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Word: vonnegutisms (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...film version of Kurt Vonnegut's recent play Happy Birthday, Wanda June brings to the screen for the first time a widely read and respected writer. Since Happy Birthday, Wanda June is an especially inept movie, it would be comforting to report that Vonnegut has been victimized by the Hollywood barbarians, his work vulgarized beyond recognition. But it is not so. Vonnegut's own company (called, with inadvertent irony, Sourdough Ltd.) co-produced the film. His name appears in the traditional superstar's position above the title, implying not only box office eminence but a certain pride...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Soft-Core Satire | 12/13/1971 | See Source »

Ogilvie and Tutko include a quote from Kurt Vonnegut...

Author: By Robert W. Gerlach, | Title: Low Blows and the Jock | 10/30/1971 | See Source »

...story of Going Nowhere is absurd, but Greenberg's good, tight fable is told with a warm, comic logic reminiscent of early Vonnegut. Arthur, a brilliant physics student, loses a leg in an unlikely series of events. Disconsolate, he becomes a hitchhiker. For ten years he lives on the random kindness of motorists, until his old mentor, Professor Melville, contacts him with an ambitious proposal. The prof wants to launch Arthur in a modest flying saucer and return him to earth as an interplanetary proselytizer for a new philosophy known as Unteleology. It disclaims any overriding purpose or plan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Two for the Road | 8/16/1971 | See Source »

...Kurt Vonnegut, guest lecturer in English in the fall term of 1970-71, once said that Spoon River Anthology is the most important book in American literature. Here is Edgar Lee Masters' vision of what the ghost of "Dippold the Optician...

Author: By Frank Rich, | Title: A Senior's Serapbook Pictures at an Exhibition | 6/17/1971 | See Source »

...ability to cope humanely with the complex choices of modern life. But unlike most apocalyptic critics, Herndon sees no easy solution. He proceeds, moreover, by meandering parable rather than polemic, and uses a ruefully genial tone of voice that might have come from Mark Twain or Kurt Vonnegut. As a result, he is just about the only education reformer alive whose writing could be (and should be) profitably and pleasurably read aloud at the family dinner table...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Notable | 5/31/1971 | See Source »

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