Aliens, Time Travel, and Dresden - Slaughterhouse-Five Part 1: Crash Course Literature 212

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2014
  • In which John Green teaches you about Kurt Vonnegut's most famous novel, Slaughterhouse-Five. Vonnegut wrote the book in the Vietnam era, and it closely mirrors his personal experiences in World War II, as long as you throw out the time travel and aliens and porn stars and stuff. Slaughterhouse-Five tells the story of Billy Pilgrim, a World War II veteran who was a prisoner of war, survived the Battle of the Bulge and the fire-bombing of Dresden, goes home after the war, and has trouble adapting to civilian life (this is the part that's like Vonnegut's own experience). Billy Pilgrim has flashbacks to the war that he interprets as being "unstuck in time." He believes he's been abducted by aliens, and pretty much loses it. You'll learn a little about Vonnegut's life, quite a bit about Dresden, and probably more than you'd like about barbershop quartets as a metaphor for post-traumatic stress.
    Consider supporting local bookstores by purchasing your books through our Bookshop affiliate link bookshop.org/shop/complexly​ or at your local bookseller.
    Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at / crashcourse
    Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
    Facebook - / youtubecrashcourse
    Twitter - / thecrashcourse
    Instagram - / thecrashcourse
    CC Kids: / crashcoursekids

Комментарии • 829

  • @bolivarescobar
    @bolivarescobar 10 лет назад +261

    I love the part in which Billy cries for the first time, after seeing the horses with their wounded mouths. I think that this is a very accurate description of sadness, of being unable to notice the evil we cause to others.

  • @LaurokaPlay
    @LaurokaPlay 7 лет назад +371

    "Well, I can smoke or I can leave" is the writer I hope to one day be wow

  • @iammrbeat
    @iammrbeat 10 лет назад +268

    One of my favorite books. I'm glad you covered this. A must read for any human.

  • @WestPictures
    @WestPictures 10 лет назад +381

    "It is so short and jumbled and jangled, Sam, because there is nothing intelligent to say about a massacre. Everybody is supposed to be dead, to never say anything or want anything ever again. Everything is supposed to be very quiet after a massacre, and it always is, except for the birds.
    And what do the birds say? All there is to say about a massacre, things like "Poo-tee-weet?"

    • @shary497
      @shary497 5 лет назад +25

      “Everybody on the planet wanted to see the Earthlings mate. Montana was naked, and so was Billy, of course. He had a tremendous wang, incidentally. You never know who will get one.” God I love this book. It’s so wonderfully weird

    • @UltimateKyuubiFox
      @UltimateKyuubiFox 5 лет назад +23

      Humberto Avila It’s meaninglessness. Massacre is meaningless. There’s nothing to say about it that can properly convey its impact due to how horrific it is and how mundane it becomes once it happens. It’s equivalent to phoneticized bird-speech-of a bird basically going “Huh?” It’s indescribable and empty and life keeps moving anyway.

    • @connordixon4893
      @connordixon4893 4 года назад +12

      HugoAgility one of my favorite parts is, “Billy looked inside the latrine. The wailing was coming from in there. The place was crammed with Americans who had taken their pants down. The welcome feast had made them as sick as volcanoes. The buckets were full or had been kicked over.
      An American near Billy wailed that he had excreted everything but his brains. Moments later he said, 'There they go, there they go.' He meant his brains.
      That was I. That was me. That was the author of this book.”
      God, he was awesome

    • @seels9
      @seels9 4 года назад +4

      @@UltimateKyuubiFox It's not meaningless. Basically it means that Billy was unsatisfied with the way he was in reality. On Tralfamador, whether it is Montana, or his wang, he had an idealized version of himself. Tralfamador is where Billy goes when he's too overwhelmed with traumatic experiences.

  • @Tacsponge
    @Tacsponge 10 лет назад +392

    WHAT. You make Pilgrim sound insane. Pilgrim isn't insane. HE HAS become unstuck in time!

    • @pufelmulticolorido
      @pufelmulticolorido 4 года назад +57

      Well, I think what makes the novel so interesting is that it's never really addressed if it's all real or not. Try googling Slaughterhouse-Five PTSD. You'll find that there so many heavy implications throughout the whole story that Billy is delusional. But the good thing is that it's still up to interpretation.

