Slaughterhouse Five has many similar qualities as To Kill A Mockingbird. Including both of these books participate in human rights including in Slaughterhouse Five talks about the deadly bombing of Dresden. Many people died and the main part of this story is Billy Pilgrim is a soldier and was put into a POW camp and he ended up surviving the bombings. And in To Kill A Mockingbird they talk about African American rights and some people die in that story also. These stories compare very well. The story Slaughterhouse Five is told in 3rd person limited. It is portrayed in the eyes of Billy Pilgrim which has the some life experiences as the author Kurt Vonnegut. In the beginning of the book he states that he is going to write a book about is life. Billy Pilgrim goes to fight in Dresden and is sent to a POW camp just like the author. The story Slaughterhouse Five was written for the older generations. This story doesn’t focus on one specific race. It doesn’t reach out to any certain physical characteristics. This story reaches out to the general audience to tell his story about what happened in Dresden and how he was affected. I don't think he is pushing for a emotional response but on the other hand he may be because he is telling …show more content…
I cannot find any information on where the author lived in the time of the book being published. Kurt Vonnegut was an actor, a screenwriter, comedian and a author. He wrote this book to tell his story about the bombings of Dresden and how he was affected. This novel was written for the general public mainly for adults. He was very familiar with the subject of the Dresden bombings I can tell because he was there when it all happened and the book was his life story. The way Kurt Vonnegut handles those who disagree is with respect he gets their input and if it helps there you go. He doesn't show stereotypes or prejudice. To be honest I didn't expect anything so it had everything that I