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{{BYLINE|last=SANDERS|first=Jaime L.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr04sanders|abstract|mailer has been...uniform edition.|This paper served me...to participate.}}
{{BYLINE|last=SANDERS|first=Jaime L.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr04sanders|abstract|mailer has been...uniform edition.|This paper served me...to participate.}}


Norman Mailer once said he didn’t have the kind of talent that Ernest Hemingway had—the kind that could reach a nation. But his work reveals otherwise. Though Mailer often downplayed Hemingway’s influence, a deeper look shows just how profoundly Hemingway shaped Mailer’s philosophy of writing and life. Both authors didn’t just write; they wanted their words to disturb, to awaken, and to transform the reader’s understanding of life, death, and art.
'''Norman Mailer once said he didn’t have the kind of talent that Ernest Hemingway had—the kind that could reach a nation'''. But his work reveals otherwise. Though Mailer often downplayed Hemingway’s influence, a deeper look shows just how profoundly Hemingway shaped Mailer’s philosophy of writing and life. Both authors didn’t just write; they wanted their words to disturb, to awaken, and to transform the reader’s understanding of life, death, and art.
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