    • @nerdimusprime8753
      @nerdimusprime8753 4 года назад +11

      I think it’s really both

    • @Le_Samourai
      @Le_Samourai 4 года назад +11

      Nerdimus Prime Billy becomes unstuck in time because he is stuck in his situation. He believes he has no free will because he is just a “baby” compared to the large war, a passive actor who decides to be ambivalent to everything to cope with the grief (even if that grief spills out in his sleep and when he is alone)

    • @Jayhazy23
      @Jayhazy23 4 года назад +1

      Impossible

    • @nataliagonzalez1698
      @nataliagonzalez1698 4 года назад +20

      In a way PTSD is being unstuck in time in real life

  • @nolanfontaine7973
    @nolanfontaine7973 5 лет назад +49

    Just finished reading this book while on standby at my construction job in Utah. I'm 19, and Vonnegut has now become my favorite author. Thank you Crash Course for becoming an instrumental part in my young adult life and for reminding me of the freedoms associated with education.

  • @lyadmilo
    @lyadmilo 10 лет назад +420

    You cannot say for certain that, within the world of the novel, the Tralfamadorians don't exist. Both scenarios - PTSD flashbacks, and real alien intervention, are given equal plausibility within the novel. Saying it is all fantasy, for sure, lessens the impact of the novel's examination on alternate histories and the power of narrative.

    • @FrostedSapling
      @FrostedSapling 10 лет назад +91

      I quite like the idea that, within the world of the novel, the Tralfamodorians are real, because no one believes Pilgrim and he can never find the right words to make them believe much like how Vonnegut cannot find the words to describe the bombing

    • @robert.sec2
      @robert.sec2 10 лет назад +57

      Yeah I was pretty surprised that John came out with such a strong reading of Pilgrim as insane when the ambiguity is so important to the novel. Maybe that was just for the introduction and next episode we'll get a more balanced reading.

    • @najarianleskowitz4866
      @najarianleskowitz4866 8 лет назад

      +Ivan Navarro, why are you putting the Kurt off your read shelf?

    • @Cathoholicism
      @Cathoholicism 5 лет назад +13

      It's all pilgrims imagination. The adult bookstore perfectly describes everything that had built that world for him.

    • @reyiven7625
      @reyiven7625 5 лет назад

      99 I add 1=100

  • @Caperhere
    @Caperhere 5 лет назад +34

    When I was seven, I went to my great grandmothers funeral. I vividly remember having an overwhelming urge to laugh. Then I had a recurring dream about her for months. I was ashamed of her funeral until I learned about hysteria.

  • @ReadHeadPat
    @ReadHeadPat 10 лет назад +20

    I cannot express how happy I am that you guys at Crash Course decided to cover Slaughterhouse-Five, it is one of my all time favorite books. I am doing a research paper on it, (comparing some themes it has with Catcher in the Rye). One of my favorite passages from the novel is "I have lit my way in a prison at night with candles from the fat of human beings who were butchered by the brothers and fathers of those schoolgirls who were boiled." this quote just highlights so many different levels of cruelty and destruction from both countries of the war and I just love the way Vonnegut addresses the nonsensical nature of war and time and all of those horribly fascinating things.

  • @bria4404
    @bria4404 7 лет назад +122

    I read this book for the first time last week (I know I'm quite late to the party) and I read it all in pretty much one sitting. After finishing it I didn't really think much about it and it left me kind of feeling nothing too overwhelming one way or the other about the novel. However, in this past week I've found myself thinking more and more about it and realizing just how brilliant it was as well as how important of a story it was to be told. This is definitely a novel I think everyone should read at least once and it makes me a little disappointed that it was never a part of my required reading in High School.

    • @michaelreilly9502
      @michaelreilly9502 5 лет назад

      Trout Pilgrim Campbell Hoover Constant
      Elliot Rosewater unstuck in TIME

    • @correypeta
      @correypeta 4 года назад +1

      Because of you, I’ll go read it.

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  10 лет назад +84

    In which John Green teaches you about Kurt Vonnegut's most famous novel, Slaughterhouse-Five. Aliens, Time Travel, and Dresden -Slaughterhouse-Five Part I: Crash Course Literature 212

    • @nekoma7a
      @nekoma7a 9 лет назад +5

      Hey John, maybe someday you can do Cat's Cradle? I dunno. I liked it.

