"Slaughterhouse-Five" by Kurt Vonnegut is a Science Fiction novel that follows the experiences of Billy Pilgrim, a soldier who becomes "unstuck in time" and experiences different moments of his life, including his time as a prisoner of war during World War II. The novel explores themes of war, free will, and the impact of trauma.
He actually explains this at the beginning of the book. Something like "The war parts in this book are true" - "one of my friends really was shot for stealing a kettle...", and how he was in Dresden for the bombing. I'm not sure exactly how much the war scenes in the book reflect his own experience, though.
Kurt Vonnegut explores the concepts of Time, death, and free will being illusions through the simple phrase "so it goes". The main character is a time traveler of sorts, constantly hopping around throughout his existence, never knowing where or when he will be. He regularly is warped back and forth from his "current" existence to his "past" existence.
This illustrates the linearity of time being broken, that the concept of time is man-made.
So it goes.
Slaughter-Hill House was created in 1775.
Slaughter House Covered Bridge was created in 1872.
That depends on if you want the original or the slaughter house remix (slaughter house is prefered by most juggalos) the original is on ring master slaughter house on riddle box
North Side Canal Company Slaughter House was created in 1910.
slaughter is a verb not an adjective, in slauther house ,slauther ain't an adjective
Christopher Slaughter is 5' 11".
Lou Slaughter is 5' 11".
Billy Slaughter is 5' 6".
Caleb Benton has written: 'Catskill slaughter-house' -- subject(s): Slaughtering and slaughter-houses, Slaughter-houses
somewhere between 5-20 million dollars depending on size and grade.
John led the pigs to the slaughter house. Hitler was guilty of slaughtering millions of innocents.
Margaret Main has written: 'Leith Slaughter-House 1830-1995' -- subject(s): History, Leith Slaughter-House