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Cat's Cradle
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Damon, ZARDOZ
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Dec 06, 2015 11:56PM
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Really loved this book. I feel like there is a great sub genre of Sci Fi in this time period I like to call post-Atomic paranoia brought on by the Cold War. This book in particular felt a welcome voice to that sub genre. Both mocking it and acknowledging it. Vonnegut certainly has a biting wit, and breezy style. I do feel like I'd like to read it again. It's one of the books I'd wish I had bought instead of borrowed. I feel like there is more to be mined from the story.
The idea that "truth" is just a different kind of lie is such a great idea. Bokonon is perhaps an elaborate more complete lie, then say the patriotism and Hoosier-centric pride of the Indiana couple. Therefore is it more truthful? Is there a truth that isn't a lie?
Also, that ending...just great.
I don't know if I read Vonnegut's truth/lie as the tension of authenticity. It seems to me that a Bokonon wouldn't concern themselves with a truth that is congruent with the world around themselves and would consider their own "inner truth", so much BS. In fact...that's what I think "truth" is in this narrative...BS (which I guess is a certain type of authenticity).


