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Harry Simpson
April 11, 2015
Thank you for sharing a part of your life with us.
Rest Kurt, until you hear at dawn,
the low, clear reveille of God.
Thank you for your service to this nation.
Ioannis Moray
March 31, 2014
So it goes...
Nicholas Hazel
August 31, 2012
His books were not only powerful insights into the basic frameworks of humanity, they were also incredibly fun to read. He found such a wonderful balance.
March 16, 2010
For Kurt...
WEEP NOT FOR ME
Do not weep for me when I no longer dwell among the wonders of the earth; for my larger self is free, and my soul rejoices on the other side of pain...on the other side of darkness.
Do not weep for me, for I am a ray of sunshine that touches your skin, a tropical breeze upon your face, the hush of joy within your heart and the innocence of babes in mothers arms.
I am the hope in a darkened night. And, in your hour of need, I will be there to comfort you. I will share your tears, your joys, your fears, your disappointments and your triumphs.
Do not weep for me, for I am cradled
in the arms of God. I walk with the angels, and hear the music beyond the stars.
Do not weep for me, for I am within you;
I am peace, love, I am a soft wind that caresses the flowers. I am the calm that follows a raging storm. I am an autumns leaf that floats among the garden of God, and I am pure white snow that softly falls upon your hand.
Do not weep for me, for I shall never die, as long as you remember me...
with a smile and a sigh.
© Joe Fazio
~
[email protected] /Joe Fazio,
Beverly Hills, California
January 2, 2010
As the days and weeks pass, and as you return to life's routine, may you continue to feel comforted by the love and support of family and friends.
Russell Halvorson
August 13, 2007
He's not gone...he's just gone on to chapter 4...
Annette Strauch
July 20, 2007
Remember reading Slaughterhouse 5. Very good!
Sean Matthews
May 19, 2007
What a sad loss to the world. Full of wit, biting sarcasm and wonderful, warm stories. He will be sadly missed by all. It's like losing a father. Goodbye to a great storyteller and a man who has truly given his heart to the world.
Erik Biksa
April 26, 2007
in his words: up to the big clam bake in the sky. his works help make lives a little more livable.
Samantha Rea
April 21, 2007
He's up in Heaven now.
The funniest thing I could have said.
Bernard MacKinnon
April 17, 2007
Your passing has instilled a deep sadness in me. You've always had a special place in my library, and in my heart. You taught me to walk that fine line between humour and despair, and that our life here is worhtless without compassion. I'm going to miss you. So it goes.
Ed Dunne
April 17, 2007
I will miss you. You taught me how to grieve and laugh in the absurd tragedy of it all.
jason ries
April 17, 2007
Upon
my next journey down the blue tunnel, to the pearly gates, it is you
who I would like to interview. I like to think that we were in the same
karass.
-God bless you, Mr. Vonnegut!
Louanne Crowder
April 16, 2007
Round and round and round we spin, with feet of lead and wings of tin.
And now we have to do it without you. I first met you through your short stories in high school in the '60s, and have loved you ever since. My 20-year-old daughter is also a fan, using Epicac for a Forensics reading.
I know that you'll be delighted to hear that our church women's group has thoroughly enjoyed meeting you through your stories, some of which I've been sharing with them.
The world is now a less thoughtful place. My heartfelt condolences to the family.
Richard & Regina Brown
April 16, 2007
God Bless You. You were an American Literary Icon. May you rest in peace.
nancy seymour
April 16, 2007
Your book deadeye dick brought great joy into my husbands and my life. I will always treasure your books and will keep them under my pillow from now on!
M R
April 15, 2007
Kurt Vonnegut has and always will be one of my favorite authors teaching me to think outside the box, Thank you for the impact you made on me .
Keith Deshaies
April 15, 2007
Discovering you was one of the happiest literary accidents I've ever had.
Lonesome no more, Mr. Vonnegut.
Lonesome no more!
