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1[[quoteright:311:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/4981.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:311:[[ArcWords "So it goes..."]]]]
3
4->''It begins like this: "Listen: Billy Pilgrim has come UnstuckInTime." It ends like this: "Poo-tee-weet?"\
5\
6Everything was beautiful and nothing hurt.''
7
8''Slaughterhouse-Five, [[EitherOrTitle or]] the Children's Crusade: A Duty-Dance with Death'' is a 1969 [[ScienceFiction science fiction]]-infused anti-war novel by Creator/KurtVonnegut.
9
10The novel focuses on Billy Pilgrim, a soldier who witnessed the bombing of Dresden and subsequently gets kidnapped by Tralfamadorian aliens, who can see in all four dimensions and thus see all events in their lives in no particular order. Billy becomes UnstuckInTime, marries a nice girl, experiences death for a while, befriends Kilgore Trout (Vonnegut's recurring AuthorAvatar in TheVerse), and lives his life like most other humans -- just less chronologically. Tralfamadorians don't believe you can change anything, but that doesn't mean you can't choose to focus on a particular time, and to enjoy life the way it happens. Billy learns to accept life as well as death -- if something dies, then [[ArcWords so it goes]].
11
12Why aliens, and why time travel? Because Vonnegut wanted to write about his experiences in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, but he didn't want to write a story about BigDamnHeroes. Instead, his character is simply a meek observer: Billy gets to see the war and the world from a distance, objectively, as if through the eyes of aliens.
13
14The book caused a bit of controversy when it came out, as people were unwilling to believe that "the Greatest Generation" during "the Good War" could do evil. But Vonnegut's story about the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Dresden_in_World_War_II Bombing of Dresden in World War II]] is factual, as he was there, initially as a POW working at a slaughterhouse and later involved in clearing the city of corpses and wreckage after the bombing. However, there is a question about how many died; it is said that in the book he got the numbers wrong. [[note]]The numbers are based on a book from David Irving, who was later widely criticized for his pro-Nazi sympathies and Holocaust denial. Even Irving has since rejected the larger figure.[[/note]] Still, 135,000 civilians or 25,000 civilians, dead is dead. [[ArcWords So it goes.]]
15
16An intensively autobiographical book (minus the time travel and aliens bits), ''Slaughterhouse-Five'' is one of the books Vonnegut is most remembered for and contains philosophies about free will, fate, life, and death, often through the use of irony. For example, scholarly discussion usually holds that Billy and the Tralfamadorians are the examples of what is ''wrong'' and that free will, and therefore moral responsibility to try to prevent war, futile though it may seem, are the correct paths.
17
18A film adaptation of the book directed by Creator/GeorgeRoyHill was released in 1972. [[ApprovalOfGod Vonnegut liked it.]]
19
20The book was also adapted into a graphic novel in 2020 by Creator/RyanNorth and Albert Monteys. Vonnegut was dead in that time. [[RuleOfThree So it goes.]]
21----
22!!Tropes in this book include:
23
24* AlternateAesopInterpretation: In-universe, the moral of [[Literature/TheBible the New Testament]] is hypothesized as really being "Before you kill somebody, make absolutely sure he isn't well connected."
25* AnachronicOrder: Listen: Billy Pilgrim has become unstuck in time.
26* {{Anticlimax}}: In the introduction, Vonnegut says that the climax of the novel should be Edgar Derby's execution for looting a teapot. During the novel, we're reminded several times that this will happen; however, when it finally does, it's described in three sentences.
27* AnyoneCanDie: And ''so many'' do. [[JustifiedTrope It is a war, after all]]. Some characters' deaths (i.e., Billy, Derby) [[ForegoneConclusion are explicitly mentioned by the narrator long before they ever occur]], some are a little more unexpected (i.e., [[spoiler:Roland Weary]]).
28* ApocalypseHow: In the distant future, an accident during a test of a new Tralfamdorian rocket will start a chain reaction that will utterly annihilate the universe.
29* ArcWords: "So it goes." It appears no less than 106 times in the novel (and it's a quite short novel as well).
30* AuthorAvatar: Two in this novel.
