Kurt Vonnegut's life was not without its ironies. Fighting in World War II, that descendant of a long line of German immigrants in the United States found himself imprisoned in Dresden just when it was devastated by Allied firebombing.
The 40 pages of notes amid Vonnegut’s papers include several revisions of its rules, but also pitch letters to board-game companies suggesting that *GHQ *could “become the third popular checkerboard game” — and even “be used to train cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.”