Stephane Carriere
April 15, 2007
A great master has passed..
but not without opening our eyes and our souls to our own stenghts and faillings and giving us the liberating gift of self- depreciation and scalding sinicism.
ray interlandi
April 15, 2007
I was so sorry to hear of your loss. The thoughts of many are with you at this time of sorrow.
Gail Powers
April 15, 2007
A voice of reason in a time of absurdity.....stilled, but not forgotten. You are in our hearts and minds.
April 15, 2007
All men die, but few truly live. You will live on inside the rest of us. You will speak to us from the novels that are stacked upon our bedside tables, our desks, and our library shelves. You challenged us to stretch our imaginations, our tastes and to seek the truth. May you do the same now as you are undoubtedly floating behind that thin veil that E. Dickinson wrote about.
God Bless,
A fan, a follower, a reader.
Paula Zipser
April 15, 2007
We've lost one of the greatest writers of our generation. 'Slaughterhouse-Five' was one of the most influential books that I've ever read. I was introduced to Mr. Vonnegut's writings in college, and have been a fan of his work ever since. I think that I will go back and reread and rediscover this remarkable masterpiece.
Steve and Sue Kondikoff
April 15, 2007
The Seventies, English II, and Kurt. What more could you ask for?
Our deepest sympathy to the family.
Mark Ingram
April 14, 2007
So it goes
You said
So it did
So long
J.J. Harting
April 14, 2007
Your leaving hurts so badly, but your everlasting presence comforts our hearts. There is no other person in my existence that has shaped me more. Thanks for everything. God bless you Kurt Vonnegut.
Dennis Davis
April 14, 2007
A thoughtful and brave man. Maybe a man without a country, but not without friends and followers.
Mary Ellen Reda
April 14, 2007
Slaughter House Five was the last book my book club read. It was first time I read anything written by Mr. Vonnegut. It is awesome; as I am sure he was in real life. The world will miss him, but rejoice in all the books he left for us to enjoy.
Rev. Joseph P Hildebrandt Sr
April 14, 2007
"And another thing Vonnegut"!! Happy heaven Sir. May God bless your family and all of us who appreciated your work.
Linda G
April 14, 2007
Ms. Simmons at WOJH introduced our English class to him and we fell in love with his work. Some of us would again read his works in 10th grade the following year. Both of my kids have also read some of his work in English. He is one of my favorite authors and always will be. Nay he give people in Heaven some interesting stories.
Donald Elliott
April 14, 2007
Kurt, Alex, Scott, Jill & family,
It was wonderful to have come to know Kurt and Bernie and to have filmed them. I will miss
the neighborly dynamics and closeness for ever. I often think of Kurt's phone call to me one Christmas morning. At least the brothers are together once again.
Truly an incredible loss.
Donald W Elliott
[email protected]
Jerry Chase
April 14, 2007
"So Job died, being old and full of days."
- Job 42:17
S McQ
April 14, 2007
I just can't shake the sense of how much less kind and humane a place this world is without you.
Joe
April 13, 2007
I as so many other baby boomers came of age reading this man's works. His sardonic humor was such a breath of fresh air. God bless you, Mr. Vonnegut. May you find true peace.
unkl trumpet
April 13, 2007
At last you are free
Peter Vielbig
April 13, 2007
Dear Mr. Vonnegut,
Two weeks ago, I mailed a letter to you to Sagaponack, NY. It was returned for insuficient address. I resent it to your agent the day before you died. It was a poignant letter written in 1945 by a buddy of my cousin, Arthur Mallette, who was captured in Belgium in Dec '44 and died as a POW in a bombing raid on Christmas Eve. He was in many of the same places you were and I am sure you would have recognized his situation and appreciated the sadness of this letter written to his widow. They were married in July '44.
Your writings have inspired us to think of the futility of war, especially at this time, we all need to think about man's inhumanity to man and act as peacemakers.
