Download Fates Worse Than Death: An Autobiographical Collage AudioBook Free
Kurt Vonnegut presents in Fates Worse than Fatality a veritable cornucopia of his applying for grants what could quite possibly best be summed up as "anti-theology", a manifesto for atheism that details Vonnegut's drift from typical religion, a good tract evidencing belief in the divine held within every individual self--the deity within every individual person present in a world that otherwise lacks any real order. Vonnegut was never a genuine optimist, and with just cause: he had an incredibly difficult life (he had been a prisoner of conflict, from which he drew the title for his book Slaughterhouse-Five) and suffered with faltering health, which only proved him his own mortality even more than he already understood it. Still, most viewers find that in the body of Vonnegut's work there is a glimmer of eager hope. Vonnegut's continuing search for indicating surely matters for a great deal as he balances expectation and despair. Scholars and supporters can read about Vonnegut's encounters during World War II and the after impact he felt it got on him. His spiritual (or antireligious) ramblings and notations are interesting and, by turns, funny and perceptive. The humor may be dark, but that does not make it any the less funny.