![]() ![]() Through the course of all this madness Campbell loses the wife he loves dearly, finds her, sort of, and then loses her again. Eventually he is frozen by an existential nausea and gives himself up to the Israelis.Īnd I should mention that “Mother Night” is also a love story. He longs to call out, “Olly-olly-ox-in-free,” so that the make-believe will be over. ![]() Government will neither confirm or deny that Campbell was a spy. This role-playing seems to have no end, as the U.S. There he is a hero to the Iron Guards, a group of crazy and pathetic American Nazis. ![]() Soon Campbell’s Jew-baiting rants are being broadcast on the radio, bringing inspiration and joy to the Nazis, and coded messages to allied agents.Īfter the war, Campbell’s intelligence contact helps him return to New York. As a respected playwright married to a popular German actress, Campbell easily ingratiates himself to the Nazis and offers his services as an anti-semite. He is recruited by United States military intelligence to be a spy when World War II begins. Howard Campbell, Jr., the narrator of “Mother Night,” is an American writer living in Germany when the Nazis come to power. I have always admired his ability to turn simple and unpretentious prose into the stuff of classic pop literature.īut back in 1961 Vonnegut was relatively unknown, still feeling out his role as an artist, and about to find his voice. Surviving the fire-bombing of Dresden was a formative experience for Vonnegut as a novelist, though he sometimes disputed this, and it served as the jumping off point for his 1969 breakout anti-war novel, “Slaughterhouse-Five.”īy the late 60s Vonnegut had bridged the divide between high art and low art, becoming a bestselling author at the same time he was called “the best living writer in America” by Graham Greene. “It was the largest massacre in European history, by the way. The future author, as all his readers know, was hiding in a cool meat locker under a slaughterhouse while above him 135,000 civilians burned to death in Dresden after an allied fire-bombing of the German city, which had no military value. Vonnegut’s amiable introduction goes on about Germans and Nazis and his experience during World War II. He wrote the introduction in 1966 for the paperback edition of this 1961 novel, which has always made me think that Vonnegut, like many writers, wasn’t really sure what he had written until years after the hardback was in the stores. “We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be.” “This is the only story of mine whose moral I know,” Kurt Vonnegut writes in the introduction of “Mother Night,” his third novel. A Retrospective on Kurt Vonnegut’s “Mother Night” ![]()
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