    • @brunorobinson1759
      @brunorobinson1759 8 лет назад +2

      +CrashCourse +John Green thank you John Green for making English, a subjected I hated, into something interesting and informative

    • @falnica
      @falnica 7 лет назад

      I didn't thought of the time travel nor the aliens as hallucinations

  • @LostOmin
    @LostOmin 10 лет назад +19

    One of my absolute favorite books, every time I read it I seem to get a different message in the end.

  • @1293ST
    @1293ST 7 лет назад +265

    The name Slaughterhouse Five sounds more like a cheap slasher movie.

  • @SlimThrull
    @SlimThrull 10 лет назад +15

    "Well, I can smoke or I can leave."

  • @lalideni
    @lalideni 8 лет назад +158

    Dearest John,
    When the Ernest Hemingway will you start making CC Literature videos again?
    Best wishes,
    Lit. Nerdfighters

    • @grrr1351
      @grrr1351 6 лет назад +1

      CC Lit is actually coming soon.

  • @gigibyte_
    @gigibyte_ 4 года назад +10

    Literature is really a combination of everything. History, psychology, the past, the future...
    it's quite interesting to see how everything played out.

  • @Lucols4
    @Lucols4 10 лет назад +41

    You met Kurt? Dude that's so awesome

  • @evanfinnigan
    @evanfinnigan 10 лет назад +13

    Slaughterhouse Five is my favourite book. It is an incredible piece of literature.

  • @kendalltracey3143
    @kendalltracey3143 7 лет назад +2

    Congrats on 5+ million subscribers, Crash Course Team! So proud and happy for you guys.

  • @PizzaPlatypus
    @PizzaPlatypus 10 лет назад +1

    Also surprised you didn't bring up the short segment about the horse, that was the part that struck me as the most powerful and detailed about the aftermath of the bombing and kind of goes against the idea of vague descriptions

  • @Jack7967
    @Jack7967 10 лет назад +10

    I love this series. I get so much science in my normal course work that its nice to take a break and hear you discuss literature.

  • @crystalp7242
    @crystalp7242 4 года назад +4

    I just started reading this one, and I just wanted to thank Crash Course Literature for making me want to read it! I’ve already read the first chapter, and I think I’m already beginning to enjoy Kurt Vonnegut’s writing style. (Especially since the last book I just finished reading was the ridiculously long War and Peace, which probably deserves an episode or two of its own.)

  • @anabel4105
    @anabel4105 6 лет назад +4

    That was extremely insightful. I always appreciate delving into the minds of writers, because it's just so fascinating the way their brains must function when writing. The part in the video where you mention how Vonnegut uses metaphors and analogies to block out the reality of Dresden's devastation was powerful and evoked goosebumps from me. I read his book over the summer, but the thought of that part of his writing never occurred to me. It really just goes to show how much thought is put into the language, structure, form, and just everything within a novel.

  • @trilliaannisa2201
    @trilliaannisa2201 7 лет назад +3

    Thanks John Green for introducing me to Kurt Vonnegut. It really changed my life

  • @sagegoering11
    @sagegoering11 8 лет назад +32

    This is an ode to all of the people
    put into harm's way,
    to the people that bravely keep
    this world from disarray.
    This is an ode to the hidden ones,
    warring on Hell's raft,
    raging on through bullet rain,
    fighting the devil's laugh.
    This goes out to all those souls,
    holding back their fears
    keeping others safe and sound
    by keeping darkness from coming near.
    This is an ode to all the people,
    the old, and the terribly young,
    just know that we will always hear
    the songs that you have sung.

  • @WitlessGentlemen
    @WitlessGentlemen 10 лет назад

    Great summation and analysis. Vonnegut is my favourite author and you do him justice. I look forward to part 2. And so it goes.

  • @dominicmako4649
    @dominicmako4649 10 лет назад +2

    I was waiting this entire video series to get to this book. Kurt poured so much of himself into most of his works, and his writing style is so conversational, that it's very easy to make a personal connection with the narrator/author. In Breakfast of Champions he even put the author literally into the storyline. Slaughterhouse Five is the kind of work that benefits from multiple readings, like a youtube video with little easter egg references that you only notice the second time through.

