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Peace in Amber: The World of Kurt Vonnegut

door Hugh Howey

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Hugh Howey was a boat captain living aboard a seventy-four-foot yacht in the shadow of the Twin Towers on the morning of September 11, 2001. Imprisoned and put on display in a glass-domed zoo on the planet Tralfamadore, adult film actress Montana Wildhack is left alone with her thoughts and her occasional lover Billy Pilgrim. Inspired by Kurt Vonnegut's masterpiece Slaughterhouse Five, Howey uses this short story to weave his own personal Dresden experience with Wildhack's private hell. In Peace in Amber, he examines the struggle to determine what to control, when to surrender, and how to discern those things we cannot change.… (meer)
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Toon 4 van 4
While a little disorienting, this story kept jumping back and forth in time between the lives of two people. I really did not care for the story being so heavy on September 11th. I wish that the author would have done less on it and had more about the person in an intergalactic zoo. ( )
  dewbertb | Jan 23, 2016 |
Far more than fan fiction, Howey uses Slaughterhouse Five as a lens to view the tragic day of 9/11. This is a very personal account from the author, who witnessed the event. It captures the horror and confusion we all felt that on that day, as Vonnegut before masterfully conveyed the bombing of Dresden. ( )
  wethewatched | Jan 7, 2016 |
This was probably as powerful a book as I'm likely to read this year. Maybe that's why I avoided it for so long, putting it off for various reasons, waiting for an epub version that Howey himself confirmed would not be coming.

I imagine it wouldn't have the same impact for someone who'd never read "Slaughterhouse-Five" or anything else by Kurt Vonnegut. Nor would it, I suppose, for those who didn't experience the stomach-churning terror the morning of 9/11 of trying frantically to account for loved ones. But perhaps the survivors of the fire-bombing of Dresden felt the same about Slaughterhouse-Five.

Perhaps there's hope in all horror, but not right away. Coming unstuck in time may well help. So might seeing things in four dimensions, or keeping the mental images and memories of strangers holding on to each other and making room in boats and cars. I remember those things most. And I know that others all through the world have their own horrors far worse than ours. And so books like Howey's and Vonnegut's - by mixing time, scenarios, and moods - make it equally bearable and horrifying. As it should. ( )
  bkshs | Feb 14, 2015 |
I'm twenty-one years old. With no home to call my own, I'm currently sleeping on my sister's couch. I've recently returned from a trip to California to see my father because he lied and said he was dying so that I would sit on a Greyhound bus for 1800 miles and come visit him. I spent the last money I had in this world to do so. I cannot afford rent, so when I return to Alabama, I'm evicted. I'm not in a chipper mood.

The front door flies open and my sister comes barreling into the living room. I come awake instantly at the discordant symphany that is her entrance. She shoves my legs off the couch and flops down beside me. The remote is in her hand, and she's frantically flipping channels. Doesn't matter though, because every station is playing the same disaster movie. Or is it a war movie? Some kind of alternate history thing, like RED DAWN, where some country's military has breached America's borders, has dared step a foot down on our soil with violent intent... But these aren't movie networks my sister's scrolling through. These are news outlets. CNN. FOX. MSNBC... Local stations...

We all know where we were the day those planes flew into the towers, and most of us do not want to be reminded of that day other than to remember the slain, and author Hugh Howey seems to get that. He doesn't dwell on the carnage, and when he must broach the topic, he does so tactfully. In this short piece, Howey channels Vonnegut to perfection. If Vonnegut weren't gone from this world, I'd have thought he wrote this. So it goes.

Slaughterhouse Five is one of my all time favorite works of fiction based on war. Vonnegut's novel moved me and molded me into the individual I am today: a peaceful soul that respects life. This is not to say that I am anti-war or anti-military or any other such nonsense. It's only to say that I don't like death and destruction, whether it be large-scale or intimate, and think that any loss of life is a tragedy. Funny thing for a horror writer to say, but it's the truth.

This is the first thing from Hugh Howey that I've read all the way through. I couldn't get into the WOOL books, or Silo Saga, or whatever they're called, and I believe my enjoyment of this novelette stemmed from my love of Vonnegut style and not Howey's. Howey does a spot on impersonation, and, for that reason alone, I tip my nonexistent hat to him. ( )
  Edward.Lorn | Feb 13, 2015 |
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Hugh Howey was a boat captain living aboard a seventy-four-foot yacht in the shadow of the Twin Towers on the morning of September 11, 2001. Imprisoned and put on display in a glass-domed zoo on the planet Tralfamadore, adult film actress Montana Wildhack is left alone with her thoughts and her occasional lover Billy Pilgrim. Inspired by Kurt Vonnegut's masterpiece Slaughterhouse Five, Howey uses this short story to weave his own personal Dresden experience with Wildhack's private hell. In Peace in Amber, he examines the struggle to determine what to control, when to surrender, and how to discern those things we cannot change.

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