Vonnegut was born in 1922. After studying at Cornell University from 1940-1942. During college Vonnegut enlisted in the U.S. Army and later he was sent to Europe and served in the famous Battle of the Bulge in which the Allies finally broke through Hitler's troops and invaded Germany. After the battle Kurt was captured and held as a prisoner of war in a German concentration camp. During this time, Vonnegut witnessed the physical demise of Germany. While Kurt witnessed the murder of 130,000 people in the concentration camp, he survived by hiding in the basement. I imagine that during Kurt's time in war he saw the mass destruction of human life which, as a result, placed a value human life for Kurt . Kurt's war experience and ideas were expressed in his novel SlaughterHouse Five which describes the journey of a disoriented and ill-trained soldier who dislikes war. In addition to the meaning of life Kurt found in the mist of the war, Kurt's again witnessed how easily life could be taken away when his mother committed suicide. (3) Lev Grossman of Time Magazine believes that Vonnegut was constantly dissapointed with humanity and himself. (4) I agree with Grossman because Vonnegut's experience in war and experience with depression and death would lead him to devalue human life and therefor search desperately to find a meaning behind life and the purpose of man (exactly what he attempts to tell the world in The Sirens of Titan).
Refer to Bibliography:
"Kurt Vonnegut Biography" (1)
"Kurt Vonnegut" (2)




I think Vonnegut's journey through life really made him understand the struggles that humans go through on a day to day basis. In a way his life is truly sad. Its very unfortunate that someone gets caught in a concentration camp, witnesses mass murder first hand, looses his mother, and more. I understand his attempted suicide because of his dramatic struggles. I believe that eventually Kurt finally found his way in writing and he truly writes to society in all of his novels.
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