The Timequake reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Timequake

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Timequake is a semi-autobiographical work by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr

In this concluding work, Vonnegut uses the premise of a timequake (or repetition of actions) in which there is no free will. Vonnegut uses the idea of determinism as in many of his previous works (Slaughterhouse-Five) to assert that persons really have no free will. Kilgore Trout serves again as the main character.

The plot, while centered around Trout, is also a sort of ramble in which Vonnegut goes off on complete tangents to the plot and comes back dozens of pages later to the plot: the Timequake has thrust citizens of the year 2001 back in time to 1991 to repeat every action they undertook during that time. The book (Timequake) was written in 1996, halfway through the relapse. At the end, in 2001, the timequake ends and everyone regains control of their bodies. This creates initial pandemonium, as everyone is used to 'automatic pilot'. This caused Trout to write a book titledMy Ten Years on Automatic Pilot.

In the conclusion of this book, Vonnegut (who has inserted himself into the text as well as being its narrator, something he also did in Breakfast of Champions) meets other authors for a celebration to recognize Trout as a hero. With this recognition, Trout alludes to being sleepy. Ultimately, Vonnegut uses Trout thus to express his stepping down from writing novels and his increasing closeness to death.