05/31/2026
Howdy Bay Area Vonnegutians, KVML will be at Booth 69 (same year as when Slaughterhouse-Five came out!) at the tomorrow! Stock up on Vonnegut merch! Talk to our General Manger Pat “April Fresh” Downey about Vonnegut, the museum, or any other topics he posses some knowledge of.
05/29/2026
The Great Depression changed everything for the Vonnegut family. Once a successful Indianapolis architect, Kurt Vonnegut Sr. watched commissions dry up, and the family was eventually forced to sell the North Illinois Street home he had designed and built.
What had been a comfortable, upper-middle-class life suddenly became much more uncertain, and the downward shift in the family’s fortunes was impossible to miss. That decline shaped the Vonnegut household in ways Kurt Vonnegut Jr. never forgot. The family’s financial fall meant a changed school path for the children. Kurt Jr. was pulled out of his private school, the Orchard School where he met Jane Cox, who eventually became his wife.
It was a home life marked by strain and fading expectations. It also became part of the emotional backdrop of Vonnegut’s later writing, where money, status, disappointment, and human fragility are never far from the surface.
05/28/2026
Happy Birthday to KVML’s General Manager Pat Downey. We appreciate you, Pat! ❤️ Visit Pat this weekend at the Bay Area Book Festival
05/25/2026
Howdy Bay Area Vonnegutians, KVML is looking for volunteers to assist us at the Bay Area Book Fest this weekend! If you have an hour to spare or six we would love to have you. Email KVML’s General Manager Pat Downey ([email protected]) to learn more!
05/22/2026
It was a privilege to visit our friends at Indy Type Shop today! They do such wonderful work and have a great book selection too!
05/22/2026
Edith Lieber Vonnegut came from one of Indianapolis’s most prominent German-American brewing families. She was the daughter of Albert Lieber, whose Indianapolis Brewing Company made the family wealthy and placed them among the city’s elite. By the time she married Kurt Vonnegut Sr. in 1913, their wedding was a major social event in Indianapolis.
Kurt’s love for Edith knew no bounds. He frequently wrote to his family regarding her character, love for
animals, and selflessness. After Edith’s death, Kurt Jr. wrote about her character by stating she had, “Complete and unselfish devotion to her family; morality; inflexible sense of fair play; childlike love for all things alive. I see now the what and why of my being.”
The love between Kurt Sr. and Edith and Edith’s family’s success in the brewing business helped shape the world Kurt Vonnegut Jr. grew up in. It connects his childhood to a larger story of immigrant success, civic status, and changing fortunes in old Indianapolis. Edith’s side of the family reflects how German-American families could rise through industry, build a lasting local legacy, and then be reshaped by the upheavals of the early 20th century.
05/20/2026
Howdy Folks, here are our hours changes for Memorial Day Weekend!