20 January 2009

Jailbird by Kurt Vonnegut




I read this quite a few days ago now, so with some Amazon references I will write what I can.
I always enjoy reading Kurt Vonnegut, there is something about the combination of satire, politics, and the war which he combines magically and he writes like no one else in the world quite can. Well, no one I have read anyway.
Jailbird details the story of Walter F. Starbuck, a former advisor (on Youth Affairs) to Richard Nixon who has just gotten out of jail for his involvement (or not) in the Watergate conspiracy. It reminded me in a lot of ways of other Vonnegut books, such as the continual repetition of 'and on and on' and the re-entry of everyone's favourite random guy Kilgore Trout, who Starbuck meets in jail.
As usual, this book also starts as a seemingly normal sort of epic story about a guy who has been through a lot and been shoved back into a world he no longer understands. However, as with Cat's Cradle another Vonnegut book, it suddenly becomes at the same time a political satire and a very unbelievable but magical story. Most everyone Starbuck meets in this story works at the RAMJAC Corporation, a metaphor for the increasingly capitalist and monopolistic world of the time at which the book was written, it also shows the increasing power large corporations have on the state because of their incredible wealth. The main character's surname (Starbuck) also seems to contribute to this metaphor, especially as Starbucks Coffee was moving to all corners of the world in 1999 when the book was published.
Starbuck continues to meet people he knows in some way or another all throughout the book, and all the characters are brought together within Vonnegut's beautiful prose at the end of the book in a way that is difficult to imagine.
That's one thing you can always rely on with Vonnegut, he's never predictable.

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