07.39: Difference between revisions
(Created page.) |
m (Tweaked formatting.) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{WDside}} | {{WDside}} | ||
====''On God: An Uncommon Conversation''. With [[J. Michael Lennon|Michael Lennon]]. New York: Random House, 16 October. 215 pp., $26.95.==== | |||
Dedication: From [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]]: | Dedication: From [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]]: “To my wife, my sister, my children, my grandchildren"; from Lennon: "To my sisters, Kathleen Arruda and Maureen Macedo.” | ||
Consists of edited transcripts of ten conversations between Lennon and Mailer that took place in Provincetown from June 2003 to June 2006. Rpt: [[07.38]], [[07.43]]. | Consists of edited transcripts of ten conversations between Lennon and Mailer that took place in Provincetown from June 2003 to June 2006. Rpt: [[07.38]], [[07.43]]. |
Revision as of 11:56, 15 December 2018
On God: An Uncommon Conversation. With Michael Lennon. New York: Random House, 16 October. 215 pp., $26.95.
Dedication: From Mailer: “To my wife, my sister, my children, my grandchildren"; from Lennon: "To my sisters, Kathleen Arruda and Maureen Macedo.”
Consists of edited transcripts of ten conversations between Lennon and Mailer that took place in Provincetown from June 2003 to June 2006. Rpt: 07.38, 07.43.
“ | I have spent the last fifty years trying to contemplate the nature of God. If I speak specifically of fifty years, it is because my pride in the initial thirty-odd years of my life was to an atheist—how much more difficult and honorable I then considered that to be, rather than having a belief in an All-Mighty divinity. I was a novelist, after all (as will be noted frequently in these interviews), so I was intensely, even professionally, aware of the variety, and complexity, of human motivation and its offspring—morality. It took a good number of years to recognize that I did believe in God—that is, believed there is a divine presence in existence. | ” |
— Norman Mailer, 0.39 |