  • @skinkrackz
    @skinkrackz 7 лет назад +13

    Dear John Green,
    I can relate my art style to certain passages in this novel, if not my writing style (I'm not the most talented writer). I like to evoke emotions that others would generally prefer not to have aroused such as discomfort or confusion using surrealist and absurd artwork and, well, my comedy too. I've been doing this for years with my paintings and drawings, but I never really understood why I did it. That was until you so perfectly described the scene with the guards and it really opened my eyes to why I do what I do. Thank you so much making a subject I used to despise into something I enjoy doing for fun.
    Best Wishes,
    Griffin Durning

  • @Redem10
    @Redem10 10 лет назад +145

    Well someone in detroit need to make a band called Slaughterhouse-Five

    • @juststeveschannel
      @juststeveschannel 10 лет назад +11

      We had the MC-5, which comes pretty close, if you know their music. They were the progenitors of punk music, if you don't.

    • @gabbls_
      @gabbls_ 5 лет назад

      Did I see your comment on EarthBound Did you know gaming part 2?

    • @bradeng7158
      @bradeng7158 5 лет назад

      The Dave Clark Slaughterhouse 5

    • @kamuelalee
      @kamuelalee 5 лет назад

      Slaughterhouse featuring the Dave Clark Five

  • @TheSchoopdawhoop
    @TheSchoopdawhoop 10 лет назад +6

    So it goes. One of my favorite books of all time, thank you for doing this!

  • @sophiarodriguez2010
    @sophiarodriguez2010 10 лет назад +17

    "NO SINGING ME FROM THE PAST!"
    said every person who grew up, ever

  • @Birdfreak2010
    @Birdfreak2010 10 лет назад +4

    As with other Vonnegut novels, Slaughterhouse-Five was a book that gave me more of a feeling than a precise memory of the plot. In fact, I read it 2 years ago and only remembered the description of women picking through the Dresden rubble. This was a great reminder of what Vonnegut was saying with this novel, but I also think it is cool that his writing can make the plot seem irrelevant, but still pull you in and make you think about the things he wanted you to think about.

  • @MariannesStudio
    @MariannesStudio 10 лет назад +9

    I really want to read this book now. Thanks Crash Course!

  • @nfinn42
    @nfinn42 10 лет назад +7

    One of my favorite novels, and authors, of all time. Learning that John got a chance to meet Kurt, which I never did, is just another reason thrown on the towering pile of reasons to be jealous of John Green. Vonnegut was one of my greatest heroes.

  • @Bkmlb
    @Bkmlb 10 лет назад +1

    the thoughtbubble animation in this one is particularly fantastic

  • @haotianyang9216
    @haotianyang9216 10 лет назад +8

    Mr.Green. I hope you can talk about the book "1984" in crash course literature, that book is just so amazing...

  • @djmitrano
    @djmitrano 10 лет назад +32

    i am really liking crash course literature, keep it up John

  • @jesstaff5346
    @jesstaff5346 10 лет назад +1

    Every time I see a night vale shirt in one of these, my day is made a thousand times better.

  • @austinwilliams3305
    @austinwilliams3305 11 месяцев назад +1

    Kurt Vonnegut is unrivaled in his writing style, so unique

  • @graemeharry8456
    @graemeharry8456 7 лет назад +1

    One of my favourite authors discussing another one of my favourites. Love it!

  • @digdoug31
    @digdoug31 10 лет назад +2

    I wish I hadn't seen this until next week. Now I'll spend a whole week wondering why "So It Goes" still hits me way too deep.

  • @puppylover06152001
    @puppylover06152001 10 лет назад +3

    I just showed these videos to my English teacher. I hope he plans to use them!

  • @TheAvatarWan
    @TheAvatarWan 10 лет назад

    I love you, John Green. I subscribed to CrashCourse a few weeks ago and already love the content. I've also read your book, The Fault In Our Stars recently. Fell in love with it. :) Thank you (x1,000)

  • @mchllme
    @mchllme 10 лет назад +1

    This was my favorite book from AP Langauge and I'm so glad you're going over this!

