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The Big Trip Up Yonder
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Description Wiki
is a short story by Kurt Vonnegut originally written in 1953. It was first published in Galaxy Science Fiction magazine in January 1954, where the story was titled "The Big Trip Up Yonder", which is the protagonists euphemism for dying. A revised version bearing the title "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" appeared in Vonneguts collection of short stories, Canary in a Cat House (1961), and was reprinted in Welcome to the Monkey House (1968). The new title comes from the famous line in Shakespeares play Macbeth starting "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow".[1][2]
Description GoodReads
The Selected Works of Kurt Vonnegut is a collection of noteworthy science-fiction titles penned by a beloved American author. Considered by most to be one of the most important writers of the twentieth century, Kurt Vonnegut s works offers profound insight into the human condition with words of charm and wit steeped in the rhythms of the everyday and in the extraordinary. This collection includes two of his acclaimed novels, Cat s Cradle and Galapagos, rounded off by two short stories, The Big Trip Up Yonder and Unready to Wear. In Cat s Cradle, Kurt Vonnegut s fourth novel published in 1963 that explores themes including religion, technology and science with a satirical eye. Galapagos is Vonneguts meditation on Darwinism, fate, and the essential irrelevance of the human condition. In The Big Trip Up Yonder, Kurt Vonnegut asks what would happen to human society if there was no death? In Kurt Vonnegut s world, immortality isn t exactly the gift it s cracked up to be. Unready to Wear takes readers to the far future, where humanity has evolved to the point that the spirit can transcend the body. But there s a cultural backlash from those who want to return to the body and believe the spirit should stay there.
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