Kurt Vonnegut's slaughterhouse news comes from ancient Greek playwright Euripides ("All we all have to give up" (Fitzhenry 122)) to the famous 19th century poet Emily Dickinson ("Because I will not die He stopped in good faith for me - / transport was held, but our own / / immortal "(Fitzhenry 126)] death, reincarnation, only regeneration and loss are repeated many times There is no clear answer to the most mysterious death problem in life, and that seems to be more natural to explore this problem further.
Vonnegut, Kurt Slaughterhouse by Five Kurt Vonnegut Kuughterhouse Five is a fictitious book based on the author's experience as a prisoner of war during the fire of Dresden. Dresden was a city that had not been influenced by the World War II before and was almost exclusively occupied by German hospitals full of American prisoners and injured soldiers. As an untouched city, the US Air Force decided it was an ideal place to try out the effectiveness of the new type of war: a high altitude fire bombing. The result is catastrophic: Dresden moves from ash and rubble from one of the most beautiful cities in Europe. Billy pilgrims of the protagonists struggle with this idea and try to rationalize war and living through all necessary means, so the destruction of this beauty is a common theme throughout the book.
Slaughterhouse - Five Dresden Kurt Vonnegut 's Slaughterhouse - Five is focused on Dresden' s devastating bomb in both Vonnegut 's real life in World War II and fictitious Billy Pilgrim. Through this novel, Vonnegut has announced an explanation of the event that itself can not explain. In order to tell the story to the world, Vonnegut used Billy 's pilgrim tralfa morian' s experience as a window to free readers from fear of war.