In the middle of Indianapolis is a lovely little museum devoted to the life and works of a brilliant and crazy author of more than a dozen novels and a dozen more works of non-fiction, plays and short-story collections: The Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library.
Among the displays in the museum is a shelf of books with Vonnegut novels published in many, many languages around the globe. With novels set all over the world including a million years in the future (Galapagos), Vonnegut is very much a man from Indiana. He loved Indiana and expressed that love all of his long life.
And this darkly funny man could also include his Indiana roots in messages from a coming Armageddon.
The third floor of the museum is devoted to Vonnegut's most famous work, Slaughterhouse Five.
This strange novel is in part the story of Vonnegut's survival of one of the terrible fire bombings during World War II. He was a prisoner of war in an underground slaughterhouse in Dresden which is how he survived a five-day raid in which 150,000 people died.
Vonnegut was captured in December 1944 during the Battle of the Bulge.
Later in life his face became well-known as one of America's great artists.
For me, Vonnegut is one of the great examples of people who transformed the pain of war into art.
At the end of his life he admired Jesus deeply and openly at the same time he was a noted atheist. He said that being kind was the greatest thing a person could do with their lives.
Contradiction? Life has a lot of contradictions. I am so glad Kurt Vonnegut shared his contradictions with the world.
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