31** Billy Pilgrim is a stand-in for Vonnegut's experiences as a POW during World War II and as a witness to the bombing of Dresden.
32** Kilgore Trout is a recurring author avatar (although he also has elements of fellow sci-fi author Creator/TheodoreSturgeon, Vonnegut's friend/mentor) in many of Vonnegut's novels
33** Because of the intense personal nature of the story -- Vonnegut himself actually witnessed or took part in many of the book's events -- the author himself is present as a character as well as first-person narrator.
34* AxCrazy:
35** Paul Lazzaro comes off as pretty unhinged, being the poster child for DisproportionateRetribution. He once fed a dog a steak filled with razor wires for biting him, and maintains a list of people he plans on having murdered for even the most minor of slights.
36** Roland Weary is both a PsychoKnifeNut and [[NightmareFetishist obsessed with gruesome forms of torture]].
37* BizarreAlienSexes: The Tralfamadorians look like toilet plungers and have five sexes.
38** More than that, the Tralfamadorians reveal to Billy that ''humans'' have ''seven'' sexes, it's just that we can only perceive two because the others exist in the fourth dimension. (Granted, humans do indeed have far more combinations of genitals, chromosomes, and sexual traits than the general public tends to acknowledge, and in three dimensions no less--Vonnegut may not have known.)
39* BlessedWithSuck: Billy can see his entire life at once but is unable to do anything about it.
40%%* BreadEggsMilkSquick: "So it goes."
41* BreakingTheFourthWall: The narrator ''is'' Kurt Vonnegut. The first chapter is about him describing some of his life and how he came to write his "famous Dresden novel". To drive it home, at one point, he describes a man standing in the same room as Billy Pilgrim during the bombing of Dresden and then writes, "That was I. That was me. That was the author of this book."
42* BrickJoke:
43** In the first chapter, the narrator mentions drunkenly calling up old friends with his breath stinking of mustard gas and roses. In the fourth chapter, Billy gets an anonymous call and assumes the caller is a drunk whose breath smells like mustard gas and roses. Then, on the last page of the book, the smell of rotting bodies is likened to... [[RuleOfThree guess what]]?
44** Early in the book, Roland Weary shows Billy a photo from the 1800s of a woman attempting to have sex with a pony. Towards the end of the book, Billy visits a dirty bookstore in New York City years later, and an employee shows him a copy of the same photo.
45* TheCameo: Howard W. Campbell, the protagonist of Vonnegut's earlier work ''Literature/MotherNight'' makes an appearance, working for the Nazi propaganda effort. Eliot Rosewater, protagonist of another earlier book, ''God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater'' also appears as Billy's roommate in the veteran's hospital. Also a case of DemotedToExtra.
46* ChildSoldiers: Mrs. O'Hare more or less considers young enlisted men to be this. We get to see more literal examples from the Germans who have a 12 year old scout and a 16 year old prison guard. The Children's Crusade is also discussed at one point.
47* ClassicalAntiHero: Billy Pilgrim has many traits of this.
48* CosmicPlaything: Billy Pilgrim, like most of Vonnegut's protagonists, personifies this trope thanks to his passivity in the face of tragic and farcical misadventures.
49* DatedHistory: It's stated several times that 135,000 people were killed in the bombing of Dresden. Vonnegut took this figure from David Irving's book, ''The Destruction of Dresden'', which even appears in the novel. Back in the '60s, Irving was considered a respectable historian, and his figures were widely accepted. Since then, he came out as a Holocaust denier and fell into disgrace. It also turned out that he inflated the figures, and the actual casualties were no higher than 25,000.
50* DeadpanSnarker: Kilgore Trout, especially when managing newspaper delivery boys.
51* DeathSeeker: Billy isn't afraid of death. He doesn't mind living so much, but to put the degree this trope influences his character in perspective, he was quite annoyed when his father saved him from drowning while he was a child as it was a rather calm and almost pleasant experience.
52%%* DefiantToTheEnd:
53%%** [[spoiler:The hobo. "You call this bad? This ain't bad."]] Either that or TemptingFate.
54%%** Also applies to Wild Bob.
55* DiamondsInTheBuff: Montana's necklace; since she's naked, you can't look at it without also looking at her boobs.
