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Loading... Galapagos (Delta Fiction)by Kurt Vonnegut
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Interesting and very funny story, but even though this is a short book, I still felt it was a bit too repeating here and there. One of the greatest books ever written! Awesomely weird and a little creepy and definitely competing with Cat's Cradle for my favorite slot out of Kurt Vonnegut's novels. At this point in time this novel is winning because of its out of this world crazy ideas about humankind and the direction we are going in. I think the reason I like this book so much is because of the seal people, but Vonnegut obviously never thought of test tube babies. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 17:25:51 -0500)
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Galapagos is set one million years after 1986, when the world as we know it ended and, through a series of fluke events, one man and several women are stranded on the island of Santa Rosalia in the Galapagos. The end of civilization was brought about by mankind's "big brains" (although not necessarily by man himself, as man is fundamentally good--just led astray by his inability to control his thoughts and his imagination), along with the help of a bacteria that leaves all the women of the world sterile. However, on the secluded island of Santa Rosalia, the female castaways still young enough to produce are spared and, with an unwilling sire and a little help from a high school biology teacher, they are all impregnated. Thus, life continues to flourish on Santa Rosalia. Not only that, but after millions of years, mankind has evolved so that they have smaller brains, flippers for hands, and a lifespan of 30 years (at which point we're easy prey for sharks and killer whales). Welcome to utopia! With our Darwinian advancements, we no longer have the ability to lie, cheat, steal, etc. We also lack the capacity for simple thought or creativity of any kind. (Admittedly, it's a shit utopia, as far as utopias go, and I would gladly swim out to meet the sharks myself.)
If you think I've just divulged several plot spoilers, I haven't. You learn all this at the beginning of the novel and the rest of the novel circles itself like a dog chasing its tail as these events are told over and over again, but with additional details added with each retelling. This structure could become somewhat repetitive for some readers, but didn't really bother me. As with most Vonnegut novels, fragmented and nonlinear narrative is to be expected, as is the theme of "people are dumbasses." However, there is hope in the novel as it serves as a cautionary tale--if we learn to rein in our big brains, then maybe we'll be spared the evolutionary chain of events that leads to the utopian existence of lounging around on a beach somewhere, clapping our flippers together while while chewing seaweed cud and hoping for some seal-like lovin' before the sharks come for us. And I think that's a lesson we can all learn from, don't you? (