A Man Without a Country

A Man Without a Country (subtitle: A Memoir of Life in George W. Bush's America) is an essay collection published in 2005 by the author Kurt Vonnegut.The essays deal with topics ranging from the importance of humor, to problems with modern technology, to Vonnegut's opinions on the differences between men and women.Many of the essays explicate Vonnegut's views about politics and the issues in modern American society, often from a humanistic perspective.[1] A Man Without a Country was a New York Times Bestseller and a Booksense Notable Book.In January 2007, Vonnegut indicated that he intended this to be his final work – a statement proved correct, with his death in April 2007.
The Man Without a CountryKurt VonnegutSeven Stories PressDewey DecimalLC Classproblems with modern technologydifferences between men and womenpoliticsissuesmodern American societyhumanisticNew York Times BestsellerBooksenseBloomsburyBibliographyPlayer PianoThe Sirens of TitanMother NightCat's CradleGod Bless You, Mr. RosewaterSlaughterhouse-FiveBreakfast of ChampionsSlapstickJailbirdDeadeye DickGalápagosBluebeardHocus PocusTimequakeGod Bless You, Dr. KevorkianCanary in a Cat HouseWelcome to the Monkey HouseBagombo Snuff BoxArmageddon in RetrospectLook at the BirdieWhile Mortals SleepSucker's PortfolioComplete StoriesWampeters, Foma and GranfalloonsPalm SundayFates Worse Than DeathVonnegut by the DozenFortitudeHappy Birthday, Wanda JuneBetween Time and TimbuktuLike Shaking Hands with GodNext DoorKurt Vonnegut's God Bless You, Mr. RosewaterSlapstick of Another KindWho Am I This Time?Displaced PersonKurt Vonnegut's Monkey HouseHarrison BergeronKilgore TroutEliot RosewaterRabo KarabekianRAMJACGranfalloonTralfamadoreIce-nineKurt Vonnegut Museum and LibraryVonnegut (Mercury crater)Jill KrementzMark VonnegutEdith VonnegutKurt Vonnegut Sr.Bernard VonnegutBernard Vonnegut Sr.Clemens Vonnegut