Talk:Lipton’s Journal
Entry Dates
December 1, 1954
# | NM# | First Words | x-Refs | Cut | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Perhaps the artist is less | |||
2 | 2 | Lipton's seems to open one | |||
3 | 3 | Fucking is perhaps an approach | |||
4 | 4 | In relation to (1) | L1 | Note. | |
5 | 5 | The concentration camp novel | x | Note. Unclear x-ref # in note. | |
6 | 6 | One should always listen attentively | Note. | ||
7 | 7 | Herbert A[ptheker]. said of Lipton’s | Note. | ||
8 | 8 | In modern jazz, one feels | Note. | ||
9 | 9 | Thoreau’s beautiful remark | Note. | ||
10 | 10 | I upset Herbert [Aptheker] by saying | |||
11 | 11 | In a short novel | x | Note. |
December 8, 1954
# | NM# | First Words | x-Refs | Cut | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
12 | 12 | One should always try to | x | ||
13 | 13 | It seems to me that | |||
14 | 14 | It is possible that many | Note. | ||
15 | 15 | All of my life with Adele | |||
16 | 16 | If there is that other world | |||
17 | 17 | Listening to a child | |||
18 | 18 | I advertise to everyone | |||
19 | 19 | Six and Four are close | |||
20 | 20 | Knowledge is systematized ignorance | |||
21 | 21 | A novel is slowly emerging | |||
22 | 22 | It may be that the | |||
23 | 23 | In the conc. camp novel | L17 | ||
24 | 24 | There may actually be such | |||
25 | 25 | Every word sets up | L24 | Note. | |
26 | 26 | Television may have some extraordinary | Note. | ||
27 | 27 | Possibly the spasmodic nervous system | |||
28 | 28 | Vomiting may be the orgasm | |||
29 | 29 | No saint can be a teacher | |||
30 | 30 | Infants may be enormously wise | |||
31 | 31 | The saint and the psychopath | Note. | ||
32 | 32 | No one is more unreligious | |||
33 | 33 | Medicine may be witchcraft | end: [and] its emphasis on progress. | ||
34 | 34 | The aggressive instinct | |||
35 | 35 | Psychoanalysis, liberalism, etc. etc. | |||
36 | 36 | I have learned more from | |||
37 | 37 | In The Deer Park after the | Note. | ||
38 | 38 | If the more saintly people | |||
39 | 39 | In a Collier’s article | Note. | ||
40 | 40 | Words are not entirely bad | |||
41 | 41 | Death may be the price | |||
42 | 42 | I know nothing about semantics | |||
43 | 43 | Talk with Rhoda L. | Note. |
December 17, 1954
# | NM# | First Words | x-Refs | Cut | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
44 | 44 | The saint and the churchman | |||
45 | 45 | There is no death-instinct | |||
46 | 46 | What worries me today | |||
47 | 47 | Spengler is a great writer | L48 | Notes. | |
48 | 48 | Swing in jazz is different | |||
49 | 49 | When Susie speaks of “war” | |||
50 | 50 | There is a lesson for me | L47 |
December 28, 1954
December 29, 1954
December 31, 1954
January 3, 1955
January 20, 1955
January 24, 1955
January 25, 1955
January 26, 1955
January 27, 1955
January 31, 1955
February 1, 1955
February 2, 1955
February 7, 1955
February 10, 1955
February 14, 1955
February 21, 1955
February 22, 1955
March 4, 1955
Questions
- What do we want to do with omitted entry numbers? Just skip them? Or should they be included in the digital version but not the printed?
- Are the numbers on Donna’s transcript the new, correct numbers? (I know Mike said that Mailer mis-numbered some entries.)
- Should each entry date have its own index page? Perhaps each numbered entry could be summarized here?
- Should each numbered entry should have its own (sub)page? I think yes.
- Should each numbered entry have a title other than a number? Each could have a shortcut, so if the title is
Lipton’s Journal/December 1, 1954/1
, the shortcut could beLJ1
or justL1
. - Should we categorize numbered entries? Thematically? Style of entry?