Book Review Joseph Heller Catch 22 And Closing Time

Photo taken by me – my book shelves
Preston, England
February 21, 2019 5:53pm CST
Simon & Schuster, 1961 and 1994.- Spoiler alerts Catch 22 My favourite novel ever. The story of Yossarian’s efforts to get himself out of the U.S. air force during WW2 is one of the sharpest, most savage satires of our age. The Catch itself states that to believe you have suffered irrational madness and a compulsion to get out of flying a warplane due to an fear of flying shows reason, intelligence and sanity, that makes you the ideal person to undertake even the most dangerous of missions, so there is no way out of the fact that you have to get in the plane again. Catch-22 is now a buzzword for a no-win situation. The novel that gave us this line also features many references to atheism. At one point two characters argue viciously, and one says the God you don’t believe in isn’t the same as the God I don’t believe in. Heller’s other books have generally proved disappointing. The book was a big influence on the cynical anger behind MASH. As well as its humour with Milo Minderbinder making profit from war and misery, (even selling weapons to the Germans) and Yossarian’s efforts to swim to Switzerland, there is also some genuine horror. A suicidal pilot cuts a man in half with the wings of his plane. There are also the intense descriptions of life on a plane undergoing heavy fire. Closing Time Though most of Heller’s other books are unexceptional, the sequel to Catch-22 (Closing Time) is brilliantly set in the present day. Reading it over thirty years after the original was something of a curate’s egg experience for me. It reintroduces the now old figures that were the legends of some of my earliest reading; Yossarian, The Chaplain, Minderbinder, etc, and it feels good, like a school reunion. (Their own nostalgia is a prominent theme of the novel), but the increasingly end of the world science fiction theme of the Chaplain inexplicably starting to urinate ‘heavy water’ (a vital ingredient in nuclear weapons) is a mistake. The idea seems fun in many ways, as the poor man is exploited as a natural resource and Yossarian tries desperately to find him, There are still great moments of surrealism and humour, i.e. the society wedding among the homeless in a bus shelter, and M & M enterprises under Milo Minderbinder, picking up on Stealth Plane technology and selling the ever greedy US air-force a plane that doesn’t even exist. Trump has made this concept frightfully prophetic in some of his pronouncements. Closing Time lacks the realism of the book it follows on from. Still, it was nice to be visited by my old friends again. There is also a touching cameo by Heller's real life friend, Kurt Vonnegut, in vivid descriptions of the fire-storm at Dresden, which Vonnegut really lived through. Arthur Chappell
9 people like this
10 responses
@RasmaSandra (97991)
• Daytona Beach, Florida
22 Feb 19
Have not read one or the other. I might try watching the Catch 22 movie.
2 people like this
• Preston, England
9 Mar 19
@TheHorse it is very good
• Preston, England
22 Feb 19
@RasmaSandra not bad but not a patch on the book
1 person likes this
@TheHorse (238298)
• Walnut Creek, California
9 Mar 19
I have not read the second one either.
1 person likes this
@NJChicaa (127127)
• United States
22 Feb 19
I love Catch-22. That is an absolute classic. I always laugh when the guy has crabapples in his cheeks.
2 people like this
• Preston, England
22 Feb 19
@NJChicaa And Major Major-Major who ends up promoted to Major, adding another Major to his name
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
9 Mar 19
@TheHorse sounds familiar
1 person likes this
@TheHorse (238298)
• Walnut Creek, California
9 Mar 19
Didn't the guy from Iowa have "flies in his eyes"?
1 person likes this
@TheHorse (238298)
• Walnut Creek, California
9 Mar 19
I really enjoyed Catch-22, though I haven't read it in years. Scenes that stand out to me include (was it Snowden?) "spilling his guts" and the man on the dock halved by a propeller blade (as I remember it).
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
9 Mar 19
@TheHorse yes, thoe happen, plus Yossarian trying to swim off to Switzerland
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
10 Mar 19
@TheHorse same here, fresh salad tomatoes are nice but not grilled, stewed or tinned
1 person likes this
@TheHorse (238298)
• Walnut Creek, California
9 Mar 19
@arthurchappell I forgot about Yossarian trying to swim to Switzerland. I should read this one again. Hey (remembering Snowden), I don't like stewed tomatoes either.
1 person likes this
@pjmurphy (2498)
• United States
21 Feb 19
It's been a long, long time since I read Catch 22. Haven't read Closing Time.
2 people like this
• Preston, England
22 Feb 19
@pjmurphy it is a good sequel
@TheHorse (238298)
• Walnut Creek, California
9 Mar 19
Same here.
1 person likes this
@Ronrybs (21499)
• London, England
23 Feb 19
Not read Closing Time, but Catch 22 is one I enjoy. Haven't read it in a long time. MASH was another one I liked
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
23 Feb 19
@Ronrybs The original MASH movie was very similar to Catch 22 - the TV version, though great, was quite different
1 person likes this
@Ronrybs (21499)
• London, England
23 Feb 19
@arthurchappell Didn't really watch the TV MASH
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
23 Feb 19
@Ronrybs it was good overall, but the film was much better
2 people like this
• Northampton, England
22 Feb 19
We have a Catch 22 with Brexit
2 people like this
• Preston, England
22 Feb 19
@thedevilinme totally, whatever is decided no one will be happy
1 person likes this
@LadyDuck (502345)
• Italy
22 Feb 19
I have not read this one. The story sounds interesting.
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
22 Feb 19
@LadyDuck it is, very much so
1 person likes this
• Midland, Michigan
18 Apr 19
I read Catch 22 back around 1982 or so when I was around thirty. Which was a long time ago. I don't remember that it had anything to do with the war, but while reading that I was also introduced to pot for the first time and I know the book confused me and that may be the main reason why.Because I didn't like the way it made me feel, I never got into using it again. Glad you liked the second book too.
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
25 Apr 19
@MarshaMusselman it was very much set in WW2 - shame you didn't enjoy it
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
26 Apr 19
@MarshaMusselman worth a go
1 person likes this
• Midland, Michigan
25 Apr 19
@arthurchappell Maybe once I retire I'll check it out again and see whether I remember anything about it or not.
1 person likes this
@JohnRoberts (109841)
• Los Angeles, California
22 Feb 19
Did you ever see the movie Catch-22?
1 person likes this
• Preston, England
22 Feb 19
@JohnRoberts yes, it is good but only like edited highlights from the book
1 person likes this
@Nevena83 (66063)
• Serbia
22 Feb 19
Sounds interesting.
• Preston, England
23 Feb 19
@Nevena83 yes it is
2 people like this