97.23d: Difference between revisions

From Project Mailer
(Created page with "{{WDside}} {{" '}}He smiled, so I punched him.{{' "}} Article-interview by Mick Brown. ''Daily Telegraph'' (London), 25 September, 26. {{NM}}, speaking in a London hotel room...")
 
mNo edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 8: Line 8:
[[Category:Works]]
[[Category:Works]]
[[Category:Works in the 1990s]]
[[Category:Works in the 1990s]]
[[Category:Works in 1991]]
[[Category:Works in 1997]]
[[Category:Articles]]
[[Category:Article-Interviews]]

Latest revision as of 15:11, 31 May 2020

Norman Mailer: Works and Days
Navigation
Frontmatter
PrefaceLennon IntroductionLucas IntroductionAcknowledgments and Appreciations
Bibliographies
First EditionsKey TextsBibliographiesBiographiesCriticismCultural Backgrounds
Works
Works IndexNM’s IntroductionsThe Big BiteMailer for MayorAbbott Affair
Days
Days IndexImportant Dates
Index
Index of NamesWorks CategoriesDays Categories
Wikipedia book BooksProject page Projects

‘He smiled, so I punched him.” Article-interview by Mick Brown. Daily Telegraph (London), 25 September, 26. Mailer, speaking in a London hotel room while promoting 97.13, gives his longest description of punching Martin Peretz on a Provincetown street after Peretz’s New Republic gave 97.13 “a particularly ugly and personal review.” He adds that his wife, Norris Church, “was appalled.” He describes himself as “a fellow of less than medium size and slightly more than medium weight, but with a huge dragon’s tail”—the legends surrounding his reputation. Speaking of the Catholic Church, which he called “a compassionate church,” he recalled that Pope John Paul II said that if necessary, the Vatican would have “to sell its treasures to help the poor.” “Well,” he said with a laugh, “I’m waiting.” This, one Mailer’s best spontaneous interviews of his later years, also includes comment on The Last Party (97.11), a memoir by his second wife, Adele Morales.