56* DisproportionateRetribution:
57** Edgar Derby is shot by a firing squad for stealing a ''teapot'' from the ruins of Dresden. This after he wasn't even disciplined as far as we know for telling American traitor Howard J. Campbell to go fuck himself.
58** Paul Lazzaro makes a list of people he plans to have assassinated at some point in the future for even minor offenses. He mentions feeding a wire-filled steak to a dog that once bit him for the sake of revenge.
59* DissonantSerenity: Billy during the second World War as his visions of the future all but assure him that he's going to make it out of the conflict all right. This disturbs everyone around him, but on his end, he urges them to prioritize their safety over his own because at least his is guaranteed.
60** More extensively, every time someone dies, up to and including Billy's wife, a whole airplane full of his colleagues, his father-in-law among them, and ''Billy himself'', it's succinctly punctuated by the phrase "so it goes," with no other emotional response.
61* DividedStatesOfAmerica: In the future, before Billy dies, he's making a speech in the balkanized United States.
62* {{Eagleland}}: Type 2, especially in the writings of Howard W. Campbell, Jr. but to a lesser extent throughout the book.
63* TheEeyore: Kilgore Trout, as was the case in his role in Vonnegut's other novels.
64* EvenEvilHasStandards:
65** Paul Lazzaro, the psychotic and murderous car thief from Illinois, is dismissive of the firebombing of Dresden. However, even Lazzaro is disgusted by Howard W. Campbell Jr's treasonous support of the Nazis during the war. Lazzaro's threat to kill Campbell was the only moment when he and Edgar Derby were on the same side of an issue.
66** Also, while Lazzaro will go to great lengths to get revenge on anyone he perceives to have insulted him, he draws the line at RevengeByProxy. This is why he doesn't like watching enemy cities get firebombed, since he knows that many people who had nothing to do with starting the war will end up as collateral damage.
67-->''He was proud of never having hurt an innocent bystander. "Nobody ever got it from Lazzaro," he said, "who didn't have it coming."''
68* ExtremeDoormat: Billy spends the whole war being pushed and ordered around by others. After coming back, he becomes an optometrist and marries a woman whom he doesn't love, because that's what people around him expect of him. He only starts taking initiative after his abduction experience.
69* FailedFutureForecast: We get a glimpse of the "future" in which the US is divided into various sectors, among other things. The year? 1976.
70** Towards the end of the book it is also mentioned that human population would reach seven billion before 2000, which only happened in 2011.
71* FantasticRomance: Between Billy and a fellow abductee Montana Wildhack. They have a child together, and get along fairly well after a fashion.
72* ForegoneConclusion:
73** Billy knows he's going to die -- in fact, he's died over and over again, but merely goes back to a time when he isn't dead.
74** The Tralfamadorians take this attitude on a universal scale, as they all know a rocket test of theirs will destroy the entire universe and don't much care. They don't care because they see no point in caring. To their senses: it will happen. It is happening. It will always happen. It cannot be stopped because it has always happened.
75** Edgar Derby's death is brought up before he is even named or is introduced into the story.
76* GagPenis: When Billy is naked in the alien enclosure, the narrator takes time to note that "Billy Pilgrim had a tremendous wang, incidentally. You never know who'll get one." In the graphic novel, the narration box [[SpeechBubbleCensoring covers rather a lot]].
77%%* GentlemenRankers: Edgar Derby.
78* GoldDigger: Billy marries Valencia because the resulting marriage will be both bearable and, more importantly, profitable.
79* HumansAreSpecial: How much this specialness matters is arguable, but according to one Tralfamadorian, "I've visited thirty-one inhabited planets in the universe.... only on Earth is there any talk of free will." Because of this, they're seen as [[HumansAreMorons idiots]] by the Tralfamadorians.
80* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Averted. Billy suggests the Tralfamadorians and other aliens feel this way about humans since they have war. It is quickly explained that humans aren't alone in their ability to make war and that most aliens have no opinion one way or another about them.
81* HypocriticalHumor: Near the end of the book, Billy visits a porn shop. The clerks treat Billy like he's a disgusting pervert because he wants to read one of the novels they keep in the window instead of consuming the pornography most of their customers are there for.
