World of Gore

Gore

Welcome to the Monkey House… Thursday, April 12, 2007

Filed under: Rant — rjgore3 @ 2:26 pm

Kurt Vonnegut dead at 84 | U.S. | Reuters

By Matthew Robinson NEW YORK (Reuters) – Kurt Vonnegut, whose dark, satirical vision in works including “Slaughterhouse-Five” and “Cat’s Cradle” was shaped by the horrors he witnessed during World War II, has died at age 84.

Vonnegut died on Wednesday after suffering brain injuries following a fall weeks ago, said Donald Farber, Vonnegut’s friend, lawyer, agent and manager.

Vonnegut wrote plays, essays and short fiction, but his 14 novels were classics of the American counterculture, resonating with the U.S. antiwar sentiment during the Vietnam War era.

The author’s Web site, updated after his death, displayed a simple black-and-white image of a bird cage — a symbolic element in his writing — empty with an open door. “Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. 1922-2007,” the page read.

“He was a beautiful man,” Farber said. “I never hung up the phone without having laughed, he always left me laughing, no matter what the circumstances of the world.”

“I last spoke to him the day he fell,” Farber said. “He was in good spirits. Every time he spoke with me no matter what the circumstances in the world, he had a funny angle on it even if it wasn’t a funny thing.”

Despite battles with severe depression, Vonnegut was known for his witticisms.  Continued…

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Sounds like a great tattoo. Thursday, April 12, 2007

Filed under: Rant — rjgore3 @ 11:20 am

AN American man has tattooed cremation instructions on his arm in a bizarre recipe for eternal rest.The man, Russell Parsons, has tattooed: “Barlow Bonsall cook 1700-1800 for 2 to 3 hours”.

“It’s a recipe,” the 67-year-old widower told the Associated Press. “It’s a recipe for cremation.”

Barlow Bonsall Funeral Home and Crematorium manager Linda Wilson – where Parsons has prepaid for his cremation – said she thought Parsons was joking several weeks ago when he said he was going to have his final wishes tattooed on his arm.

But he wasn’t.

Parsons, a cancer survivor who still deals with injuries from his army service, said not everyone understands his attitude about life and death.

“I’m not afraid of death. I’m afraid of life,” he said. “I’m afraid of living and not being able to take care of myself.”

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