Saturday, October 12, 2019
Kilgore Trout as Kurt Vonneguts Alter Ego :: Biography Biographies Essays
Kilgore Trout as Kurt Vonnegut's Alter Ego                             In 1922,  two residents of Indianapolis,  Indiana had a son  who  would  later  become  one  of  the  premiere writers in 20th  century American literature. Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. was born to Edith  and Kurt Sr.  on November 11, 1922. He  graduated from Shortridge  High School in 1940, attended Cornell University for a year, then  joined the  army. He fought in  World War II and  was captured by  the Germans in  1944. As a Prisoner of War,  he lived through the  firebombing  of Dresden,  an event  which inspired  his acclaimed  novel,  Slaughterhouse-Five.  After  he  returned from  Europe in  April of 1945, he married Jane  Marie Cox and spent several years  studying at the  University of Chicago and working  as a reporter  for the  Chicago City News  Bureau. In 1947,  he went to  work at  General Electric Corporation as  a research laboratory publicist.  He worked there  for 3 years until he left  to become a full time  writer in  1950. In the past  47 years, he has  become one of the  most acclaimed writers of our time.          Kurt Vonnegut's  first novel was entitled  Player Piano and  was published  in 1952. Since then,  he has written over  a dozen  other  novels,  collections  of  short  stories,  a collection of  essays and interviews, and a  play, Happy Birthday Wanda June. He  spent  1965  in  residence  at  the  University  of Iowa Writer's  Workshop  and taught  writing at   Harvard in  1970. He  also was  awarded a  M.A. degree from  the University of  Chicago. Vonnegut  currently appears on the Barnes  and Noble Booksellers bag and is  featured  on a Visa commercial in which  he buys a copy of one of  his own books.          If one  looks through Vonnegut's works,  one will find many  occurrences  of  reoccurring  characters,  settings,  and themes.  Perhaps  one  of  the  most  frequently  occurring  characters is  Kilgore Trout, an obscure science-fiction writer with a small but    					    
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