<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Mythic Bios]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://matthewkirshenblatt.ca]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[matthewkirshenblatt]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://matthewkirshenblatt.ca/author/matthewkirshenblatt/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Ice-Nine Mornings and Vonnegut&nbsp;Nights]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;d only heard his name in passing as I read other works of fiction and science-fiction. I&#8217;m not even sure how my girlfriend got me to start reading Kurt Vonnegut: what the precise details of that moment were like but I remember other details.</p>
<p>It was summer of last year. I was still in the process of (procrastinating) writing my Master&#8217;s Thesis and driving myself crazy. I&#8217;d finished reading Hermann Hesse&#8217;s <em>Glass Bead Game</em>&#8211;or<em> Magister Ludi</em> if you&#8217;d like&#8211;and I found that once I did I wasn&#8217;t really interested in reading anything else of his. But I was starving for reading material: so much so I didn&#8217;t even know that I was.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t exactly remember when my girlfriend and I started talking about <em>Cat&#8217;s Cradle</em>, but we did and I really wanted to read it. But as I write this I remember that it had to do with her introducing me to Vonnegut&#8217;s made-up religion of Bokononism&#8211;of the concept of a <em>karass</em> as a strange unification of people under God or divine influence, and especially a <em>granfalloon</em>: the creation of a forced or &#8220;false&#8221; group of people who really have nothing in common whatsoever but&#8211;again&#8211;something forced or artificial. I&#8217;d had some personal experiences with both&#8211;and it is hilarious and fitting just how fictional concepts make human nature and interaction easier to understand&#8211;and I wanted to know more about the book from where it all came from.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, despite our best efforts, we couldn&#8217;t find her copy. So I gave in and borrowed it from York&#8217;s library. As I was reading it and making commentary on the way as I usually do, all my girlfriend really told me at the time was that she found it &#8220;cute&#8221; that I thought I could predict how a Kurt Vonnegut novel would end or even continue.</p>
<p>She was right.</p>
<p>What can I tell you? That summer, Kurt Vonnegut&#8211;or &#8220;Grandpa&#8221; as my girlfriend likes to call him&#8211;exposed me to a world of black, black humour and rendered spectacularly the banal frailty and stupidity of the human race in such a way that was immensely entertaining. His &#8220;what-the-fuck&#8221; moments were plenty and awfully true to the strangeness of life. I started<em> Cat&#8217;s Cradle</em> slow. It was a deceptive little bugger: with each chapter little more than a few pages for the most part. Then as I got towards the middle I consumed each page with voraciousness and a notable lack of mercy or pity.</p>
<p>After that there was an old, tattered, and well-loved copy of <em>Mother Night</em> for my consideration: where what we consider war crimes and human atrocity, stupidity, and uniqueness essentially and cunningly &#8220;fuck you the fuck up&#8221; and your preconceptions too. The best lesson I got out of the thing that I read as I took the bus to school, lay in our bed, and even rode with my friends to a table-top role-playing game session with Lego is to be careful of what you pretend to be, because you might become it.</p>
<p>I remember mornings where my girlfriend forced me to go meet my friends for gaming weekends and those books accompanied me with lunch. I didn&#8217;t think about my looming school project, but I learned from Grandpa Vonnegut instead&#8211;my cynical, grumpy, literary grandfather&#8211;about life. I don&#8217;t remember the last Vonnegut book I read. It was about a man who was a former soldier and he taught at a college close to a prison. I never got farther than the chapter with him and his class looking at old and failed perpetual motion machines found in an attic.</p>
<p>I remember that part well. I was riding by myself back down two buses from York Region back downtown from said gaming session and the serious work around it  :). It was the bus I took on Bloor in the late warm summer night: under the amber artificial lighting of the bus, the ambiance of the passing streetlights outside, the fading blue darkness in the sky. and a metal framed red-purple seat. I put that book on hold to read <em>A Song of Ice and Fire</em>&#8211;based on my friends&#8217; constant pestering that I needed to&#8211;and I never picked it up again. I wish I had.</p>
<p>My Vonnegut education is not complete. I didn&#8217;t finish that book and my girlfriend doesn&#8217;t have <em>Slaughterhouse Five</em>. I hear Vonnegut likes to break the fourth wall so much after a while that he just gets fed up and it is less a spectacle and more a matter of a &#8220;I don&#8217;t give a damn&#8221; course. I can sympathize with that. I think I will be a grumpy old man like that when I&#8217;m old. I&#8217;m already half-way there with the grumpy part. Or maybe that&#8217;s crazy I&#8217;m thinking about.</p>
<p>I do think that you need to have time between readings of Vonnegut: just like you don&#8217;t want to eat bitter-sweet chocolate all the time: just occasionally and when the summer times come, and when you have a long bus ride far past two in the morning and you need some black therapeutic entertainment on the TTC &#8230; all the way home.</p>
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