Mailer: A BiographyUndeniably one of the most controversial figures of past half century, Norman Mailer has also been one of the most influential. Twice a winner of the Pulitzer Prize, once a candidate for mayor of New York City, and the author of thirty-one books, he has both made the news and commented on it with an originality that has permanently altered America's literary landscape. From the peace rallies of the sixties that lead to The Armies of the Night, to the coverage of the "sex wars" in The Prisoner of Sex, to the study of violence and punishment in The Executioner's Song, Mailer has observed our culture with unmatched insight -- and shaped it as well. Mary Dearborn had unprecedented access to Mailer's friends, relations, and antagonists. With photographs and correspondence never before published, her biography fills in the familiar outlines of his colorful personal life -- the wives and mistresses, the brawls and arrests -- and charts Mailer's brilliant successes and notorious failures. Acclaimed for her biographies of Henry Miller and Louise Bryant, Dearborn comes to her subject uniquely sensitive to Mailer's best and worst sides. Her account is the most clearheaded and balanced evaluation to date. As splendidly told by Mary Dearborn, Mailer's story is, for good or ill, the story of our times. |
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Page 17
... seemed powerless in the household , totally under Fan's thumb and with no life outside the family , was actually an independent man with pressing , important concerns , a man who fearlessly took on risks and moved in some of the city's ...
... seemed powerless in the household , totally under Fan's thumb and with no life outside the family , was actually an independent man with pressing , important concerns , a man who fearlessly took on risks and moved in some of the city's ...
Page 65
... seemed to him to have missed the point- yet he seemed generally content . He had started a second novel in Paris , but he wasn't especially eager to get back to that . The immediate reason Norman and Bea had returned home was to attend ...
... seemed to him to have missed the point- yet he seemed generally content . He had started a second novel in Paris , but he wasn't especially eager to get back to that . The immediate reason Norman and Bea had returned home was to attend ...
Page 94
... seemed mandatory , he did not assert his Jewishness . One of the few comments Norman Podhoretz could bring himself to make about Mailer in later years was that he had never ( according to Podhoretz ) circumcised his sons and never been ...
... seemed mandatory , he did not assert his Jewishness . One of the few comments Norman Podhoretz could bring himself to make about Mailer in later years was that he had never ( according to Podhoretz ) circumcised his sons and never been ...
Contents
COCK OF THE WALK | 1 |
THE ARMY | 36 |
POLITICS AND HOLLYWOOD | 65 |
Copyright | |
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