And So It Goes (Hardcover)

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Product Summary

Format: Hardcover
ISBN-10: 0805086935
ISBN-13: 9780805086935
Buy.com Sku: 220365387
Publish Date: 11/8/2011
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 9.5H x 6.5L x 1.75T
Pages:  513
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Annotation:
The first authorized biography of American satirist Kurt Vonnegut, AND SO IT GOES profits from a wealth of interviews and the late author's own archives. Charles Shields builds a report of Vonnegut's manifold experiences as youngster, soldier, prisoner of war, patriarch, writer, and celebrity, to show how privilege penetrated by strife marked the novelist's public works and private life. The book's title quotes the famous refrain in SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE, an archetypical Vonnegut euphemism split between cynical fatalism and jaunty gallows humor.
Praise
"And so it goes [is] an incisive, gossipy page-turner of a biography....[It] isn't a book to rekindle the popularity of its subject's work. Mr. Shields acknowledges that much of it was too time specific to age well. But it offers a potent account of struggle, popularity and painful longevity...." - Janet Maslin 11/02/2011

Read A Chapter

1: You Were an Accident

1922-1940

The wedding of Kurt Vonneguts parents, Edith Sophia Lieber and Kurt Vonnegut Sr. on November 22, 1913, in Indianapolis, Indiana, was spectacular.

Ediths father, Albert, owner of a giant brewery who reveled in his reputation as one of the richest men in the city, threw a gargantuan reception at the Claypool Hotel at the northwest corner of Washington and Illinois streets, reputed to be the finest hotel in the Midwest. There were six hundred guests, and those not chauffeured in automobiles arrived in horse-drawn carriages with jingling brass harnessesan entire generation of rich Edwardians, silk-hatted or covered demurely by parasols, many of whom had been raised in Indianapoliss mansions on Meridian Street.1 Albert Lieber knew what his guests expected and he did not disappoint. There was a sixty-foot bar, choice meats, champagne, and dancing to an orchestra in the ballroom lasting until six in the morning.

And to the sa

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