Norman Mailer: Works and Days/Bibliography/Criticism

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Norman Mailer: Works and Days
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A

  • Adams, Laura (1976). Existential Battles: The Growth of Norman Mailer. Athens: Ohio University Press. Good discussion of themes and techniques, especially early narrators; includes description of extra-literary activities.
  • —, ed. (1974). Will the Real Norman Mailer Please Stand Up. Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press. Fourteen essays and reviews and one interview examining Mailer’s protean activities. Includes two essays on Mailer’s cosmology, a long bibliography and Adams’s useful introduction.
  • Aldridge, John W. (1992). Classics and Contemporaries. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. pp. 54–58. Contains Aldridge’s reviews of Genius and Lust (76.12), The Long Patrol (71.29), and Harlot’s Ghost (91.26).
  • — (1985) [1951]. "Mailer, Burns, and Shaw". After the Lost Generation: A Study of the Writers of Two Wars. New York: Arbor House. pp. 133–156. Reprint, with an introduction by Norman Mailer. In his introduction Mailer says, “Aldridge was the nearest guideline to absolute truth that the working novelist had in my young days.” See 85.14.
  • Algren, Nelson (1963). "New York: Rapietta Greensponge, Girl Counselor Comes to My Aid". Who Lost An American. New York: Macmillan. pp. 1–29. Satirical portrait of Mailer (Norman Manlifellow) and James Baldwin (Giovanni Johnson) and other New York literary figures. See 63.10.
  • Amis, Martin (1987). "The Avenger and the Bitch". The Moronic Inferno and Other Visits to America. New York: Viking. pp. 37–43. See 86.42.
  • Anderson, Chris (1987). "Norman Mailer: The Record of a War". Style as Argument: Contemporary American Nonfiction. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. pp. 82–132. Concrete reading of Mailer’s “rhetoric of self-dramatization,” with deft discussion of Mailer’s “Left-conservatism.”
  • Apple, Max (1976). "Inside Norman Mailer". The Oranging of America and Other Stories. New York: Grossman. pp. 49–60. One of the best comic fantasy struggles with a larger-than-life Mailer.
  • Arlett, Robert M. (1987). "The Veiled Fist of a Master Executioner". Criticism. 29 (2): 215–2232. xamination of free indirect speech in The Executioner’s Song (79.14).

