"Gimmicks" is, of course, a loaded word, pejorative, "cheap tricks," say in contrast to "devices" or structural support or a Greek chorus or some such. In Vonnegut's day, his repeated quips made him hip, sassy, cool, droll, fun to read, on the same shelf as supercharged Tom Wolfe and Hunter Thompson. They were never dull, archly serious, overtly pedantic. Oh, maybe strike the last item, in retrospect. But somehow we always wanted another hit. I don't mean that in the best-seller sense. No, that would be a sell-out. (Maybe that's the crux of the issue you're raising.)
As much as I loved Vonnegut's work, especially Rosewater, I'm surprised how little I remember all these years later, apart from the asterisk, just don't ask me which novel that punctuated.
By the way, I am taken with the ideal of a short novel, though obtaining that can be elusive.
One facet to consider is the way Vonnegut spoke from the Midwest, a region largely ignored or overlooked in American literature, in contrast to New York City mostly Manhattan but rarely Queens or the Bronx. That in itself was a major accomplishment, even if it was from his firehouse on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. So it goes.
Well, his father did run a hardware store and had to sell, uh, useful gimmicks. Drain stoppers, screws, nuts, hammers. (Bang, bang, expletive.)
It is amazing how much "bad writing" fills "great literature," or even the New York Times Magazine, as one of my ambitious writing teachers led us to see. (He, too, had his own addiction to cool as in gimmicks.)
One question you stir up is how much a piece works for the time when it's published and how much will still work (function) in later eras? And why?
What did your daughter think of the book, anyway?
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