Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Review of Mother Night

Mother Night
Mother Night
Author: Kurt Vonnegut
Genre: Literature & Fiction
Book Type: Paperback
terez93 avatar reviewed on + 273 more book reviews


This novel is simply Vonnegut at his best. As much as I enjoy a good romp in farce, this book has none: just tragedy and despair, writ large in a fashion only KV can make palatable, much less enjoyable.

To sum it all up: "People should be changed by world wars... else what are world wars for?"

And so it was with Kurt Vonnegut. War is a central theme in nearly all his novels, but this plot twist involves an American spy (maybe) who is caught up in his own web of propaganda-mongering, and, as most of KV's other tragic characters, as such, meets with fate, which is none too kind. I won't divulge all the twists and turns, but I will say that this is one of the most "real" books KV wrote, I think, much material having been drawn from life and no small amount from personal experience. For this one in particular, I wonder how much of this book involves quotes or anecdotes KV actually heard from other people, like the account of his aunt and the paperwork, the Jewish guard who helped hang Hoess, and the countless other brief passages which speak to startling realism. These are too profound to be invented-to me, they have to have been things people who experienced them actually told him at some time or other. He had his own deep well of experiences to draw from, to be sure, but all the details presented herein are too varied and diverse to be all his own. There are so many stories in him, and in the people whose words he records.

There's a lot more I want to say about this one, eventually, but I think the best course at present, until I've had time to ruminate a bit, is to let KV speak for himself. There is a veritable smorgasbord of quotables in this one.

------------MEMORABLE PASSAGES------------

We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful what we pretend to be.

I remember some laughs about my aunt, too, who married a GERMAN German, and who had to write to Indianapolis for proofs that she had no Jewish blood. The Indianapolis mayor knew her from high school and dancing school, so he had fun putting ribbons and official seals all over the documents the Germans required, which made them look like eighteenth-century peace treaties.

There's another clear moral to this tale, now that I think about it: When you're dead, you're dead.
And yet another moral occurs to me now: Make love when you can. It's good for you.

...a man who served evil too openly and good too secretly, the crime of his times.

I felt the dust of the holy land creeping in to bury me, sensed how thick a dust-and-rubble blanket I would one day wear.

'I was like almost everybody who came through that war... I got so I couldn't feel anything... Every job was a job to do, and no job was any better or worse than any other. After we finished hanging Hoess [the commandant of the extermination camp at Auschwitz]... I packed up my clothes to go home. The catch on my suitcase was broken, so I buckled it shut with a big leather strap. Twice within an hour I did the very same job-once to Hoess and once to my suitcase. Both jobs felt about the same.'

'It's all I've seen, all I've been through...that makes it damn nearly impossible for me to say anything. I've lost the knack of making sense. I speak gibberish to the civilized world, and it replies in kind.'

To be to each other, body and soul, sufficient reasons for living, though there might not be a single other satisfaction to be had.

It's no doubt a great flaw in my personality, but I can't think in terms of boundaries. Those imaginary lines are as unreal to me as elves and pixies. I can't believe that they mark the end or the beginning of anything of real concern to a human soul. Virtues and vices, pleasures and pains cross boundaries at will.

This is a hard world to be ludicrous in, with so many human beings so reluctant to laugh, so incapable of thought, so eager to believe and snarl and hate.

I've heard a lot of bombs go off in my time, and they never impressed me much as a way to get things done.

Man, I think, is an infantry animal.

Plagiarism is the silliest of misdemeanors. What harm is there in writing what's already been written? Real originality is a capital crime, often calling for cruel and unusual punishment in advance of the coup de grace.

All people are insane. They will do anything at any time, and God help anybody who looks for reasons.