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    The lesson of "Slaughterhouse-Five" is whatever you need it to be. That is the magnificence of the book. In any case, in his usually dull, wry way, Kurt Vonnegut gives us a few conceivable subjects to investigate. One of the subjects identifies with the route in which Mr. Vonnegut displays the human life expectancy. Through his written work, Mr. Vonnegut offers an old conversation starter: Are we experts of our fate, or would we say we are pawns of destiny? The medium through which Mr. Vonnegut…

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    father was a miner (“Reformation”). Originally he went to school to study a new law, but changed to theology and eventually lived in a monastery(“Reformation”). On october 31, 1517 Martin Luther began attacking the catholic church by nailing “His ninety-Five…

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    The Reformation: How a Monk and a Mallet Changed the World, written by Stephen Nichols, is a book to inform the reader about the Catholic Reformation. This book was not exactly intriguing, and did not appeal to the reader at most times. Martin Luther, a monk, used his mallet to attach his 95 theses to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, hence the title of the book. The strokes of his mallet echoed all throughout the continent, and along with other reformers, his 95 theses would greatly…

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    Slaughterhouse-Five written by Kurt Vonnegut is not a relaxed read. If this book was not assigned for a class reading, Slaughterhouse- Five would not be a novel I would have considered picking up. The unpleasant flash of red on the book cover is mysterious, but not approachable. The chaotic format is intriguing, but confusing. However, my views on this remarkably written literature piece has changed dramatically as I finished the novel. Kurt Vonnegut’s satirical approach was unlike other authors…

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    Lesson Plan Format Type of Lesson Read-Aloud Lesson Students will be reinforcing what they have already learned about the five senses through Rain by Manya Stojic, with a discussion focusing on the difference in the five senses and the impact they have on the story and its characters. Information about the Class Grade Level: 27 Kindergarteners Reading Levels: The students in this class cannot read on their own yet. Diversity – Gender: 12 girls and 15 boys. Linguistic Diversity: From what has…

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    SUBJECT Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut, illustrates the events of the Dresden bombing through the life of Billy Pilgrim. Throughout the novel Billy Pilgrim has no control over time and constantly travels to different points of his life. Billy Pilgrim was born in Illium, New York and pursued a career in optometry. After graduating high school Billy was drafted into the army during World War II. In the war Billy meets up with three men, one of them named Roland Weary. These men decide to…

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    Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five is a great hostile to war novel that presents the character Billy Pilgrim who is a wannabe in the novel. Billy Pilgrim gets himself lost in the wake of battling in World War Two when his mental solidness is diminishing. Billy recounts the tale of being stole to an unusual planet and meeting Tralfamadorians, the planet's life. These outsiders know each minute that their life will experience; in this manner, they are with the exception of their destiny. Through…

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    attention and ridicule the flaws of mankind, most of which end in destruction and chaos of some sort. In two of his novels, Cat’s Cradle and Slaughterhouse-Five, damage and destruction of millions is determined by what can potentially be a single man’s decision. Vonnegut himself experienced the bombing of Dresden, about which he wrote in Slaughterhouse-Five, first hand. He was taken by the Germans as a prisoner of war and by chance managed to survive by escaping with a few others and seeking…

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    In the novel Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut is able to unify a non-linear narrative by using time travel. Billy Pilgrim, Vonnegut’s main character, is constantly traveling back and forth his life experiences “paying random visits to all events in between” (SF 23). Consequently, the reader sees Billy’s life as a series of episodes without any chronological nature. This in essence is the structure of the novel, presenting us the traditional beginning, middle, and end in an untraditional manner…

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    events unfold around us, some for better, and others for worse, that no matter how much we believe we affected them, their is no evidence supporting we directly caused them. Kurt Vonnegut did not have free will, and he knew it. His book, Slaughterhouse Five, was a…

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