NEW YORK - Kurt Vonnegut, the satirical novelist who captured the absurdity
of war and questioned the advances of science in darkly humorous works such as
"Slaughterhouse-Five" and "Cat's Cradle," died Wednesday. He was 84.
 Governor's Arts Award winning author Kurt Vonnegut glances
down at his daughter Lilly,7, in this file photo from June 29, 1990,
during the New York State Governor's Arts Awards ceremony at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. [AP]

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Vonnegut, who often marveled
that he had lived so long despite his lifelong smoking habit, had suffered brain
injuries after a fall at his Manhattan home weeks ago, said his wife,
photographer Jill Krementz.
The author of at least 19 novels, many of them best-sellers, as well as
dozens of short stories, essays and plays, Vonnegut relished the role of a
social critic. He lectured regularly, exhorting audiences to think for
themselves and delighting in barbed commentary against the institutions he felt
were dehumanizing people.
"I will say anything to be funny, often in the most horrible situations,"
Vonnegut, whose watery, heavy-lidded eyes and unruly hair made him seem to be in
existential pain, once told a gathering of psychiatrists.
A self-described religious skeptic and freethinking humanist, Vonnegut used
protagonists such as Billy Pilgrim and Eliot Rosewater as transparent vehicles
for his points of view. He also filled his novels with satirical commentary and
even drawings that were only loosely connected to the plot. In
"Slaughterhouse-Five," he drew a headstone with the epitaph: "Everything was
beautiful, and nothing hurt."
But much in his life was traumatic, and left him in pain.
Despite his commercial success, Vonnegut battled depression throughout his
life, and in 1984, he attempted suicide with pills and alcohol, joking later
about how he botched the job.
His mother had succeeded in killing herself just before he left for Germany
during World War II, where he was quickly taken prisoner during the Battle of
the Bulge. He was being held in Dresden when Allied bombs created a firestorm
that killed an estimated 135,000 people in the city.
"The firebombing of Dresden explains absolutely nothing about why I write
what I write and am what I am," Vonnegut wrote in "Fates Worse Than Death," his
1991 autobiography of sorts.
But he spent 23 years struggling to write about the ordeal, which he survived
by huddling with other POW's inside an underground meat locker labeled
slaughterhouse-five.