82* ItsNotPornItsArt: André Le Fèvre, the maker of the first dirty photograph in the world, which depicted the woman having sex with a pony tried to argue before court that "the picture was fine art, and that his intention was to make Greek mythology come alive". (Indeed, there are several stories in Myth/ClassicalMythology where gods have sex with mortals taking the form of animals).
83* KarmicDeath: Two of Weary's "Three Musketeers" who ditched him and Billy because they thought they stood a better chance of not getting captured by German troops that way [[spoiler:are shot to death minutes after.]] Roland Weary, a disturbed bully obsessed with torture, is forced to march in hinged clogs that wound his feet and wrack them in ceaseless pain; he eventually [[spoiler:dies of gangrene from his injuries.]]
84* LongLostRelative: Although they were not aware of it, Billy and a German prison guard were distant cousins.
85* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: A popular theory about the novel is that the Tralfamadorians only exist [[ThroughTheEyesOfMadness in Billy's head]], brought on post-traumatic stress disorder. In the same vein, there are also hints that Billy's time-travelling is just him reliving his wartime experiences and daydreaming about possible future events.
86%%* MeaningfulEcho: ''Several''.
87* MeaningfulName: Tralfama -- ''[[Literature/ThePictureOfDorianGray dorian]]''. Like Dorian Gray, the Tralfamadorians can move through time while unaffected by it. Also, Billy Pilgrim himself. ("Billy" due to his childlike innocence -- explicitly stated in the second chapter -- and "pilgrim" due to the religious aspects of his journey.)
88* MentalTimeTravel: Maybe? It's never made clear whether Billy is really "unstuck in time" or just has PTSD. Either way, he sure doesn't travel in time physically.
89* MikeNelsonDestroyerOfWorlds: In the distant future, a Tralfamadorian pilot will ignite an experimental fuel which, unintentionally on its inventor's part, will cause a lethal cosmic chain reaction and destroy the entire universe. So it goes.
90* NiceGirl: Even though Billy doesn't feel the same way, Valencia genuinely loves him and is distraught when he ends up in the hospital.
91* NiceGuy: Edgar Derby is one of the few individuals who is friendly towards Billy at the POW camp. Unfortunately, he's also very naive to the point of being TooDumbToLive.
92* NonLinearCharacter: The Tralfamadorians.
93* NotAfraidToDie: Because he experiences time in a non-linear way, Billy is not the least bit afraid of his death -- he knows that after a while, he'll go back to a time when he isn't dead.
94* TheNothingAfterDeath: Billy experiences death as nothing but violet light and a hum.
95* OhAndXDies: The narrator wastes no opportunity to remind us that Edgar Derby is going to be executed for stealing a teapot. When that finally happens, it's told in a by-the-way sentence that doesn't even rate a paragraph of its own. The movie makes a somewhat bigger deal about it. The first chapter, in which Vonnegut discusses his writing of the book, has Vonnegut toying with the idea of making Edgar Derby's death the climax of the novel -- a sort of appropriately retroactive LampshadeHanging.
96* PeopleZoo:
97** Billy and Montana are residents. [[TimeTravelTenseTrouble Or were. Or will be]]. At least, so he says.
98** It's mentioned that one of Trout's novels features this as its plot. [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane If Billy is indeed hallucinating]] the Tralfamadorians, this could have served as inspiration.
99* PocketProtector: The "bulletproof Bible" that saves Roland Weary's life.
100* PrecisionFStrike: Subverted when one soldier shouts for Billy to "Get out of the road, you dumb motherfucker!"
101-->''The last word was still a novelty in the speech of white people in 1944. It was fresh and astonishing to Billy, who had never fucked anybody.''
102* PrettyBoy: One of the German soldiers who first capture Roland and Billy, to the point where he's described as looking like Eve from the Bible.
103* QuintessentialBritishGentleman: The British prisoners are so friendly, even the German guards like them.
104* RedShirt: Any side character mentioned in the UsefulNotes/WW2 segments will probably be dead soon. Like, in a few pages. Doesn't mean that it's any less sad, or that it can't be jarring (honestly, who expected [[spoiler:Roland Weary]] to go out like that?).
