eBooks - Literature - Modern Fiction - Kurt Vonnegut - Player Piano


Player Piano eBooks

by Kurt Vonnegut


Player Piano - Adobe Reader PDF eBook

Player Piano ~~ Adobe Reader PDF eBook

Adobe Reader PDF eBook

Platforms
Windows 98SE+, Mac OS X+, Palm

Features
Advanced navigation, search, bookmarks, and multiple viewing options.

Availability:
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Price: $8.99


Player Piano - Microsoft Reader eBook

Player Piano ~~ Microsoft Reader eBook

Microsoft Reader eBook

Platforms
Windows 98+, Tablet PC, Pocket PC 2003

Features
ClearType, advanced navigation, search, personal library, bookmarks, notes, and drawing.

Availability:
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Price: $8.97


Player Piano - Microsoft Reader eBook

Player Piano ~~ Microsoft Reader eBook

Microsoft Reader eBook

Platforms
Windows 98+, Tablet PC, Pocket PC 2003

Features
ClearType, advanced navigation, search, personal library, bookmarks, notes, and drawing.

Availability:
Download Now

Price: $8.99


Player Piano - Mobipocket eBook

Player Piano ~~ Mobipocket eBook

Mobipocket eBook

Platforms
Windows PC, Palm, Pocket PC, eBookMan, SmartPhones, and more.

Features
Easy to install, Very Compatible, Touch-screen page turning, Bookmarks, Adjustable font size and color, Search.

Availability:
Download Now

Price: $8.99


Player Piano Summary

Kurt Vonnegut's first novel Player Piano, published in 1952, heralded the beginning of one of the most diverting and provocative adventures in modern American fiction. Vonnegut went on to write novels that perhaps had greater formal skill and technique, but Player Piano is a tour de force of imaginative insight into modern life and a shrewd satire of American progress. What must Vonnegut's first readers have made of Player Piano? The story gives off the dank chill of 1984 and Brave New World, but it is less earnest, almost zany, and it wields its message playfully in comparison. The hero is Paul Proteus, an engineer in an America of the future where computers run everything and do everything, making people almost afterthoughts. Paul seems to be on his way up the ladder of success in this techno-utopia -- a perfect wife, a fast-track position at the Ilium Works and a shot at a major promotion -- but he is plagued with doubts about what modern life has become. Through a strange series of events (for some form of Big Brother is, indeed, watching), Paul joins a revolutionary organization called the Ghost Shirts and even becomes its leader. The Ghost Shirts are inspired by the past, when people mattered more than machines, but their revolution collapses with brutal irony. Paul and his companions surrender when they discover their followers have become obsessed with making new machines from the wreckage of the machines they have just smashed. The title of the novel smiles ruefully over what, in retrospect, looks like the most naive kind of mechanical progress -- a player piano, a machine that seems perpetually presided over by ghosts. A whole world emerges in this visionary tale, which describes much more than the fate of Paul Proteus. From the beginning, it is clear, Vonnegut delighted in devising astonishing subplots and whimsical detours from his basic story, and they never fail to stretch the reader's imagination. What is maybe most interesting about Player Piano is its scathingly clever take on the future, which looks and sounds an awful lot like the smug, "progressive" present. That quality was felt and discussed in 1952, when the novel was published. It is a measure of the depth and sensitivity of Vonnegut's imagination in Player Piano that, half a century later, the book's edge seems even sharper and its satire even funnier.

Vonnegut's first novel, an unforgiving portrait of an automated and totalitarian future, was published in 1952. A human revolt against the machines which control life was arranged by the machines themselves to prove the futility of such resistance.

Vonnegut's first novel, an unforgiving portrait of an automated and totalitarian future, was published in 1952. A human revolt against the machines which control life was arranged by the machines themselves to prove the futility of such resistance. Visionary and unrelenting, this is felt by some critics to be Vonnegut's best and most original novel.



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