Introduction
Item. The short story is the fabulous invalid of American letters. Item. According to an Authors Guild survey, only 39 percent of all working authors support themselves exclusively through writing-related work.
Those two propositions are connected. Many of the best American writers of the 20th centuryJack London, Sinclair Lewis, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Kurt Vonnegutsubsidized their literary careers by writing for high-paying mass-market slicks like The Saturday Evening Post, Colliers, Liberty, and This Week. Although writing for the slicks, with their middle-class taboos, could corrupt a talent, it allowed these authors to support themselves while gestating and writing the novels that earned them a place in the American literary canon.
Television has pretty much usurped the short storys entertainment role in our culture; the golden age of the mass-circulation magazine is behind us. In a reminder of that age, the adventurous Seven Stories Press has issued a 911-page doorstop of a book containing every published story and the best of the unpublished ones, slick or unslick, that Kurt Vonnegut ever wrote97 in all. His earnings from them helped him to write the novels for which he is best known: The Sirens of Titan, Slaughterhouse-Five, Mother Night, Player Piano.
This volume is obviously a work of love. It was edited by two Vonnegut devotees: Jerome Klinkowitz, an academic who wrote a critical study of him, and Dan Wakefield, a novelist and magazinist, who hails from Vonneguts hometown of Indianapolis. Dividing the labor, they have organized the stories into categories (War, Women, Science, Romance, etc.) and written illuminating headnotes, as well as informative introductions.
The stories, like the sample below (published here for the first time anywhere) are entertaining, witty, sad, ironic, and served up in Vonneguts vernacular style, which to me sounds like Indianapolis talking. I doubt we shall ever see his like again.
Richard Lingeman