Breakfast Of Champions is vintage Vonnegut. One of his favorite characters, aging writer Kilgore Trout, finds to his horror that a Midwest car dealer is taking his fiction as truth. The result is murderously funny satire as Vonnegut looks at war, sex, racism, success, politics, and pollution in America and reminds us how to see the truth.From the Trade Paperback edition.
Kurt Vonnegut's Iconic Satire: Absurdity, Capitalism, and Human Life in 'Breakfast of Champions'
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Kurt Vonnegut is known for his absurd, simplistic, unconventional, and often satirical writing style. Within the pages of Breakfast of Champions, Vonnegut confronts the issues of race, poverty, and the distribution of wealth in America. He criticizes the capitalist system and consumerism, exposing the hypocrisy of a society that marginalizes and mistreats its own members. Another significant theme in the book is the environmental destruction caused by overpopulation and industrial pollution. Vonnegut paints a grim picture of a planet damaged by human activities, forcing readers to confront the consequences of our actions.
Listen, this is a fifty year old book written as a self-indulgent solipsistic meta-narrative birthday gift. It is nonsense. Sounds terrible, but it's not. It's a slender simple story with a lot of monotonous rhythms, kind of like the hums and oscillations of a Suicide song. That simplicity is the delivery method, but once the stories enter you fully they ricochet and even impossibly collide. Those collisions produce mirrors/leaks that are held up for you and the writer, not to reflect together, but rather to meet one another in that other universe. Plus we get another of Vonnegut's Bartleby's "I would prefer not to" with "And so on."
mahdi stune, bez energie doplazit se do mistni knihovny ... toz vylosujeme neco z lokalnich zasob :)
Urcite se nejedna ani o nejvtipnejsi ani nejkvalitnejsi Vonnegutovu knizku; k cajicku s medem ideal! Nevim pokolikaty to ctu, vzdycky me dostane prehrsel napadu v epizodnich pribezich, wau. Rad sem si pripomnel.
Reading perhaps 3rd or 4th time, still love it. Easy reading, lot of ideas in short stories inside main story.
I had such a love/hate relationship with this book, and yet I found I could not put it down. It's a bona-fide train wreck, full of gimmicks like the drawings that seem to have little import, and breaching of taboos largely for shock value, but buried beneath all that is a compelling message, delivered in a truly original way, and I am still processing it. Vonnegut has some interesting things to say about free will, but I think he let himself get carried away in the process.
As a "gift to himself on his 50th birthday" it seemed that he ran out of steam rather than take time to finish properly. But perhaps that was part of the gift; just let it happen how it did and not worry about it.
Parts of it I enjoyed, parts of it which were a bit hard to gel with. Like usual I think you really need to be in the right mood to read some Vonnegut books.
I'm having a hard time deciding whether I liked this book less than the rest of Vonnegut's, or such time has passed since my Vonnegut phase that I wouldn't like others either anymore. Regardless, it didn't click: the ratio of insight to connecting narrative seemed off, such that the book felt like a disjointed series of one-liners.
Four stars because it kinda got boring a few pages past the middle. The beginning was very strong and funny. The ending was ok.
Kilgore Trout is an interesting character. I liked the description of his novels, especially their ideas and how the author, who is the narrator, integrates it into the story.
The framing of the story is the first time I've encountered. The story is narrated by the author who is also a character in the novel. The problem is that the narrator is omniscient and omnipotent, so he can do whatever he wants to the characters. Does this detract from the 'reality' of the characters?
It is a short novel, and the drawings provide an additional source of humor. The language is plain. The book is very quotable.
Some quotes from the novel:
"The things other people have put into my head, at any rate, do not …
Four stars because it kinda got boring a few pages past the middle. The beginning was very strong and funny. The ending was ok.
Kilgore Trout is an interesting character. I liked the description of his novels, especially their ideas and how the author, who is the narrator, integrates it into the story.
The framing of the story is the first time I've encountered. The story is narrated by the author who is also a character in the novel. The problem is that the narrator is omniscient and omnipotent, so he can do whatever he wants to the characters. Does this detract from the 'reality' of the characters?
It is a short novel, and the drawings provide an additional source of humor. The language is plain. The book is very quotable.
Some quotes from the novel:
"The things other people have put into my head, at any rate, do not fit together nicely, are often useless and ugly, are out of proportion with one another, are out of proportion with life as it really is outside my head. I have no culture, no humane harmony in my brains. I can’t live without a culture anymore."
“Bill, Bill—” he said, “listen, I’m leaving the cage, but I’m coming back. I’m going out there to show them what nobody has ever seen at an arts festival before: a representative of all the thousands of artists who devoted their entire lives to a search for truth and beauty—and didn’t find doodley-squat!”
"Once I understood what was making America such a dangerous, unhappy nation of people who had nothing to do with real life, I resolved to shun storytelling. I would write about life. Every person would be exactly as important as any other. All facts would also be given equal weightiness. Nothing would be left out. Let others bring order to chaos. I would bring chaos to order, instead, which I think I have done."
Peculiar book. A recommendation in the San Francisco City Lights bookshop, I read this without knowing quite what to expect.
Written in an odd style, with bizarre illustrations, it was quite an enjoyable read, though a little confusing in places. Childlike in tone, yet not in others. Quite unlike any other book I've read: part satire, part surreal.
Not a very satisfying read, but an interesting book I'd not have picked up otherwise.
Chaos, irony, dark humor, satire: everything you want from Vonnegut. So far this in my favorite one. Couldn't put it down. Looking forward to more Kilgore Trout.
Breakfast of Champions: or Goodbye Blue Monday by Kurt Vonnegut is a dark comedy on racism, war, consumerism and greed in America during the 70’s. The book follows two loners, an unknown Sci-Fi writer named Kilgore Trout and a car dealer owner Dwayne Hoover. Both their lives are intertwined by one of the books written by Trout and read by the already plagued with “bad chemicals”, Dwayne Hoover. The book, which Hoover believed was factual, sent him into a violent rampage. Vonnegut is a master satirist and always manages to write some unusual stories, though comparing this to Slaughterhouse Five, Breakfast of Champions comes up short. It was enjoyable to read, weird in a lot of parts (I really didn’t need to know everyone characters penis size), but overall worth the read.