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Encyclopedia > Galápagos (book)

The novel Galápagos is Kurt Vonnegut's look at evolution, first published in 1985. Kurt Vonnegut, Junior (born November 11, 1922) is an American novelist, satirist, and most recently, graphic artist. ... 1985 is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...


Galápagos is the story of a small band of mismatched humans who get shipwrecked on the island of Santa Rosalía in the Galápagos Islands after a global financial crisis has crippled the world's economy. Shortly thereafter, a disease renders all humans on earth infertile, with the exception of the people on Santa Rosalía, making them the last specimens of the human race. They eventually evolve into a race resembling seals. NASA Satellite photo of the Galápagos archipelago. ... Charles Darwin, the father of evolutionary theory Although generally, evolution is taken to mean any process of change over time, in the context of life science, evolution is a change in the traits of living organisms over generations, including the emergence of new species. ...


The story's narrator is a ghost who has been watching over humans for the last million years. This particular ghost is the immortal spirit of Leon Trout, son of Vonnegut's recurring character Kilgore Trout. Leon maintains that all the miseries of humankind were caused by "the only true villain in my story: the oversize human brain". Fortunately, natural selection eliminates this problem, since the humans best fitted to Santa Rosalía were those who could swim best, which required a streamlined head, which in turn required a smaller brain size. Kilgore Trout is a fictional character created by author Kurt Vonnegut. ... In the anatomy of animals, the brain, or encephalon, is the supervisory center of the nervous system. ... Alternative meaning Natural Selection (computer game). ...


Like Vonnegut's earlier Slaughterhouse-Five, the story is fragmented and told out of sequence. Major events are rarely seen directly, but are rather alluded to and mentioned in reference to other events. In this way, the focus of the reader remains on the characters. The reader is not permitted to become carried away in the storyline itself. A New York Times reviewer observed, Slaughterhouse-Five, or The Childrens Crusade: A Duty Dance With Death is a 1969 novel by best-selling author Kurt Vonnegut. ...

Although not as moving as, say, Slaughterhouse-Five, Galapagos does have moments (of father-son vis-a-vis) that bring a glug to the throat. And although more wobblingly cobbled and arrhythmic comically than Breakfast of Champions, Galapagos can be as darkly funny. Mr. Vonnegut asterisks the names of characters who are going to die and, after their inevitably gruesome deaths, kisses them off with the elegiac "Oh, well—he wasn't going to write Beethoven's Ninth Symphony anyway." Early in the novel, he even puts Captain von Kleist on The Tonight Show, and what follow are the best laughs in the book.

References

  • Moore, Lonnie. "How Humans Got Flippers and Beaks", New York Times 6 October 1985, section 7, page 7.
  • Vonnegut, Kurt. Galápagos. New York: Dell Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0385333870.


 

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