Lipton’s Journal/January 3, 1955/188: Difference between revisions

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{{ins|Perhaps}} The secret of Marilyn Monroe’s{{refn|NM’s biography of [[w:Marilyn Monroe|Monroe]] (1926-62), ''[[Marilyn: A Biography]]'', sold more copies than any of his other books, save ''[[The Naked and the Dead]]''.}} success is that she has a just-after-{{del|fucked}}{{ins|making-love}} look instead of a ready-to-{{del|fucked}}{{ins|making-love}} look. Thus she gives the {{del|image}}{{ins|feeling}} of sensual after-pleasure and ''accomplishment'', rather than anticipation and uncertainty.
{{ins|Perhaps}} The secret of Marilyn Monroe’s{{refn|Mailer’s biography of [[w:Marilyn Monroe|Monroe]] (1926-62), ''[[Marilyn: A Biography]]'', sold more copies than any of his other books, save ''[[The Naked and the Dead]]''.}} success is that she has a just-after-{{del|fucked}}{{ins|making-love}} look instead of a ready-to-{{del|fucked}}{{ins|making-love}} look. Thus she gives the {{del|image}}{{ins|feeling}} of sensual after-pleasure and ''accomplishment'', rather than anticipation and uncertainty.


{{Notes|title=Note|width=60em}}
{{Notes|title=Note|width=60em}}

Latest revision as of 18:20, 25 July 2022

Perhaps The secret of Marilyn Monroe’s[1] success is that she has a just-after-fuckedmaking-love look instead of a ready-to-fuckedmaking-love look. Thus she gives the imagefeeling of sensual after-pleasure and accomplishment, rather than anticipation and uncertainty.



Note

  1. Mailer’s biography of Monroe (1926-62), Marilyn: A Biography, sold more copies than any of his other books, save The Naked and the Dead.