B

  • Bailey, Jennifer (1979). Norman Mailer: Quick-Change Artist. New York: Harper and Row. Provides extended summaries of his work from a feminist perspective. Bailey sees Advertisements for Myself (59.13) as the key transitional work.
  • Balbert, Peter (1990). "From Lady Chatterly's Lover to The Deer Park: Lawrence, Mailer, and the Dialectic of Erotic Risk". Studies in the Novel. 22 (spring): 67–81. Best study of Lawrence’s influence. See 90.2.
  • Barnes, Hazel (1967). "The Negative Rebels: The Apolitical Left". An Existential Ethics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 56–96. Professional philosopher’s sympathetic examination of Mailer’s existential credentials.
  • Begiebing, Robert J. (1980). Acts of Regeneration: Allegory and Archetype in the Works of Norman Mailer. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. Close reading of major works from Barbary Shore (51.1) on; fine discussion of Mailer’s “heroic consciousness.”
  • — (2015). The Territory Around Us: Collected Literary and Political Journalism, 1982–2015. BookBaby. Discusses Mailer and other American authors at a transformative moment in his career.
  • — (1989). "Norman Mailer: The Magician as Tragic Hero". Toward a New Synthesis: John Fowles, John Gardner, Norman Mailer. Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press. pp. 87–125. Demonstration of how Mailer uses metafictional technique but rejects postmodern negativism. Important study of Ancient Evenings (83.18).
  • Berthoff, Warner (1971). "Witness and Testament: Two Contemporary Classics". In Miller, J. Hillis. Aspects of Narrative: Selected Papers from the English Institute. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 173–198. One of the first extended treatments of The Armies of the Night (68.8), which Berthoff places—along with The Autobiography of Malcolm X—in the American tradition of personal witness and “the saving counterforce of personality.”
  • Bloom, Harold, ed. (1986). Norman Mailer: Modern Critical Views. New York: Chelsea House. Sixteen reviews and essays covering Mailer’s major works and emphasizing the influence of Hemingway, with Bloom’s brief introduction.
  • —, ed. (2003). Norman Mailer: Critical Views. Philadelphia: Chelsea House. Thirteen reviews and essays focusing on Mailer’s later works.
  • Bozung, Justin (2017). The Cinema of Norman Mailer: Film Is Life Death. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. A collection of mixed contributions: essays and memoirs from critics, collaborators, and Mailer himself (67.21 and 71.25), some reprinted, but mostly original texts including many stills from Mailer’s films.
  • ((Anchor|Booth (1988)}}Booth, Wayne (1988). The Company We Keep: An Ethics of Fiction. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 207–210, 327–336. Useful to gauge how Mailer’s public image has alienated an important critic.
  • Braudy, Leo (1991). "Maidstone: A Mystery by Norman Mailer". Native Informant: Essays on Film, Fiction and Popular Culture. New York: Oxford. pp. 60–63, 145–151. Rpt: Adams (1974). Informed comment on Mailer’s film and the Mailer-Pynchon dichotomy.
  • —, ed. (1972). Norman Mailer: A Collection of Critical Essays. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. Thirteen essays on Mailer’s work through Of a Fire on the Moon (71.1); includes Steven Marcus interview (64.1) and a thoughtful introduction with useful insights into Miami and the Siege of Chicago (68.25).
  • Brookeman, Christopher (1987). "Norman Mailer and Mass America". In Brookeman, Christopher. American Culture and Society Since the 1930s. New York: Schocken. pp. 150–170. Staid overview of Mailer as “a personal index of American history since the Second World War.”
  • Bryant, Jerry H. (1970). "The Moral Outlook". The Open Decision: The Contemporary American Novel and Its Intellectual Background. New York: Free Press. pp. 369–394. Authenticity, courage and the belief that “self-discovery must precede the establishment of satisfactory societies” in the early novels of Mailer.
  • Bufithis, Philip M. (1978). Norman Mailer. Modern Literature Monographs. New York: Ungar. Perhaps the most readable and reliable study of Mailer’s early work.
  • Busch, Frederick (1986). "The Whale as Shaggy Dog". When People Publish: Essays on Writers and Writing. Iowa City: Iowa University Press. pp. 65–82. Argues persuasively for the influence of Moby-Dick on “The Man Who Studied Yoga” (56.25). See 51.2.

C—F

  • Cappell, Ezra (2016). "Hemingway's Jewish Progeny". Mailer Review. 10 (1): 208–228.
  • Capote, Truman (1985). Grobel, Lawrence, ed. Conversations with Capote. New York: New American Library. pp. 112–116, passim. Capote criticizes The Executioner’s Song (79.14).

G

H

J–K

L

  • Lennon, J. Michael, ed. (1986). Critical Essays on Norman Mailer. Critical Essays on American Literature. Boston: G. K. Hall. Ten reviews and ten essays, including two original ones: Robert F. Lucid’s overview of his proposed biography and Michael Cowan’s on Mailer’s Americanness. Introduction summarizes critical response to Mailer’s work.
  • Lucid, Robert F., ed. (1971). Norman Mailer: The Man and His Work. Boston: Little, Brown. First major collection of essays: 13 on his work, four on his life and Paul Carroll’s interview (68.1). Contains checklist of his work and important introduction in which Lucid attempts to resolve the apparent conflict between Mailer’s public and artistic activities.

M

N–R

S

T–Z

  • Widmer, Kingsley (1965). "Several American Perplexes". The Literary Rebel. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. pp. 175–198. Comparison of Mailer and Paul Goodman.
  • Wilson, Andrew (2008). Norman Mailer: An American Aesthetic. Oxford, England: Peter Lang.
  • Zavarzadeh, Mas'ud (1976). The Mythopoeic Reality: The Postwar American Nonfiction Novel. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. pp. 153–176 and passim. Attempts to prove, unconvincingly, that The Armies of the Night (68.8) has a “zero degree of interpretation” of reality.