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(Paperback)
Dwayne Hoover, a Midwestern automobile salesman, with a troubled marriage, meets Vonnegut's famous character, the hack writer, Kilgore Trout, on the eve of Trout's receiving the Nobel Prize. Filmed in 1998 with Bruce Willis, this is another of Vonnegut's savage satires of middle American values and their racketeering.
You have to hand it to Kurt Vonnegut Jr. In his eighth novel, Breakfast of Champions, or Goodbye Blue Monday, he performs considerable complex magic. He makes pornography seem like any old plumbing, violence like lovemaking, innocence like evil, and guilt like child's play. He wheels out all the latest fashionable complaints about America--her racism, her gift for destroying language, her technological greed and selfishness--and makes them seem fresh, funny, outrageous, hateful, and lovable, all at the same time. He draws pictures, for God's sake--simple, rough, yet surprisingly seductive sketches of everything from Volkswagens to electric chairs. He weaves into his plot a dozen or so glorious synopses of Vonnegut stories one almost wishes were fleshed out into whole books. He very nearly levitates.
More Reviews and RecommendationsKurt Vonnegut was forever established in the literary pantheon and on the school syllabus with the publication of his brilliant antiwar novel Slaughterhouse-Five, but he endured as a purveyor of mind-warping, surreal fiction that just so happened to be funny.
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October 19, 2008: This was the first Vonnegut novel I ever read. Breakfast of Champions was a really funny, satirical book. It really makes you think, while giving you a good laugh at the same time, something that I can't say of many books. Vonnegut's putting himself in the story was a really funny, well done plot twist. It can be a bit vulgar, but I found myself able to ignore it. I really can say that I have never read a book like this.
I Also Recommend: The Color Purple, Twilight, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Hitchhiker's Guide Series #1), Harry Potter Hardcover Boxed Set (Books 1-7).
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February 24, 2005: I've read the book 'Breakfast of Champions' by Kurt Vonnegut in my english course. The story deals with two untypical characters. First, there is Kilgore Trout, a science-fiction writer who has no success. But then it seems as if the tide is turning. Kilgore Trout is invited to a meeting of artists for the first time. On his way to this meeting, he experiences a lot of crazy things. On the other hand there is Dwayne Hoover, a succesful car dealer who is loved by everybody. But he is on the brink of going insane. When Dwayne Hoover and Kilgore Trout meet each other that is the base for the catastrophe in the end of the book. The author describes with a lot of black humour how life is going on in his opinion. Kurt Vonnegut criticizes the American Society. This critic is supported by his own crazy and funny, but sometimes also vulgare cartoons. The story is really confusing, because Vonnegut is using a crazy style of writing. With his two individual characters, the author shows two kinds of people who are not that typical. The using of two untypical characters underlines the antipathy of Kurt Vonnegut towards the typical American Way of life. In my opinion, the book is crazy and somestimes it goes over the top. I don't like it that the author is so vulgare in some parts of the story. Even if that is funny for some people, I don't like it because of the exaggerations. All in all I would not recommend this book, because in my eyes it is totally crazy, boring, exaggerated and vulgare.