It's hard to tell. In the book "Breakfast of Champions", where he pretty much just spoke his opinion about how stupid the world is, he spoke negatively of drugs, ofcourse in that case he was more talking about stuff that wasn't meant to be used a drug.
However i personally find it hard to believe that he would be able to invent a book such as Slaughterhouse Five, which is about aliens who see all of time at the same time, with out aid of drugs.
I personally suspect he may have used LSD and Cannabis at one point or another, or perhaps the whole time. Good on him for using them. He wrote brilliant books.
Just like it's spelled -von-eh-gut.
"Ice Nine" in "Cat's Cradle" by Kurt Vonnegut is a fictional substance with catastrophic properties. It serves as a metaphor for the consequences of technology and human folly. The substance does not exist in reality.
It was a quote said by Kurt Vonnegut.
it seemed like Vonnegut wrote cats cradle to show how the world ca lead to their own destruction without being aware of what they are doing..just like when Angela used ice nine to get her husband and Newt used ice nine for a vacation and Frank also used it to benifit himself..nobody thought of the outcome and they eventually led to the worlds downfall( Destruction)
Sounds like someone had a reading assignment over the holidays, hasn't read one or both of the books and is only getting to their homework now...
It sounds an awful lot like 'Harrison Bergeron, by author Kurt Vonnegut jr.
never in a million years will kurt sound like justin but kurt is way better than justin just sayin :):):):):_):) ^_^
Kurt Vonnegut, before reading his work in high school I didn't think that people who thought like me could be successful. We are never alone, only separated.
Mercades did like Kurt in episode accafellas but then Kurt told her he is gay
The phrase originated in the song "Cigareets and Whuskey and Wild, Wild Women" written by Tim Spencer in 1947 and performed by his group The Sons of the Pioneers. Recently, Ray Bradbury and Kurt Vonnegut have famously quoted it.
Ah, the climax of a story is like the moment when a beautiful mountain reaches its peak, full of excitement and tension. In "The Lie" by Kurt Vonnegut, the climax is when the main character, a young boy named Eli, must face the consequences of his lie and make a difficult decision. It's a pivotal moment that reveals his true character and sets the stage for the resolution of the story.
Gigi and the Blondes "He's just the boy I love".