Slaughterhouse-Five
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- USD 0.99
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- USD 0.99
Descripción editorial
Published in 1969 and immediately recognized as a masterpiece of American literature, Slaughterhouse-Five is Kurt Vonnegut's genre-defying meditation on war, time, trauma, and the impossibility of making sense of senseless violence. The novel centers on Billy Pilgrim, a hapless optometrist and World War II veteran who has become "unstuck in time"—randomly experiencing moments from his past, present, and future in no particular order. Billy's fractured narrative loops between his mundane postwar life in Ilium, New York; his captivity as a German prisoner of war; his presence in Dresden during the catastrophic Allied firebombing of 1945 (which Vonnegut himself survived as a POW); and his abduction by aliens from the planet Tralfamadore, who teach him that all moments exist simultaneously and death is merely a transition. Vonnegut's signature blend of black humor, science fiction elements, and devastating emotional truth creates a reading experience unlike any other. The novel's famous refrain—"So it goes"—repeated after every death, becomes both a coping mechanism and an indictment of humanity's casual acceptance of mass slaughter. Drawing directly from Vonnegut's own traumatic experiences in Dresden, Slaughterhouse-Five took the author over twenty years to write, and the struggle to articulate the unspeakable is woven into the book's very fabric. Banned repeatedly, beloved by generations, and consistently ranked among the greatest novels of the twentieth century, this is essential reading for anyone interested in war, trauma, American literature, or the power of fiction to illuminate our darkest hours. A profound, heartbreaking, and unexpectedly funny book that will stay with you forever.