Slaughterhouse-Five or The Children s Crusade -
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
1969 - Seymour Lawrence / Delacorte Press, New York - First Edition, First Issue
First edition of Vonnegut’s quintessential anti-war novel, the core of which was formed by his own experience as German prisoner during the two day fire bombing of Dresden in 1945.
‘Utter destruction’, Vonnegut recalls, 'Carnage unfathomable.'
But this is Vonnegut, and as Salman Rushdie says in his brilliant New Yorker article, ‘There is much comedy in it, as there was in everything Kurt Vonnegut wrote, but it does not see war as farcical. It sees war as a tragedy so great that perhaps only the mask of comedy allows one to look it in the eye.’ Vonnegut earned a Purple Heart with the US infantry at the Battle of the Bulge, and was captured by the Germans and placed in Dresden where, in 1945, he witnessed the two days of fire bombing in Dresden. One of the worst air attacks in history killing an estimated 250,000 people, mainly civilians and European refugees. He was one of only seven American prisoners of war to survive the bombing, in an underground meatpacking cellar known as Slaughterhouse Five.
Vonnegut's mother committed suicide while he was in his early twenties. He himself attempted suicide in 1985 and later wrote about this in several essays. He maintained a long friendship with Joseph Heller, the author of Catch-22.
Reference: New Yorker, June 13, 2009, ‘What Kurt Vonnegut’s “Slaughterhouse-Five” Tells Us Now’ - Salman Rushdie. #18 in Modern Library's 100 Best Novels.
Octavo (book size 21.5x14.6cm), pp. [14] 186 [8]. In publisher's turquoise cloth stamped in gilt, spine lettered and ruled in gilt, scarlet gilt, and black, upper board with Vonnegut’s signature blocked in gilt, black endpapers, two later ink spots to page 84. First state dust-jacket designed by Paul Bacon, priced ‘$5.95’ to upper corner of front flap, and with correct code ‘0369’ at foot of rear flap. Condition: Fine but for two small ink spots to page 84, in very good dust jacket, with none of the usual fading to the spine lettering, toned to which this dust jacket is prone, slightly heavier to sine and upper edges. Ref: 111998 Price: HK$ 16,000
‘Utter destruction’, Vonnegut recalls, 'Carnage unfathomable.'
But this is Vonnegut, and as Salman Rushdie says in his brilliant New Yorker article, ‘There is much comedy in it, as there was in everything Kurt Vonnegut wrote, but it does not see war as farcical. It sees war as a tragedy so great that perhaps only the mask of comedy allows one to look it in the eye.’ Vonnegut earned a Purple Heart with the US infantry at the Battle of the Bulge, and was captured by the Germans and placed in Dresden where, in 1945, he witnessed the two days of fire bombing in Dresden. One of the worst air attacks in history killing an estimated 250,000 people, mainly civilians and European refugees. He was one of only seven American prisoners of war to survive the bombing, in an underground meatpacking cellar known as Slaughterhouse Five.
Vonnegut's mother committed suicide while he was in his early twenties. He himself attempted suicide in 1985 and later wrote about this in several essays. He maintained a long friendship with Joseph Heller, the author of Catch-22.
Reference: New Yorker, June 13, 2009, ‘What Kurt Vonnegut’s “Slaughterhouse-Five” Tells Us Now’ - Salman Rushdie. #18 in Modern Library's 100 Best Novels.
Octavo (book size 21.5x14.6cm), pp. [14] 186 [8]. In publisher's turquoise cloth stamped in gilt, spine lettered and ruled in gilt, scarlet gilt, and black, upper board with Vonnegut’s signature blocked in gilt, black endpapers, two later ink spots to page 84. First state dust-jacket designed by Paul Bacon, priced ‘$5.95’ to upper corner of front flap, and with correct code ‘0369’ at foot of rear flap. Condition: Fine but for two small ink spots to page 84, in very good dust jacket, with none of the usual fading to the spine lettering, toned to which this dust jacket is prone, slightly heavier to sine and upper edges. Ref: 111998 Price: HK$ 16,000