Kurt Vonnegut Jr (1922- 2007) at his Olympia
typewriter at his
in New York City on home on April 12, 1972.
Kurt Vonnegut Jr’s 2006 “Make Your Soul Grow” letter to Xavier High School, New York, English teacher Erin Lockwood has one
again become online fodder for the masses, so starved of writing inspiration in these
Covid-19 times.
Ms Lockwood had given her
students the assignment of writing to their favourite author, asking him or her
to visit the school. Five pupils chose Vonnegut. Vonnegut, then a self-described “old geezer” in "his sunset years" at age 84 - he died the following April - couldn’t make the trip,
but wrote back the Ms Lockwood and her students (named by him as "Messrs Perin, McFeely, Batten, Maurer and Congiusta) anyway. At least he was the one author to reply.
Erin Lockwood.
It’s interesting to compare
Vonnegut’s 2006 advice to high school pupils with an
earlier letter, in which Vonnegut details his own early hard graft to become
an author. This is outlined in a letter he wrote on an Olivetti Studio 44 typewriter from his home on Scudder Lane in West
Barnstable, Cape Cod, Massachusetts in March 1964, five years before he became a world
famous writer with the publication of Slaughterhouse-Five. Here is what Vonnegut wrote to Robert W.
Mitchner, of the Indiana University
Writers’ Conference:
Vonnegut’s brother Bernard.
Vonnegut at his Olivetti Studio 44 typewriter at his home
on Scudder Lane in West Barnstable, Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
Nice letter to the high school.
ReplyDeleteRobert - great story and wonderful find, Vonnegut was a wonderfully creative writer, my favorite, Catch 22.
ReplyDeleteJohn