In Catch 22, Joseph Heller showed how Yossarian wanted to resign from the Air Force, but the person in charge constantly changed the number of tasks that must be flew to resign from the Captain It was. One thing that left him in the Air Force was the law known as "Catch 22". This law stipulates that in order to resign from a mission as a soldier all duties must be completed. If they resign before completing the task they will be marked as angry and put in jail.
Joseph Heller, born in Brooklyn, NY, was the first Russian Jewish immigrant. His father was a driver of the van who died after receiving surgery at the age of five. Many critics believe that Heller grew up near Brooklyn 's famous amusement park, Coney Island, and developed a dark, smart humor characterizing his writing style. Heller reminds me of the influence of the world of literature on childhood, except for The Illiad of Homer, a poet of the 8th century BC. After graduating from high school in 1941, Heller worked at the insurance office for a while, and in 1942 the United States became the second world war (1939 - 45 years; France, the UK, the US, the Soviet Union and Germany , Italy and Japan). Two years later he was sent to the Corsica of the Mediterranean where he carried 60 battle missions as a fighter pilot and received the air medal and presidential award.
Joseph Heller, the author of Catch - 22, was born in 1923 near Coney Island in Brooklyn. His father was a Russian immigrant who drove a bakery delivery truck and died when Heller was five years old. Heller learned at Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn and served as an assistant for staff and blacksmith before joining the army. At the end of World War II, he was trained in bombers and carried out 60 combat missions. In the military, he encountered an obvious paradox with military rules. If you find that you are crazy, the pilot can stop the flight, but if the pilot asks for flight due to insanity, the army wants him to be completely sensible and to avoid danger This paradox defines his first novel, satirical work Catch - 22 (1961).