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  • But what a compulsion. No sooner do I write it than I notice that I made a mistake in nonsense. I tried to write ''nonsese''. So, let’s look at it.
    424 bytes (80 words) - 08:39, 1 April 2021
  • ...ate Edith Wharton Citation of Merit, and becomes New York State Author for a two-year term. ...aves him after learning of his philandering, but they are reconciled after a few months.
    864 bytes (116 words) - 09:17, 2 April 2019
  • ...stated that one reason he sold his papers to Texas was that he served with a Texas outfit during WWII. See [[05.3]]–[[05.5]], [[05.9]], [[05.12]], [[0
    549 bytes (76 words) - 08:01, 14 March 2019
  • {{start|Kaylie Jones}} is a novelist, creative nonfiction writer, writing professor, and ''A Soldier’s Daughter Never Cries'', and ''The Anger Meridian''. Kaylie teac
    562 bytes (80 words) - 14:47, 2 September 2022
  • Back to Jargon. As a rough guess take J as a substitute for G which is God, Go, Give, Gamble (God ambles). I say J for G
    427 bytes (80 words) - 16:51, 22 March 2021
  • ...elf is not a “concealed Communist,” as charged, but “admittedly and openly a dissident from the conventional and generally accepted attitudes about Amer
    941 bytes (132 words) - 08:39, 23 December 2018
  • ...dium in a long essay in ''Esquire'' ({{date|November 1977}}), titled “[[Of a Small and Modest Malignancy, Wicked and Bristling with Dots]],” reprinted
    920 bytes (143 words) - 07:12, 15 July 2021
  • ...a Man''. By Alfred G. Aronowitz and Peter Hamill. New York: Lancer Books. A compilation of comments assembled shortly after the suicide of Hemingway on
    492 bytes (70 words) - 17:39, 9 December 2018
  • ...ing a compassionate relationship with his father’s dark shadow, as part of a 17-year Jungian men’s group journey, Stephen was finally able to embrace
    1 KB (201 words) - 10:51, 22 May 2022
  • ...7. James A. Wechsler turns his column over to [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]] for a post-mortem. Mailer counters the “liberal canon, cemented in concrete, th
    524 bytes (70 words) - 16:42, 17 December 2018
  • #REDIRECT [[The Mailer Review/Volume 7, 2013/An Executioner for a New Age]]
    75 bytes (11 words) - 07:31, 6 July 2020
  • Name for a Negro. Washington O. Q. Lewis.
    91 bytes (12 words) - 16:34, 7 March 2021
  • ...lose to death and danger (dagger—danger) all his life for our greatness as a nation was the vividness of the {{LJ:H}} in us, sees the social situation a
    1,004 bytes (181 words) - 14:40, 3 April 2021
  • ...erson is one who is 35 percent good and 65 percent evil. A hero is perhaps a reverse percentage. I’m fascinated by the good that is in evil people.”
    814 bytes (110 words) - 11:14, 9 March 2019
  • ...n this journal and doing my weight-lifting that there just isn’t a hell of a lot left over. I notice that I start high on this journal every day, or get
    541 bytes (93 words) - 10:58, 12 April 2021
  • ...an Faludi. Mailer’s reply: “I have the uneasy feeling that fashion matters a good deal but in all the years I’ve been asking myself how and why, my qu
    840 bytes (124 words) - 12:05, 10 March 2019
  • ...n Mailer|Mailer]]’s speech, which he began by saying, “I have come here as a Trojan horse.”
    529 bytes (73 words) - 07:45, 7 December 2018
  • ...er’s Dream…It Could Be a Nightmare.” Article by James Garrett. ''Showtime: A Magazine of the Lively Arts'' (Cleveland Press), 6 June, 1–3; cover photo
    572 bytes (76 words) - 16:03, 17 December 2018
  • Dear Lonnie Wells,<ref>Wells was a Mailer fan.</ref> ...mple, [[w:E. L. Doctorow|E. L. Doctorow]], who worked on Mailer’s novel as a young editor at Dial, depicted [[w:Harry Houdini|Harry Houdini]], [[w:Henry
    1 KB (217 words) - 11:31, 7 April 2019
  • ...nges (including the excision of the sentence quoted), is the foundation of a longer essay, “The Hazards and Sources of Writing” ([[85.4]]).
    894 bytes (137 words) - 09:41, 23 December 2018
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