Winnie Serle
April 13, 2007
Rest In Peace, Mr. Vonnegut. You made your mark.
Zoe Kowaski
April 13, 2007
Peace & Love
Fiona Mackinnon
April 13, 2007
I'm sorry that you are gone but so glad that you were here. You made me think,cry and laugh and wish so much that I could have had blethers with you. Much love to you and until we meet again.
Levari
April 13, 2007
"Everything Was Beautiful, And Nothing Hurt."
You gave so much,
made so much
of the tragedy
that was the
20th Century.
"Poo-Tee-Weet!"
The little bird once sang.
"Poo-Tee-Weet?"
The little bird once asked.
You
are
fine
a
lee
free
of
your
mem
or
"Poo-Tee-Weet!"
Gretchen Denaro
April 13, 2007
God bless you, Mr. Vonnegut.
You're how come I write so good.
Betty
April 13, 2007
A great American War II hero has gone on to his reward. I know you would never describe yourself as such, you saw your duty and did it. I thank you for my freedom. No one but someone who seen combat knows the sacrifices both you and your family had to make as a consequence of that time. Your philosophy,insight and humor will continue to be read through the stories you have left us.
Christopher S. Hadin
April 13, 2007
Mr. Vonnegut,
You got me through my awful teenaged years by teaching me to see the inherent foolishness in self-rightous authority figures and to see the humor in adversity. I am the person I am because of your books which I will joyfully pass on to my daughter on her 15th birthday---the exact day I was assigned to read Cat's Cradle by my 10th grade english teacher. "Here," she said. "Happy Birthday. You'll like this." Ms. Casalou, how right you were!
"God Bless you (Mr. Vonnegut)"
With fond affection,
Christopher S. Hadin
Norwalk CT
Victoria Medaglia
April 13, 2007
In 1972, I based my final paper in my major subject (Religion) on "Cat's Cradle." My advisor hated it, which convinced me I was on to something. Now, I see the book is frequently used in many classes, including religion classes. Sweet subtle victory!
Kelly Warren
April 13, 2007
Thank you for your wry wit, poignant observations, and classic literary contribution.
Shannon Christman
April 13, 2007
Mr. Vonnegut had such an amazing ability to say so much in so few words. I read nearly all his books one year in college and kept up with them as he wrote more, but I have always left one unread: I hate the thought of not having any more Vonnegut books to read for the first time.
My condolences to his family and friends.
L. Leduc
April 13, 2007
It's hard to believe that there won't be anymore of his books to read. I guess I'll just have to read them all again.
My sympathies to the family.
Mark Andel
April 13, 2007
On the day of our beloved Mr. Vonnegut's death, at School District 214, which encompasses Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect and Wheeling, Illinois, dark clouds of conservatism were gathering as a book ban was being proposed -- a ban that included Slaughterhouse-Five. Kurt would have a nice chuckle about that. So it goes. And so on.
His was an elegant, spare, immensely moving voice that captured so much the spirit of a generation that was dumfounded at the political nonsense unfolding all around, and he used his pen like a sword to do what he could to change things.
He was our generation's Mark Twain, a fearless social critic with a dangerous sense of humor and dark knowledge of the abyss tempered by a baptism of fire (literally, in Dresden). He knew well the monstrosities that can occur in a world devoid of reason and sense -- especially at the top levels of government.
God bless you, Mr. Vonnegut. May the efforts to still your voice and the seeds of rampant and thoughtless conservatism find no purchase in the coming generations.
Matthew Slaughter
April 13, 2007
the reason i love to write
Gay Davidson-Zielske
April 13, 2007
Having lost my brother, Marx Prewett, and you within a month of each other, I am now without the two funniest men I have ever known and loved. You were both great hearts and we all miss you. Gay Davidson-Zielske
Joe Buehler
April 13, 2007
Let us hope that where ever he is now that everything is beautiful and that nothing hurts.
Kathy
April 13, 2007
My thoughts and prayers are with you in your time of grief. May your memories bring you comfort.
