Contemporary literature is not wanting...
Contemporary literature is not wanting for pessimistic themes about human nature. Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., reflected this pessimism in a most poignant fashion in his novel Slaughterhouse Five. In this work Mr. Vonnegut revealed his inability to reconcile himself to the tragedies of World War II and all war. His sensitivity to the senselessness of brutality in war led him to a blasphemous form of fatalism. Realists can do nothing to stop the wave of death that rolls over all of life. "So it goes," is the bitter refrain that people must utter in the face of the monstrous behavior of death.