  • @macncheesetv9816
    @macncheesetv9816 9 лет назад

    Now with crash corse, I not only learn something but I actually keep stuff I learned at school in my brain over summer. Thank you!

  • @VlasicGames
    @VlasicGames 10 лет назад +1

    I had no idea that you were the author behind "The Fault in our stars" i loved your book, you are absolutely fantastic. I can't wait tho see the film and i love what you do! Thankyou for living you life for others!!!!!!!

  • @bidaubadeadieu
    @bidaubadeadieu 10 лет назад +2

    ahh this is like my favorite book, well done John and the Crashcourse team

  • @terralynn9
    @terralynn9 10 лет назад

    I'm really loving Crash Course Literature, even though I haven't read many of the books. This is definitely one I'll add to my 'to read' list.

  • @nolanthiessen1073
    @nolanthiessen1073 10 лет назад +3

    Finally we get to SH5! This brings me back to my highschool days.

  • @tiffahkay
    @tiffahkay 10 лет назад +4

    JOHN, I've been waiting for you to do Slaughterhouse 5 cos its just so weird but still beautiful. Thanks

  • @LoganWhiteIsAwesome
    @LoganWhiteIsAwesome 10 лет назад +1

    That little Rick and Morty reference (1:28) was great

  • @MrDylan2125
    @MrDylan2125 10 лет назад

    This may be my favorite episode so far.

  • @TobyKidMajor
    @TobyKidMajor 10 лет назад +7

    The phrase "so it goes" can be found in John Green's introduction to This Star Won't Go Out. Also, pertaining to the truth of fiction especially in "war stories" The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien goes nicely with Slaughterhouse Five.

    • @iluvDNA100
      @iluvDNA100 10 лет назад

      John Green probably said "So it goes" as a reference.

    • @EnderNasworthy
      @EnderNasworthy 10 лет назад +1

      Whoa, so someone else already saw the similarities in those two books. Nice.

    • @robert.sec2
      @robert.sec2 10 лет назад

      Joe Seph iirc he explicitly continually references the novel in Katherines. I think it's probably up there with DFW in terms of influential-on-John-Green-things

    • @PninianPnin
      @PninianPnin 10 лет назад

      Scott Ferrell The Things They Carried is a work of fiction. Amazing, though it be.

  • @that.girl.ijeoma
    @that.girl.ijeoma 10 лет назад +1

    Uggghhhh if only this was uploaded before my literature exam!! It would have helped a ton!

  • @ChrisReadsBooks
    @ChrisReadsBooks 10 лет назад

    I was very worried about Crash Course's work on this book, seeing as how it is my favorite. I am glad how it came out. Vonnegut is my favorite author and I believe this video did the book justice, I look forward to the next video.

  • @hubridnox
    @hubridnox 10 лет назад

    Glad I was assigned this book in high school. Vonnegut is a great writer for young people to attempt wrapping their heads around.

  • @weirdral
    @weirdral 10 лет назад +1

    I read this book in my AP English class in high school, and I enjoyed it so much I have gone and read a lot of the other Kurt Vonnegut books and I loved how much crossover there is in his books. The Tralfamadorians are amazing creatures, and I just really, really, really, liked this book.

  • @stephenknoll1227
    @stephenknoll1227 10 лет назад +1

    Finally I have been waiting for this. My favorite author ever.

  • @NickSheridanVids
    @NickSheridanVids 10 лет назад +1

    Great book, great author, great Crash Course. I wish I had more to add :)

  • @bagel76
    @bagel76 10 лет назад +1

    You could do an entire crash course series on Kurt Vonnegut and it still wouldn't be enough. His books are incredible.
    Also you should do an episode on Catch-22.

  • @hdgehog6
    @hdgehog6 10 лет назад +2

    This was one of the first books I read when I was a kid back in the '70s. I still remember it. Vonnegut, Phillip Roth and Hunter Thompson influence my writing style in my novels.

  • @bunny39420
    @bunny39420 6 лет назад +3

    I fudging love Vonnegut! For years, this has been my favorite book!

  • @mrwachandgame
    @mrwachandgame 10 лет назад +1

    I'm ironically writing a paper for my American study's class about this book. I say it's ironic because I had no idea it was a book. I was given the topic and told to wright what I know, which was nothing so it became a creative writing peace. So thank you again Mr. Green, for helping me with my study's.

