Kurt Vonnegut used to like to say, Practicing an art form is a way to grow your soul.
He would screw up his lips into a prune face after he said this because of how important he believed this idea to be.
Pity the Reader is the very embodiment of that idea, a book about writing and life and why the two go together.
It includes rare photos and reproductions, Vonneguts own account in his own words of how he became a writer and why it matters, and previously untold stories by and about Vonnegut as teacher and friend.
It turns out he was generous to a fault about students writing, idiosyncratic, a bit tortured and always creative as a teacher, and here in this book that portrait becomes our gateway into getting to know Kurt Vonnegut better than we ever have before as a human being.
Vonnegut recounts that his favorite work of art among all those his children produced so far is a letter his daughter Nanette wrote to a disgruntled customer, after he had tormented a new waitress at the restaurant where she had just started working, and then he shares the letter with us.
Thus he illustrates his first writing rule: Find a subject you care about.
This book is full of such rare, intimately teachable moments, and they add up to something special.
Pity the Reader indeed.
Amy Grochowski
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Christina Hart-Davies
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Ann Marie Brown
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Leonard Leinow
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