John Linko
April 13, 2007
I really enjoyed his work, but his greatest influence on me was in one of a famous series of ads for International Paper Company in the 70's called The Power of the Printed Word. His contribution, titled How to Write with Style, provided me with advice that I try to remember when ever I sit down to write; "If a sentence, no matter how excellent, does not illuminate your subject in some new and useful way, scratch it out."
We'll miss you.
Guy Plunkett III
April 13, 2007
"Farewell, hello, farewell, hello"
Kurt Vonnegut, who wrote some books I really liked, died two days ago. So it goes.
tim walker
April 13, 2007
You are the only person I ever think of in response to the question "What famous person, living or dead, would you most like to have a conversation with." You changed the way I see the world.
Mark Andel
April 13, 2007
On the day of our beloved Mr. Vonnegut's death, at School District 214, which encompasses Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect and Wheeling, Illinois, dark clouds of conservatism were gathering as a book ban was being proposed -- a ban that included Slaughterhouse-Five. Kurt would have a nice chuckle about that. So it goes. And so on.
His was an elegant, spare, immensely moving voice that captured so much the spirit of a generation that was dumfounded at the political nonsense unfolding all around, and he used his pen like a sword to do what he could to change things.
He was our generation's Mark Twain, a fearless social critic with a dangerous sense of humor and dark knowledge of the abyss tempered by a baptism of fire (literally, in Dreseden). He knew well the monstrosities that can occur in a world devoid of reason and sense -- especialy at the top levels of government.
God bless you, Mr. Vonnegut. May the efforts to still your voice and the seeds of rampant and thoughtless conservatism find no purchase in the coming generations.
Gary McMahon
April 13, 2007
The greatest writer I ever read. His fiction and non-fiction made my life richer, and he inspires me to write. I'm going to miss him badly, this man I never met.
D. Westbrok
April 13, 2007
My sympathies to the Vonnegut family. (Isaiah 51:12)
Madeline Guzman
April 13, 2007
In your books, I'd probably be able to really write a letter to heaven (whether or not you believed in it).
The world will sorely miss your passion. Thank you for sharing your ideas with all of us.
Rest in peace. Then, go play shuffleboard! :-)
Mark Elliott
April 13, 2007
You have not left us. You are just unstuck in time.
Karen C
April 13, 2007
So it goes. I'll miss you terribly. Thanks for everything.
Jessica Salasek
April 13, 2007
RIP, Kurt Vonnegut. You will be missed.
Steve Semler
April 13, 2007
Vonnegut will be remembered as an incredible thinker among many other of his highly regarded literary attributes. We cannot say enough about this great man. We will miss him.
J Liu
April 13, 2007
Kurt was coolest in Rodney Dangerfield's movie "Back to School." I know guys who are still trying to come up with the formula for Ice-9 (yikes!) - in his honor they should carry him in a Cat's Cradle instead of a casket at his funeral. Kurt, may you rest in peace.
Jake Manson
April 13, 2007
They tell me Kurt Vonnegut is dead, but I don't have to believe that if I don't want to. As long as one copy of one of his books remains, and one person to read it, he will be alive. (I hope it's Slaughterhouse-5.) "I'm coming, Billy!"
Laura Kuhn
April 13, 2007
You will be missed, Mr. Vonnegut.
Thank you for giving so much of yourself--you will not be forgotten.
M. D.
April 13, 2007
I imagine how he would have written about this, an ironic death for a man who used his brain so well. Cigarettes never did kill him-false advertising!, he said.
I just read his last book only two weeks ago. And as another person wrote in this guest book so succintly, I have to say too-he was right.
And...so it goes.
Nixon Leary
April 13, 2007
Kurt Vonnegut challenged me to think, and was cool too. Every high school teacher should be like this.
Roch-André LeBlanc
April 13, 2007
One of the greatest is gone.
david colangelo
April 13, 2007
find player piano to be strangely prophetic. the story about ice nine
appears autobiographical. wonderful wordsmith, a true artist.