  • @819613
    @819613 8 лет назад

    I listen to crash course all the time, crash course is interesting while giving the viewer entertainment , thanks guys!!!

  • @jamesfarmer8463
    @jamesfarmer8463 10 лет назад +8

    Never really got what was so great about this book, pretty standard. Nothing spectacular.

    • @josephallison4302
      @josephallison4302 10 лет назад +66

      So it goes.

    • @chickenspy1854
      @chickenspy1854 10 лет назад +14

      I was more into the concepts put forward during the sci-fi parts of the book. The idea that time is nonlinear, and that humans can not perceive the full truth of time. The philosopher in me was over excited by the idea of death being of no consequence simply for the fact that death isn't forever, because everything before it is.

    • @TheSugarRay
      @TheSugarRay 10 лет назад +8

      I feel like you weren't paying attention. To be jaded is a personal problem that is one part ignorance and entirely self-indulgent.

    • @theicedragon100
      @theicedragon100 10 лет назад

    • @purplesully
      @purplesully 10 лет назад +4

      ChickenSpy You should read The Sirens of Titan by Vonnegut if you liked that part of the story. Also read the Watchmen graphic novel if you haven't already. They both explore those concepts.

  • @StephenDahlke
    @StephenDahlke 10 лет назад +1

    This really makes me want to see a CC-Lit video on some of PKD's works. Valis is the most obvious one to relate to the discussions in this video, but really, I think any of them would be a great 10-minute dive.

  • @joeyskunk
    @joeyskunk 7 лет назад +2

    John Green, thank you for the wonderful video. It inspired me to read the novel again. My father was a WWII veteran. As a boy, I never thought of my father and Kurt Vonnegut as contemporaries, since Vonnegut struck me as more of a hippy. However, they were both more similar than I imagined as a boy. Today we describe Post Traumatic Stress Disease, but I believe both men suffered the same way. To witness death and destruction on that level was truly horrible. To hear my father talk about battlefields of dead and to see Munich as city so leveled by bombs, he could see from one end of the city to the other.
    Unlike my father, Vonnegut could talk about his experience nearly immediately after the war.

  • @malnoch3520
    @malnoch3520 6 лет назад +2

    If you ever decide to get Slaughterhouse Five on audiobook, get the one narrated by James Franco. His voice adds greatly to the experience.

  • @GracieM17
    @GracieM17 8 лет назад +32

    1984 would be a great one to do an analysis on.

    • @skell0ton644
      @skell0ton644 5 лет назад

      You got your wish. Check again.

  • @theawkwardcurrypot9556
    @theawkwardcurrypot9556 4 года назад +1

    3:50 I love you John Greene

  • @BillieRolih
    @BillieRolih 10 лет назад

    That plant in the background continuously reminds me of the Simpson's Sideshow Bob. I saw it and can no longer unsee it.

  • @joselemus737
    @joselemus737 6 лет назад

    Adding this to my bucket list for reading

  • @MaximilianonMars
    @MaximilianonMars 10 лет назад

    Seeing the intros on previous eps of Crashcourse Literature I realized Slaughterhouse-Five was a book my buddy once read aloud, but I didn't get its name. Picked it up at the library a couple days ago and finished it in time for this episode, what a great show :)

  • @zuzz9352
    @zuzz9352 4 года назад +1

    Thanks crash course, now I’ve got the Dave Clark Five stuck in my head

  • @bassfight2936
    @bassfight2936 8 лет назад +1

    Loved this book when I read it, very excited to finally understand it!

  • @MsRadiorebel
    @MsRadiorebel 10 лет назад +18

    Can you do a crash course on Markus Zusak's book, "The Book Thief."

  • @PranavanathanYoganathan
    @PranavanathanYoganathan 10 лет назад

    So I just finished reading Toni Morrison's "The Bluest Eyes" and I think it would make an excellent addition to the crash course lit series. Thanks for another great episode

    • @ReadHeadPat
      @ReadHeadPat 10 лет назад

      Not sure about "The Bluest Eyes" but they are covering "Beloved" by Toni Morrison soon.