105* TheRuleOfFirstAdopters: The narration states that Louis Daguerre made the first photograph in 1839, and only two years later, his assistant, André Le Fèvre made the first dirty photograph, depicting a woman "attempting sexual intercourse with a Shetland pony".
106* ShellShockedVeteran: Billy, in spades. It's entirely possible that his time-traveling and alien encounters aren't real but instead are his coping mechanisms.
107* ShootTheShaggyDog: Considering that Billy can see how everything ends, it's easy for him to take this view.
108* ShoutOut: There are numerous shout-outs to children's stories:
109** [[Literature/AliceInWonderland "Drink Me"]].
110** The narrator compares Dresden, Germany to [[Literature/TheWonderfulWizardOfOz Oz]] when the American prisoners are first brought to the city.
111** The English prisoners put on a production of "Literature/{{Cinderella}}" and at one point, Billy puts on the combat boots that substituted for Cinderella's glass slippers.
112** Roland Weary refers to himself and the two scouts traveling with him as Literature/TheThreeMusketeers.
113* StarfishAliens: The average Tralfamadorian looks like a green toilet plunger with a human hand growing from the handle, with a single eyeball at the center of its palm.
114* StiffUpperLip: The English officers are pretty optimistic for being [=POWs=].
115* SurvivalMantra: Billy has a framed print of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serenity_Prayer Serenity Prayer]] in his office, and some of his clients say it helps them.
116%%* TimeDissonance
117* TimeTravelTenseTrouble: The Tralfamadorians, and Billy after being abducted by them, occasionally state that particular events have happened, are happening, and always will happen.
118* TimeTravelingJerkass: Given that they're the ultimate cause of its destruction via a testing accident, the Tralfamadorians are this.
119* TitleDrop:
120** "Slaughterhouse-Five" is where Billy and the other prisoners of war are herded in, and where they survive the Dresden bombing.
121** "Children's Crusade" is brought up at the start, in Kurt Vonnegut's own preface.
122* TooDumbToLive: Edgar Derby picks up and pockets a porcelain cup after the Dresden bombing as a souvenir, in full view of the German soldiers guarding the POW cleanup crew, despite being repeatedly told that looters will be shot.
123* UnreliableNarrator: It is mentioned in one single line near the start of the second chapter that the story is built on what Billy Pilgrim ''says'' happened to him. After that point every event is presented in a very matter-of-fact way, but the implication is that the entire book is really based on Billy's perspective, rather than that of an omniscient narrator. Billy's unreliability is never made explicit, but is hinted at -- he's suffered PTSD and a severe head injury, and some other characters certainly ''think'' he's unreliable...
124* UnstuckInTime: The TropeNamer, even though it's [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane possible that Billy isn't, actually, time-travelling, just crazy]].
125* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: There are a couple parts of the book that were based on Vonnegut's own experiences, such as the descriptions of Dresden post-bombing and Edgar Derby being executed for looting a teapot. "All this happened, more or less."
126* WarIsHell: Mrs. O'Hare certainly feels this way and this is proven in a surprisingly non-{{Anvilicious}} way. It is the core, but admittedly futile and redundant, theme of the book.
127* WorldOfJerkass: Most of the people Billy meets, both at the POW camp and in his hometown, are either sadistic sociopaths, crass jerks, or complete idiots.
128* WritersSuck: Kilgore Trout is a complete failure as a writer. Even his only fan, Eliot Rosewater (who introduces Billy to his work) says that Trout deserves his obscurity, because while his ideas are great, his execution is terrible.
129* YouCantFightFate: One of the Tralfamadorians says, "I've visited thirty-one inhabited planets in the universe.... Only on Earth is there any talk of free will."
130** {{Deconstructed|Trope}} as it's being used ironically, as this mentality is held up as an example of the wrong way to cope with war trauma.
131** The narrator also says that the climax will be when Edgar Derby is shot for stealing a teapot, and that is probably the textbook example of a [[{{Bathos}} deliberate anticlimax]].
132** On a more meta example, the prologue explains [[ForegoneConclusion exactly how the book will end]].
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