Norman Mailer: Difference between revisions

m
Added link.
m (Added link.)
m (Added link.)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Norman Mailer (1948).jpg|thumb|Norman Mailer in 1948.]]
[[File:Norman Mailer (1948).jpg|thumb|Norman Mailer in 1948.]]


'''[[Wikipedia:Norman Mailer|Norman Mailer]]''', one of the most prolific, outspoken and accomplished writers of the second half of the 20th century, published over 40 books in virtually every literary genre, including some he invented. He was also a leading public intellectual who spoke out on a broad range of issues, from the dangers of plastic and the deadening effects of television to the Women's Liberation Movement and the Iraq War. His dramatic interpretations of American cultural phenomena and his idiosyncratic views on sex, violence, power, technology, architecture, identity and the art of writing appeared in a 60-year run of novels and nonfiction narratives, plays, poems, sports reporting, political essays, biographies and countless media interviews. Acclaimed as one of the pioneers of the "New Journalism", he was a relentless innovator and connoisseur of narrative forms and techniques.
'''[[Wikipedia:Norman Mailer|Norman Mailer]]''', one of the most prolific, outspoken and accomplished writers of the second half of the 20th century, published over [[Norman Mailer's First Editions|40 books]] in virtually every literary genre, including some he invented. He was also a leading public intellectual who spoke out on a broad range of issues, from the dangers of plastic and the deadening effects of television to the Women's Liberation Movement and the Iraq War. His dramatic interpretations of American cultural phenomena and his idiosyncratic views on sex, violence, power, technology, architecture, identity and the art of writing appeared in a 60-year run of novels and nonfiction narratives, plays, poems, sports reporting, political essays, biographies and countless media interviews. Acclaimed as one of the pioneers of the "New Journalism", he was a relentless innovator and connoisseur of narrative forms and techniques.


Born in Long Branch, New Jersey in 1923 to Jewish immigrant parents, he grew up in Brooklyn, and graduated from Harvard in 1943, where he studied engineering. He served in the U.S. Army as a rifleman and cook in the Pacific theater from 1944–46, and attended the Sorbonne on the G.I. Bill after the war. His first novel, The ''Naked and the Dead'' (1948), which traces the campaign to take a Japanese-held island, is widely considered to be one of the finest novels of WWII. It has never gone out of print and has been translated into a score of languages. His eleventh and final novel, ''A Castle in the Forest'', an exploration of the boyhood of Adolf Hitler, was published months before his death in November 2007. Mailer is the only major American author to have bestsellers in six consecutive decades. Some of his other major novels are: ''The Deer Park'' (1955), ''An American Dream'' (1965), ''Why Are We in Vietnam?'' (1967), ''Ancient Evenings'' (1983), and ''Harlot's Ghost'' (1991). His biographical works include portraits of [[Marilyn Monroe]], [[Muhammad Ali]], [[Henry Miller]], [[Pablo Picasso]], [[Lee Harvey Oswald]], [[Madonna]] and [[Jesus Christ]].
Born in Long Branch, New Jersey in 1923 to Jewish immigrant parents, he grew up in Brooklyn, and graduated from Harvard in 1943, where he studied engineering. He served in the U.S. Army as a rifleman and cook in the Pacific theater from 1944–46, and attended the Sorbonne on the G.I. Bill after the war. His first novel, The ''Naked and the Dead'' (1948), which traces the campaign to take a Japanese-held island, is widely considered to be one of the finest novels of WWII. It has never gone out of print and has been translated into a score of languages. His eleventh and final novel, ''A Castle in the Forest'', an exploration of the boyhood of Adolf Hitler, was published months before his death in November 2007. Mailer is the only major American author to have bestsellers in six consecutive decades. Some of his other major novels are: ''The Deer Park'' (1955), ''An American Dream'' (1965), ''Why Are We in Vietnam?'' (1967), ''Ancient Evenings'' (1983), and ''Harlot's Ghost'' (1991). His biographical works include portraits of [[Marilyn Monroe]], [[Muhammad Ali]], [[Henry Miller]], [[Pablo Picasso]], [[Lee Harvey Oswald]], [[Madonna]] and [[Jesus Christ]].