Reviews

A Man Without a Country by Kurt Vonnegut

cassiopeian_star's review against another edition

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funny hopeful lighthearted reflective relaxing fast-paced

4.5

carmenx9's review

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5.0

"The good Earth - we could have saved it, but we were too damn cheap and lazy."

I devoured this one on one train ride and haven't been so simultaneously uplifted and depressed in a while

gray541's review

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funny reflective

3.75

phanuel_'s review against another edition

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funny reflective fast-paced

4.75

nopeeleo25's review

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5.0

If this isn't nice then I don't know what is

blamy's review

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5.0

quick read and totally hilarious.

alanffm's review

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3.0

This is a weird book. It's not quite a memoir and not quite a collection of essays, but a quasi-reflection of the world as Vonnegut saw it before he died. It's interesting to see how his political positions and predictions stand over a decade later. In this, I would say Vonnegut was not exactly spot on. That being said, it is worth mentioning that I am a big Vonnegut fan, despite disagreeing with him, and it was refreshing to hear his voice again. This is a good book, but only for those who are interested in it's author.

missoxley's review

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3.0

Laughed out loud at parts. I understand his political diatribe towards the end but wished he would have stuck without it. Good quick read

justaprilann's review

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dark funny reflective fast-paced

3.5

Am I an old crotchety man on the inside? Some of his points were repetitive, but I found myself agreeing with him at every turn. Especially his stances on anti-imperialism and how the planet is in peril and its because of human greed. Interested to read some of his fiction now.

kevin_shepherd's review against another edition

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5.0

A Man Without a Country (2005) is Vonnegut’s last publication before he died (2007). It is a collection of introspective essays with a somewhat pessimistic eye toward the future of human civilization (if he was this distraught about 2005 imagine how he would have felt about 2016!). This short book might be the closest he ever came to gifting us an autobiography.

“If this isn’t nice, I don’t know what is.”