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Bagombo Snuff Box
 
 

Bagombo Snuff Box (Hardcover)

de Kurt Vonnegut (Author)
3.7étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (26 évaluations de client)

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5 neufs à partir de CDN$ 31.95 12 d'occasion à partir de CDN$ 6.41

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From Amazon.com

From out of the blue, here's a new collection of Vonnegut fiction--his first magazine stories from the 1950s in book form at last, with some charming reminiscences (and three new endings for old stories) by the author. Vonnegut says these tales were meant to be as evanescent as lightening bugs, and that image captures their frail magic. They're like time travelers from an epoch when stories swarmed in mass-market magazines, before TV dawned and doomed them.

Later greatness glimmers here: the offbeat sci-fi of "Thanasphere" (in which an astronaut encounters dead souls in space) and the hero's bogus adventures in alien lands in "Bagombo Snuff Box" look forward to Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five, as do the war stories "Souvenir," "Der Arme Dolmetscher," and "The Cruise of The Jolly Roger," which incorporate and amplify Vonnegut's actual war experiences. There's authentic midcentury news here, even in the gentle Saturday Evening Post social satire of "The No-Talent Kid," "Ambitious Sophomore," and "The Boy Who Hated Girls," which pretty much nail the high-school marching band experience. The pieces are peppered with odd, true observations and neat little turns of phrase: one incompetent kid in Lincoln High's band marches "flappingly, like a mother flamingo pretending to be injured, luring alligators from her nest."

You can't miss the ironic humor and the humane, death-haunted melancholy of the young war veteran and tyro writer. This collection beats his first novel, Player Piano, and anticipates the masterpiece Cat's Cradle, whose tiny chapters resemble short stories. Young Vonnegut is derivative, mostly of Saki and O. Henry, partly because he couldn't think of endings, and their switcheroos offered a handy model. But from the start, Vonnegut's idiosyncratic voice is unmistakable. --Tim Appelo



From Publishers Weekly

Any new book by Vonnegut, especially since he has vowed to retire from literature, will be welcomed by his fans. But as the author himself says in his introduction, these 23 apprenticeship stories "were expected to be among the living about as long as individual lightning bugs," and they will be of most interest to completists and scholars. Vonnegut's best short stories from the '50s were collected in Welcome to the Monkey House. Those in this collection for the most part work humbly with formulas dear to mid-century middlebrow magazines like Colliers. Included are tales like "The No-Talent Kid" and "The Boy Who Hated Girls," both featuring a genial bandmaster named George Helmholtz, who has to deal with misfit high school boys while dreaming of owning a seven-foot-tall drum. In "Thanasphere," Vonnegut tries out a sci-fi themeAa man is sent into space in a rocket and discovers that space is full of the voices of the dead. In a short, ironic piece, "Der Arme Dolmetscher," a soldier who recites a line from Heine's "Die Lorelei" that he has learned by rote is assumed to "talk Kraut" by a bungling officer. Pressed into service as a translator, he acquires just enough of the language to help his detachment surrender in the Battle of the Bulge. The title story concerns a man who visits his ex-wife and feeds her a cock-and-bull story about being an adventurer. In "Runaways," two teenagers realize that love is not enough to get married on, gently deflating the myth of the then-incipient youth culture long before the Summer of Love. Vonnegut's afterword, "Coda to My Career as a Writer for Periodicals," comments in his trademark style about his midwestern origins and the vagaries of writing for magazines. BOMC featured alternate.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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26 évaluations
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3.7étoiles sur 5 (26 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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3.0étoiles sur 5 Can the real Kurt step up?, Juil 6 2002
Par Beth "bethiejw2" (Mesa, AZ United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Bagombo Snuff Box (Paperback)
There is a definite reason where the introduction bewares of this being Pre Vonnegutan days. There's the beginning of a master, some twists but that's all. Vonnegut is best known for his quirky, cynical twist on society. If anything in a lot of these stories he supports it. Especially when in "Lovers Anonymous" when he went on about magic markers and report cards, (you have to read it in order to know what I'm talking about.)
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Daughter pleaser, father face-saver, Mai 5 2002
Par Chris Holmes "busker" (Corfu, Greece) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
The only KV I've read is "Cat's Cradle" and that was 30 years ago. I noticed that my divine and discerning elder daughter carrying round various Vonnegut volumes so, ..., I snapped it up.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 vonnegut in short form, Avril 18 2002
Par ostawookiee "ostawookiee" (Winston-Salem, NC USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
The contents are short stories from mainly the fifties that Vonnegut got published in various magazines of the day. The stories read like typical Vonnegut, though in short format, you can tell Vonnegut focuses more on characters than on plot. I found it enjoyable. My one critique is that many of the stories were very very similar. As if he published one in Cosmo, and they called him and said "we like that! give us more as close to that as possible!"
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Commentaires client les plus récents

4.0étoiles sur 5 A must-read for the Vonnegut fanatic!
Even Vonnegut's lighter side is genius. This book is a collection of short stories he published in various magazines before he became a novelist. Read more
Publié le Fév 28 2002 par J. Sesta

4.0étoiles sur 5 Not genius, the making of one
Kurt Vonnegut fans will want to read this, but... if you're new to the man, start elsewhere. Diehard Vonneguttians will enjoy this collection as it contains some worthwhile... Read more
Publié le Déc 22 2001 par VoodooLord7

5.0étoiles sur 5 Different from his novels, but excellent nonetheless!
I believe this to be an excellent collection of short stories from the "early Vonnegut days," if you will. Read more
Publié le Nov. 30 2001 par a_bricker

3.0étoiles sur 5 Could be worse, Could be better
Fifty years from now, Kurt Vonnegut may very well be viewed a one of the top 5 American writers of the 20th century. Read more
Publié le Avril 7 2001 par ghineman

4.0étoiles sur 5 Early Works
I picked this up for cheap and was pretty happy with the content.

This book is good for those who like to see the evolution of a writing style. Read more

Publié le Oct. 3 2000 par ed

3.0étoiles sur 5 Coming to a Close
In the introduction to this collection, Vonnegut says, "there is no greatness in this or my other collection, nor was there meant to be. Read more
Publié le Aoû 30 2000 par s-ray

3.0étoiles sur 5 It's vintage...
I bought this book after picking it up in an airport bookstore. I was killing time, waiting on a delayed flight, and, as happens more often than not, I was sucked into the... Read more
Publié le Aoû 30 2000 par mahalia

4.0étoiles sur 5 Power naps of Vonnegut
These short stories, harking back to another age and a near-extinct genre, offer what amounts to fifteen-minute power naps, delivering Vonnegut's refreshing wit and unique... Read more
Publié le Jui 2 2000 par Brian T. Carpenter

3.0étoiles sur 5 Not his best work
I began reading Vonnegut as a teenager. He was the first writer whose career I actually followed. When a new Vonnegut book got released, I was the first in line. Read more
Publié le Mai 11 2000 par Voice of Chunk

4.0étoiles sur 5 Even in three generations, things don't change that much.
I enjoyed this collection of Vonnegut's earlier short stories for many reasons: I liked that the same character (high school band instructor George Hemholtz) is the protagonist... Read more
Publié le Mars 30 2000 par laa-laa

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