Charles Schultz, February 17, 1964: Difference between revisions
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Dear Mr. Schultz,<ref>{{NM}}’s letter to [[w:Charles Schultz|Charles Schultz]],Schultz was an official with the New York chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences who invited Mailer to take part in a forum discussion.</ref> | Dear Mr. Schultz,<ref>{{NM}}’s letter to [[w:Charles Schultz|Charles Schultz]],Schultz was an official with the New York chapter of the ''National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences'' who invited Mailer to take part in a forum discussion.</ref> | ||
Normally I think I would want to say yes to your invitation for the Forum, but since it falls on March 12, which is three days after I’ll be handing in my next installment [the sixth] of my novel to Esquire, I can know to a certainty that it will be impossible to prepare anything for the Forum or even think constructively in advance about what I would like to say and what my ideas might really be. So for that reason, most regretfully, I’m afraid I must decline. | Normally I think I would want to say yes to your invitation for the Forum, but since it falls on March 12, which is three days after I’ll be handing in my next installment [the sixth] of my novel to Esquire, I can know to a certainty that it will be impossible to prepare anything for the Forum or even think constructively in advance about what I would like to say and what my ideas might really be. So for that reason, most regretfully, I’m afraid I must decline. |
Revision as of 12:17, 6 April 2019
NORMAN MAILER’s Letters |
- 142 Columbia Heights
- Brooklyn 1, New York
- February 17, 1964
- 142 Columbia Heights
Dear Mr. Schultz,[1]
Normally I think I would want to say yes to your invitation for the Forum, but since it falls on March 12, which is three days after I’ll be handing in my next installment [the sixth] of my novel to Esquire, I can know to a certainty that it will be impossible to prepare anything for the Forum or even think constructively in advance about what I would like to say and what my ideas might really be. So for that reason, most regretfully, I’m afraid I must decline.
- Yours sincerely,
- Norman Mailer
- Yours sincerely,
This page is part of
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An American Dream Expanded.
Notes
- ↑ Mailer’s letter to Charles Schultz,Schultz was an official with the New York chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences who invited Mailer to take part in a forum discussion.