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LOVE, KURT by Kurt Vonnegut

LOVE, KURT

The Vonnegut Love Letters, 1941-1945

by Kurt Vonnegut ; edited by Edith Vonnegut

Pub Date: Dec. 1st, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-593-13301-9
Publisher: Random House

Kurt Vonnegut’s letters to his first wife, Jane Marie Cox, written in the crucibles of war and young literary ambition.

Vonnegut’s eldest daughter, Edith, discovered this cache of letters, written between 1941 and 1945, in the attic of her childhood home. Smartly photographed rather than transcribed, the letters offer an engrossing portrait of the artist as a young man. Many of the future novelist’s hallmarks can be seen in embryotic form: the plainspoken wit and candor (“Sex is peachy. Why bury it with things low and vulgar”), the clever doodles (one letter includes a credible stegosaurus), and, in wartime, a heartsickness over humanity in turmoil. In 1941, Vonnegut and Cox were high school sweethearts at separate colleges: Cox at Swarthmore, studying English, Vonnegut at Cornell, ill-advisedly studying chemistry and spending most of his time writing for the student paper. His early letters to “Woofy” are giddy and flirty ("the interior of a tan sedan / cannot be part of nature's plan,” goes one bit of doggerel) and not a little pleading, hinting at marriage and a touch passive-aggressive about her dating others. World War II distanced them further and inevitably changed him: His mother died, he was captured as a POW and witnessed the bombing of Dresden (which famously inspired Slaughterhouse-Five), and grew more desperate for her attention. After they married in 1945, his letters (as he awaited official release from the Army) become more practical, as he plots a literary career. But his sense of humor and ingeniousness never waver. Two examples of Cox’s letters show that she was deeply supportive, even gushing about his literary potential, and one senses Vonnegut needed every encouragement. The two split in 1971; here, though, Vonnegut’s ardor is undiluted and a pleasure to snoop in on.

A charming set of Vonnegutiana that will appeal to fans of his writing—and love letters in general.