Book details
Catch 22
by Joseph Heller
1966
About the book
Set during World War II, the narrative follows Captain John Yossarian, a B-25 bombardier stationed on the island of Pianosa. Yossarian is trapped by a bureaucratic paradox known as Catch-22: a pilot is considered insane if they continue flying dangerous missions, but requesting a relief from duty proves they are sane and therefore fit to fly. The plot details the escalating absurdity of military life as Colonel Cathcart repeatedly raises the required mission count to further his own career. Characters like Milo Minderbinder build a black-market empire across national lines, while the chaplain struggles with the loss of faith in a system where logic is discarded in favor of procedural survival.
Readers who value biting satire and non-linear storytelling will find this a sharp critique of institutional insanity. It appeals to those interested in how language can be manipulated to enforce authority and trap individuals in impossible loops. The reader moves away from the text with a clear understanding of the friction between personal morality and the demands of a cold, indifferent hierarchy. The book provides a framework for recognizing circular logic in modern life, illustrating how organizations protect their own interests by punishing those who follow the rules literally.
Details
- Published
- 1966
- Language
- EN