  • @QuackSuperStar
    @QuackSuperStar 10 лет назад +5

    Nice metal gear reference!

  • @UberMan5000
    @UberMan5000 10 лет назад +6

    Miss'r Green! Miss'r Green! Have you considered an episode about Catch-22? It's another humorous anti-war novel that definitely merits compelling analysis, especially because it predates much of the 60s counterculture that has embraced Slaughterhouse-Five. Much could be learned from it!

  • @MrTerradell
    @MrTerradell 10 лет назад +1

    So glad you are finally talking about this book. Also, good job Thought Bubble/Café, nice Metal Gear Solid reference.

  • @Sud0wood0
    @Sud0wood0 10 лет назад +76

    Rick and Morty at 1:28, sick reference.

    • @SuperFetaCheese
      @SuperFetaCheese 10 лет назад +14

      sick reference bro.
      you're out of control.

    • @howdydoo1036
      @howdydoo1036 4 года назад

      cgy2144 in the newer episode we see future r and m ruin current r and m’s christmas

  • @ehkoin
    @ehkoin 10 лет назад +17

    This. Is. My. Favorite. Book. Ever.

  • @chloeb.7999
    @chloeb.7999 10 лет назад +1

    As always thank you for doing this amazing book. And even though I will probably never meet you, John Green you are my Kurt Vonnegut. Except for the incredibly terrible life of course

  • @PeterAmbos
    @PeterAmbos 10 лет назад +1

    I am currently in the rebuilt Dresden, I have lived here for the entire fifteen years of my so very short life. Thanks for giving me something read for the next time I need a book.

  • @daveharrison84
    @daveharrison84 10 лет назад

    I'm glad to live in a world where wars of that magnitude don't happen anymore and we are moving toward world peace.

  • @colinlee1237
    @colinlee1237 10 лет назад

    I was waiting for this one for a while. Great video and amazing book.

  • @WeBeYachting
    @WeBeYachting 8 лет назад

    Really liked this video and the editing is awesome.

  • @OlafoWaffle
    @OlafoWaffle 10 лет назад

    I discovered this novel after my first deployment to Iraq in 06-07, it had a profound impact on my views about the war.

  • @jemse7471
    @jemse7471 5 лет назад

    This is my absolute favorite book

  • @JosephClayson
    @JosephClayson 10 лет назад +48

    When I heard toilet plunger aliens, I immediately thought: DALEKS

    • @JosephClayson
      @JosephClayson 10 лет назад +39

      EXTERMINATEHOUSE FIVE

    • @helenemcgreevy9556
      @helenemcgreevy9556 6 лет назад

      Joseph Clayson said that about the damn droid in Star Wars, R2-D2?

  • @WikiRiffs
    @WikiRiffs 10 лет назад

    Great insight into a book I have yet to read, but really should. Also: the Thought Bubble this week was amazing and kinda beautiful!

  • @jorgepeat9898
    @jorgepeat9898 10 лет назад

    Ah John from the past, you haves wonderful taste in podcasts.

  • @johnfoerster9853
    @johnfoerster9853 10 лет назад

    Loving the Welcome to Nightvale shirt John.

  • @Dreamfounder
    @Dreamfounder 10 лет назад

    Thanks for covering my favorite author!

  • @chaoticneutral4665
    @chaoticneutral4665 10 лет назад

    Thanks cc such a great show . Gotta get a copy of this book now .

  • @ellieanne8603
    @ellieanne8603 7 лет назад

    hahahah, loved that little Rick and Morty you included during Pilgrim's 'time travel'

  • @jfridy
    @jfridy 10 лет назад

    I got to meet Kurt Vonnegut at Kent State in the mid 1990s. He was an entertaining storyteller in person as you would expect.

  • @kaysyconundrum
    @kaysyconundrum 10 лет назад

    A book that I'll never forget.

  • @Pigloverfourteen
    @Pigloverfourteen 10 лет назад

    One of my favorite authors taking about one of my other favorite authors. This is perfect I love slaughter house 5 but I feel like cats cradle is he's under rated life changing novel

  • @nellygaspar4894
    @nellygaspar4894 4 года назад

    I didn't read the book, so here I am watching these videos in hope it can help me write an essay due in 3 hours