Kurt Vonnegut
The humanist novelist quoted here for kindness as the only rule, art as soul-growth, and the gallows-wise consolation of being briefly alive on Earth.
Kurt Vonnegut shows up in these highlights in two guises: as the author of his own late-life essay collection A Man Without a Country, and as a line other writers reach for when they need someone to say the tender, unbearable thing plainly. Across all four sources the same figure emerges β a novelist who treats art as therapy, kindness as the whole of the law, and human life as a short, absurd, communal errand worth taking seriously anyway. The register is gallows wisdom: jokes told at the edge of despair, which is exactly why they land.
The one rule: be kind
The center of gravity in the highlights is a single commandment. In A Man Without a Country Vonnegut recounts greeting a newborn to the planet: "Welcome to Earth, young man... It's hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It's round and wet and crowded. At the outside, Joe, you've got about a hundred years here. There's only one rule that I know of: Goddamn it, Joe, you've got to be kind!"1 The whole of his ethics fits in that outburst β mortality, scarcity of time, and the lone obligation that survives it.
Its quieter twin is the line he borrowed as a personal creed: "Father, we are here to help each other get through this thing, whatever it is."2 There is no theology behind it, no purpose supplied β only mutual aid as the point of the exercise.
Art as soul-growth, not livelihood
Vonnegut's second great theme is that making things is for the maker, regardless of quality or income. His advice to the young is emphatic: "The arts are not a way to make a living. They are a very human way of making life more bearable. Practicing an art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow, for heaven's sake. Sing in the shower. Dance to the radio. Tell stories."3 The reward is not publication but the fact of having created something.
He extends this to the body and to sheer aliveness β a rebuke to screens and abstraction: "We are dancing animals. How beautiful it is to get up and go out and do something. We are here on Earth to fart around."4 Even his craft advice carries the same anti-solemnity: his first rule of style is "Do not use semicolons. They are transvestite hermaphrodites representing absolutely nothing. All they do is show you've been to college."5 And his remedy for the "worldwide epidemic of depression" is not a doctrine but a musical form β the blues, from which he claims all pop music descends.6
The consolation of process over perfection
When Anne Lamott needs to give writers permission to be bad on the page, she summons Vonnegut. Her whole gospel of the "shitty first draft" leans on his self-portrait of the working artist: "When I write, I feel like an armless legless man with a crayon in his mouth."7 The point is that even a master feels clumsy and blind at the desk β so go ahead and make big scrawls and mistakes, because "perfectionism is a mean, frozen form of idealism, while messes are the artist's true friend."7 Vonnegut here is the patron saint of starting badly and continuing anyway.
The universe has no plot (and that's the joke)
In Fluke, Brian Klaas enlists Vonnegut to puncture our craving for cosmic reasons. Klaas quotes the Bokononist creation scene from Cat's Cradle: Man asks God the purpose of everything, God asks whether everything must have a purpose, Man insists it must, and "'Then I leave it to you to think of one for all this,' said God. And He went away."8 Klaas uses it to illustrate teleological bias β our habit of "slapping ordered reasons with a purpose onto disordered, even random processes."9 It is a neat rhyme with Vonnegut's own humanism: if the universe supplies no meaning, the job of supplying one falls to us, together.
What to do with a life: cure loneliness
John Green closes the loop in The Anthropocene Reviewed with the Vonnegut line that reads almost as a mission statement: "What should young people do with their lives today? Many things, obviously. But the most daring thing is to create stable communities in which the terrible disease of loneliness can be cured."10 It ties the threads together β kindness, helping each other through, art and community as the antidotes to being a lonely animal on a crowded planet.
The recurring notes
mindmap
root((Kurt Vonnegut))
Kindness
"you've got to be kind!"
help each other through
Art as therapy
soul-growth, not a living
dance, sing, tell stories
we are dancing animals
Process over polish
crayon-in-the-mouth writer
messes are the artist's friend
No cosmic plot
Bokononism / Cat's Cradle
meaning is ours to make
Cure loneliness
build stable communities
| Source | Vonnegut's role | The line the user flagged |
|---|---|---|
| A Man Without a Country | author | "you've got to be kind!"; art makes your soul grow13 |
| Bird by Bird (Lamott) | quoted authority on drafting | "armless legless man with a crayon in his mouth"7 |
| Fluke (Klaas) | novelist of contingency | Bokononism's absent, plotless God8 |
| The Anthropocene Reviewed (Green) | moral compass | cure "the terrible disease of loneliness"10 |