Book Review: Kurt Vonnegut's A Man Without A Country

I've always had a bit of an affinity for Kurt Vonnegut. We even share the same birthday – November 11. We also share a kind of bemused black humor about the chaos and craziness to be found in the world around us. Of course, Vonnegut is about three thousand times the writer I am, but y'know, we try to find common ground. Did I mention we have the same birthday?

Vonnegut is nearing his 84th year, while I'm just closing in on 35, so he's seen and done far more than I have. His latest, possibly his last, book is A Man Without A Country, a brief, bittersweet collection of essays that serve a bit as memoir, a bit of a screed against what Vonnegut calls the "proud, grinning, jut-jawed pitiless war-lovers" that have taken over America. If a man who lived through the Dresden firebombing (135,000 died) of World War II, the Great Depression, and more, considers this the worst of times, what hope is there?

Yet it's not all cynical curmudgeon grumblings, even if Bush is compared to Hitler at one point. There's still his trademark black humor, and a solid sense of outrage at what Vonnegut sees as us losing the chance to "become the humane and reasonable America so many members f my generation used to dream of."

A Man Without A Country, and its pointed political views, is kind of like sitting next to Vonnegut at a dinner party. He holds forth, eloquently and in his unmistakable style, on everything from writing (never use semicolons) to politics to the sorry state of the environment to a common theme of his in his books – loneliness and the utopia of an extended family. Country is filled with Vonnegutian (is that a word?) humanist insights, such as "Life is no way to treat an animal."

In his autumn, Vonnegut still seems timely. He's never taken himself too seriously, to his credit, and A Man Without A Country is a humble, yet opinionated work. "If I die – God forbid," he writes, "I would like to go to heaven to ask somebody in charge up there, 'Hey, what was the good news and what was the bad news?'"

It's fragmented, outraged, pessimistic, and a little overwrought, but yet, it's still compelling reading, if not essential. Vonnegut's fiction such as Slaughterhouse 5 or Hocus Pocus remains the place to start for novices – but Country serves as a summing up of this unique voice's views, a fine final epilogue. I only hope things aren't really quite as bad as he thinks they are.

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Article Author: Nik Dirga

An American journalist who now lives in New Zealand, Nik Dirga writes whenever the mood strikes him about books, music, movies, pop culture and more.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Robert Fitzpatrick

    Apr 04, 2006 at 12:17 am

    I hope it's not his last comment on our times but I tend to agree that things are as bad as he thinks they are. After all, this is twice in our lifetime that the " pitiless jut jawed war mongers" have led us into the unimaginable waste of war! How is it that we have let them??

  • 2 - Natalie Bennett

    Apr 05, 2006 at 5:45 pm

    This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!

  • 3 - Bolg

    Apr 28, 2006 at 8:50 am

    How about "the pitiless hook-nosed war mongers"? Much more accurate, no?

  • 4 - bernie

    Apr 13, 2008 at 1:37 pm

    I think Kurt Vonnegut has poor views in politics. I had to read the book for school. If it wasn't for school i would have stopped reading the book after the first couple pages.

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