Rating: Summary: Vonnegut at his best Review: Welcome to the Monkey House has something for everyone. Vonnegut does a masterful job wrapping you up in the world and lives of each story and character. Each of the stories drops you into a different time and place and makes you feel like you are truly there. After each story My view on the world was changed just slightly, So that when I was finished with the book I was looking at life with all new eyes. Pick this one up you won't regret it
Rating: Summary: Vonnegut's closet cleaning a must to attend Review: Don't bi-pass "Welcome to the Monkey House" just because it's a short story collection. Next to "Slaughterhouse 5", this is easily the most necessary Vonnegut book to own. Here, he sets free both his imagination AND his senses of humor and adventure to come up with some of the best short works published in this century. Just look at this list: "Harrison Bergeron", "Thomas Edison's Dog", a truly hysterical piece on assisted suicide and a truly suspenceful piece on a game of chess played with real people. Most of these styles have since, of course,been copied to death. But has anyone really cut as deep or as precisely into the public consciousness as did Vonnegut here? One wishes he would have continued writing short stories, at least occasionally, and we could have more collections as diverse, entertaining, and thought provoking as this is. By itself, though, "Monkey House" is one residency to make sure you visit
Rating: Summary: Vonnegut's hidden treasure chest Review: My favorite book of all time. This is a book which is rich with invention thought provoking ideas and is hilarious all at once. This book always leaves me blind with tears of laughter 'til I can't read anymore. My favorites being the short stories Harrison Bergeron and Thomas Edisons Dog. Funny as it is, it is a book that evokes many emotions. I never have a copy of this book as I tend to give it away. It has become increasingly hard to find as few people know about it. Perhaps because it is a collection of short stories it is passed over for his more well known novels. But in my opinion you will not find a finer treasury of great stories than Welcome to the Monkeyhouse
Rating: Summary: A great reminder of what a real book feels like. Review: This is the first book I have read by this author, and I think it is fabulous. Let me just say, this book rolls
Rating: Summary: THOUGHT PROVOKING STORIES! Review: I really enjoyed the bulk of the stories. They were definitely thought provoking, often dealing with the issues of technology
Rating: Summary: A celebration of the beauty of humanity's imperfection. Review: Each of these stories is a world in its own right; all of them speak from a deep understanding of what it means to be human. Ranging from true (The Long Walk to Forever/Hell to Get Along With), through plausible (Adam), to dark futurism (Harrison Bergeron, the title story), Vonnegut celebrates life, love, and freedom... and in every story, you will see the world you know. Both tragic and comic, these stories show us what we are, and make us glad of it. An unforgettable read - don't miss it!
Rating: Summary: !!! GREAT !!! Review: I LOVED THIS BOOK!!! When I picked it up I thought that it was not going to be as good as Vonnegut's "Slaughterhouse-five", but it deffinately was. Vonnegut has once again proved himself to be a magnificent author in this collection of short stories. In this book, there were a few parts that I beleive may have been adapted from the past. If this is the case, Vonnegut has deffinately done a good job reproducing them, as well as make up brilliant tales of his own. This is one of those books that you'll read once and contemplate for a while. Then you'll find it lying around a month or two later and pick up a totally new perspective on its initial meaning. This is book that MUST be read, no questions asked. :-D
Rating: Summary: Range of Stories from Sci Fi to Intimate Family Drama Review: From the wonderous humanity of EPICAC, the computer who loved a girl, to the simply yet imaginatively told story of "Thomas Edison's Shaggy Dog", to the black American soldier's relationship with a certain displaced person ("D.P.") to the title story's grim view of the future population (see also "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow", the last story in the collection), Vonnegut surprises with his humor, and then delivers a knockout punch with his pathos. *SPOILER* The story about the boy who cannot tell his parents that he didn't get in the School, and "The Kid Noone Could Handle" *END* Is the "fifty-year man" the real "Deer in the Woods"? One of my favorite stories has always been "More Stately Mansions" about the woman who yearns for a more perfect abode as collected and clipped from many home decorating magazines. The realism of his stories is kind of spooky sometimes. His prose writing is amazing--a master of the quick turn of phrase, the one-sentence description that reads like a book, the presence behind the prose somehow is able to make complex, profound ideas more simple, and vice versa. I first read this volume in 1974 on airplanes and while traveling to Africa at the age of 12. Some of it escaped me then, but by now I think I get it. And I recommend it highly!
Rating: Summary: Great Intro to Vonnegut! Review: This was the first book I ever read by Vonnegut, and it was good enough to spur me on to furthur reading. This is a collection of some of his shorter stories, and I think it gives the reader a fairly good idea of his writing style.
I think whoever compiled these stories chose a bad one to start off with. Where I Live, while well written and very descriptive, was very boring. I was ready to stop reading after this one. I slogged through to the next, and discovered I had read Harrison Bergeron in high school. This is a great story about PC-ness gone crazy. So then I was drawn into this book and the wonderful stories that followed.
Although I could go one by one and review each story, I really think that would amount to an extremely long review. Suffice it to say that I thoroughly enjoyed almost every stroy in this book. Vonnegut's writings are descriptive and vast, and his obviously unique and odd viewpoints make for extremely interesting and thought-provoking reading. This man was very much ahead of the times when these stories were written.
The stories are very unique in and of themselves also. Just when you think you have Vonnegut pegged, he throws you a curve and a totally different type of storyline, and you wonder what in the world goes on in this guy's mind. Pick up a copy! Another book I need to recommend -- completely unrelated to Vonnegut, but very much on my mind since I purchased it off Amazon is "The Losers' Club" by Richard Perez, an exceptional, highly entertaining little novel I can't stop thinking about.
Rating: Summary: Years later, this book is still affecting people Review: I just read this book last year, as a tenth grader. It might sound as though I'm exaggerating if I say it changed my life, but I believe that almost everything you read changes you in a small way. Well, this book changed me in a big way. I'll still be thinking about these stories months after I read them. They're the kind of stories that make you want to close your eyes and think for an hour after you're done reading them. This book was my introduction to Kurt Vonnegut, and it remains my favorite.
I also think its amazing how a book read by somebody 30 years ago can still have the same effect on a young person today, and I hope that 30 years from now, this book will still change people.
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