Tina Huus
April 13, 2007
From now on every day will be a Blue Monday. Thanks for all the mindblowing thoughts, may they be remembered forever.
Lewis McCormick
April 13, 2007
Mr. Vonnegut,
No words can express my gratitude. Thank you for all that your writings have given me.
I pray that our Good Lord shall give me nothing more than a place at your table.
If only I should be so worthy!
May God bless you and keep you!
Amen!
Edith T. Nowels
April 13, 2007
Mr. Vonnegut: 106th Inf. Div. and 9th Armored Division supported each other in St.Vith's nasty battle in Belgium. Maybe you and my brother "Bud" Thorne knew each other before he was KIA 12/21/44 (9th Armored CCB)and awarded Congressional Medal of Honor. The world needs more of 'THE GREATEST GENERATION's' ilk right here on earth. Thank you for the camaraderie you shared during The Battle of the Bulge WWII. Carry on 'brothers'.
H R
April 13, 2007
Mr. Vonnegut,
You have changed my life. I could have chosen no better person to help form my thinking during that early college experience. It is because of your works that I am who I am. Because of you I will always challenge, and remember that I should do what makes me happiest and the world the best.
Stan Wojtusik
April 13, 2007
To Kurt Vonnegut family and friends: His pride must keep you proud. His strength must keep you strong. I, too, served with Kurt in the 106th Infantry Division in WWII Battle of the Bulge, wounded, captured, tortured, packed into boxcars and forced to labor in Dresden. I, too, worked with dead bodies, breaking arms and legs to lay flat when stacked. It was a difficult time but we were all brothers on the battlefield, supporting each other, our God above, and memories of home helped us survive. Age and illness keeps up our fight sixty-three years later. On behalf of your comrades, Kurt rest in peace. Your legacy is carved in granite at our memorial in Section 21 at Arlington National Cemetery, "TRIUMPH OF COURAGE". Sir Stanley A. Wojtusik, National President, Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge.
Mark A. Melymick
April 13, 2007
I started reading Vonnegut, as many did, while travelling the world in the 70's. I loved his wit, his humour, his social conscience, his politics, his imagination and his honesty, and his passion. I was thrilled that someone saw the world the way I did.
He had a love of his family that was often alluded to in his works, and he loved America - so much so he was not afraid to point out the flaws. He may be gone - but his books will be with me forever. For that I am Thankful.
Hiho.
julian entsminger
April 13, 2007
thank you, mr. rosewater, for the first sci-fi story I read at 8 or so in a textbook, of all things-"the barnhouse effect". Good bye and god bless!
Amin Datu
April 13, 2007
There are some things which you never wish to learn. Kurt's passing is a big one. What a wonderful world we all had the opportunity to share because of his insight and writing prowess. I thought of him quite often, his health, praying for new works. Always wanted to write to thank him for each and every publishing I managed to read and collect. You will be sorely missed, always celebrated, and your works cherished. Every word rang so true. Best wishes to Mr. Vonnegut's family.
Broom
April 13, 2007
I was first introduced to Kurt Vonnegut in college by one of my professors. I was then always delighted with every new book that I read from the author's library. I even got the pleasure of seeing him speak. He will be remembered for some time to come. Thanks for everything.
April 12, 2007
If I'm getting the quote right, he wrote that a friend from IN remembered the school boy KV this way: "He laughed often and was kind to everyone." What a lovely way to be remembered. Behind a veneer of the bizarre and the silly in his writing, that kindness is always there.
I'm just so glad he was around, and I selfishly worry who can fill the hole he's left.
I wish comfort to his loved ones.
DEBBIE DAVIS
April 12, 2007
YOU WILL BE MISSED
Timothy Stickle
April 12, 2007
"Rented-a-tent-tent-tent."
You rocked Kurt and really made a difference. Thank you so much.
