that Vonnegut uses after a death or when something tragic happens in his critically acclaimed book Slaughterhouse-Five. At face value, this book seems like an interesting sci-fi story, but in reality, it is a gripping anti war novel. So it goes. Such a little phrase with so much meaning packed into it. That seemingly insignificant phrase, so it goes, turns this somewhat …show more content…

He becomes engaged to Valencia, the rather large daughter of the owner of the optometrist school. Before their wedding, Billy has a nervous breakdown and admits himself to the veterans’ hospital. Once Billy fully recovers, he finishes optometry school, and marries Valencia. On their honeymoon, Valencia breaks down in tears, because she thought no one would ever marry her because she was so fat. “‘I never thought anybody would marry me.’” (Vonnegut 153) Billy’s father-in-law gives Billy his very own optometry practice. Billy and Valencia become very rich over the years. They have two children, a boy and a

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