David Harrington
April 12, 2007
Read a Vonnegut book.
Meet Nelson Rockefeller on the street.
When he asks, "How 'ya doin' fella?" it will be impossible to say, "About the same."
Daniel Barnes
April 12, 2007
See the cat? see the cradle? Thanks, Kurt, for the books. I was never the same. I guess that is a good thing; certainly an interesting one. Honey never tasted the same again. Peace.
Kate
April 12, 2007
"A plausible mission of artists is to make people appreciate being alive at least a little bit."
Thanks for writing, Mr. Vonnegut.
Jeff Landen
April 12, 2007
Your writing defined art as pushing the bariers: "kicking against the darknes 'till it bleeds daylight." Peace be with you.
Don Lancaster
April 12, 2007
Over the last month I re-read (for the who knows how many times) both Slaughterhouse 5 and Mother Night, the two best books I know. I also got to share them with my 7th grade daughter.. and she is hooked forever (and also loves Harrison Bergeron) That is a gift you have given me. She woke me up me this morning to tell me that you had passed away.
David Bruce
April 12, 2007
Well, you're up in heaven now.
I wish it weren't so, but I'll have your books with me always. Despite all your trials, you managed to find humanity in inhumane situations, but more than that, your mastery of irony made me laugh and cry, sometimes at the same time. You are and always have been my favorite writer, alive or dead.
Thank you.
Susan Hickey
April 12, 2007
I have read everything he wrote and spread the word. Kurt was the voice of us in the '60s. He articulated our thoughts and concerns in a way that was ewasy to deal with....so it goes. Your wit will be sorely missed.
Paul Rozario
April 12, 2007
My introduction to Kurt Vonnegut was, believe it or not, on television in Malaysia through EPICAC. This was followed by 'Happy Birthday, Wanda June', and I was hooked. It wasn't until I was at university in Melbourne, Australia that I was able to pursue his written words. I am forever grateful to Mr Vonnegut for having the courage and persistence to write what he did. As he wrote for his elder sister - "Everything was beautiful, and nothing hurt." - now is for Mr Vonnegut.
Rachel Wagstaff
April 12, 2007
"Slaughterhouse-Five" was the first of Mr. Vonnegut's books I ever read, and it remains my favorite. It saved my sanity during high school, and made me an instant fan of his work.
Samantha
April 12, 2007
Fly up and away from here; we needed you but you have left us with the memories of laughter. There is no greater legacy. Thank you.
George White
April 12, 2007
I met Kurt Vonnegut on the corner of Lexington and 49th Street in NYC two years ago. What a thrill. I asked him a bunch of questions while we walked. I had read most of his novels in high school and college and always enjoyed them very much. He was very nice to me. Should I have expected anything else? Kurt, you had an impact on my life and a lot of other lives. Is there a better legacy?
Chris Waddell
April 12, 2007
Farewell Kilgore Trout--you and your alterego Kurt helped to form my life. Thank you.
John Brusveen
April 12, 2007
“Hello, babies. Welcome to Earth. It’s hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It’s round and wet and crowded. At the outside, babies, you’ve got about a hundred years here. There’s only one rule that I know of, babies — ‘God damn it, you’ve got to be kind.’ ”
Matt Rhodes
April 12, 2007
Thank you for your humor, thank you for your grace, thank you for your writing, and thank you for your other wondeful gifts. Our world will be a little less bright with your passing.
Diletta
April 12, 2007
You're a free man, no more authority!!
Ink stained fingers...you shook up my youth...
Rest....dear sir.
Joe Leisek
April 12, 2007
I read Breakfast of Champions when I was 12. It completely changed my outlook on the world. And it made me laugh. The older I became, the more I understood and admired KV. A few months ago I gave my 18-year-old son a copy of Slaughterhouse 5. He loved it. God Bless You, Mr. Vonnegut.
Richard King
April 12, 2007
"What a man, what a language".
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