Search results

  • ...stract=A professor recounts the events surrounding his meeting with Norman Mailer at American University in 1972. |url=https://prmlr.us/mr03moy}} ...can prose writer and poet at the time. In October of that year, I wrote to Mailer, mentioning the course and asking if he would be interested in coming to AU
    9 KB (1,544 words) - 07:53, 27 May 2021
  • ...rg develops, mainly with his literary influences Samuel Beckett and Norman Mailer, and his Buddhist teacher, who Shainberg calls Roshi, or “old master.” ...ding of the writer that begins their friendship—one that continues through Mailer’s waning years, mostly through shared meals at Michael Shay’s, thumb wr
    9 KB (1,464 words) - 13:31, 2 March 2021
  • | name = The Mailer Review, Volume 2, 2008 | title = ''The Mailer Review'', Volume 2, 2008
    6 KB (833 words) - 07:39, 23 May 2022
  • ...appeared in two parts in ''Playboy'' ([[75.8]], [[75.9]]). [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]] includes excerpts from eight chapters in ''The Time of Our Time'' ([[98.7 ...ne else’s. His mind, he noticed, was beginning to spin its wheels….|author=Mailer|source=75.12}}
    4 KB (585 words) - 09:04, 21 December 2018
  • '''The annual conference of the Norman Mailer Society was held in Provincetown, MA, September 30 through October 3, 2015. ...orously done with great élan. We taped it, and you will see it via Project Mailer.
    4 KB (711 words) - 09:45, 5 January 2022
  • ...'', published a week before his eighty-fourth birthday. No other writer of Mailer’s generation had best sellers in each of six consecutive decades. ...n a reality.” He was a great friend to the Lennon family. We salute Norman Mailer, novelist.
    4 KB (653 words) - 17:47, 7 July 2020
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-size:22px;">''The Mailer Review''/</span>Volume 3, 2009}} | name = The Mailer Review, Volume 3, 2009
    6 KB (836 words) - 16:43, 22 May 2022
  • ...e Naked and the Dead'' written at the age of twenty-four. This was not the Mailer I knew. ...o him about my ideas. He replied by mail, and so began our correspondence. Mailer did not like writing letters and, although they were brief, they encouraged
    5 KB (977 words) - 17:53, 7 July 2020
  • [[Norman Mailer]] was everything I came to America for. His large scope, his flamboyant ris ...to the Hemingway model, but kicked it up a notch and made it his own, the Mailer model: the novelist as pugilist, the novelist as man of action, the novelis
    5 KB (864 words) - 17:31, 7 July 2020
  • ...ng woman, Bobbi, worked in that house as a cook and housekeeper for Norman Mailer. Bobbi lived in the ground floor apartment of the building I lived in and o ...me. Ninety minutes later I walked out of the auditorium determined to read Mailer, for anyone who could make a film that bold and outrageous about cops and c
    10 KB (1,936 words) - 09:40, 8 July 2021
  • <big>The 14th Norman Mailer Society Conference<br /> The 2016 Norman Mailer Society Conference is scheduled for September 28, 29, 30, and October 1 on
    10 KB (1,553 words) - 07:56, 21 May 2022
  • ...d to find that several people actually remembered one of my three books on Mailer or the 1975 ''Partisan Review'' interview. ...Bob Lucid, Barry Leeds and others I knew in the old days for creating the Mailer Society and including me in its work. What is remarkable about the Society
    17 KB (3,068 words) - 17:58, 7 July 2020
  • ...Ivy League kid. There would be a movie, too, a documentary called ''Norman Mailer: The Sanction to Write''. ...[Cannibals and Christians]]'', and especially ''[[Existential Errands]]''. Mailer’s self-interviews about doing drugs and was it worth it to be high or dru
    9 KB (1,595 words) - 18:49, 7 July 2020
  • ...entire [[Norman Mailer]] archive. In response to the question “Why Texas?” Mailer commented, ...or take a few) document boxes worth of material chronicling every phase of Mailer’s life and career from the 1930s on. The archive will open for use at the
    14 KB (2,291 words) - 08:41, 8 July 2021
  • ...Serling]]. The second, in my more mature professional years, was [[Norman Mailer]]. Each was a cultural touchstone of my baby boomer generation. Each had a ...rling did for the half-hour teleplay what O’Henry did for the short story. Mailer so dazzlingly merged nonfiction into the milieu of the novel, and vice vers
    8 KB (1,380 words) - 18:44, 7 July 2020
  • ...Divinity for ineptitude, insisted on ''On God: An Uncommon Conversation''. Mailer took existence and God more seriously than many a theologian and most bisho ...ese tend to portray the sensational rather than the sensible and sensitive Mailer, a burly tousle-haired genius who grew old along with us battling at one ti
    8 KB (1,363 words) - 18:00, 7 July 2020
  • ...his analysis identifies particularly relevant bibliographic references for Mailer’s seminal work.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr17moss}} ..., while Paul O’Neil entertained readers of ''Life'' magazine by ridiculing Mailer and the Beats as devotees of “the cult of the Pariah,”{{sfn|O’Neil|19
    10 KB (1,509 words) - 17:03, 1 December 2020
  • ...ration. That sad, long morning brought forth powerful memories of [[Norman Mailer]], the world-class writer and the man I had been fortunate to know. ...of what I might say, my mind raced back to my first encounter with Norman Mailer. I strove to remember this amazing man in personal, emotional ways.
    10 KB (1,718 words) - 17:08, 1 October 2020
  • ...Bishop of New York in 1970. The following year I introduced him to Norman Mailer. ...St. John the Divine, for a raucous, unruly anti-war rally at which Norman Mailer staged his play, “D.J.” at the high altar and almost brought the roof c
    22 KB (3,925 words) - 18:47, 7 July 2020
  • I first met Norman Mailer in the spring of 1948 in Paris. I was just a kid, a mere high school gradua ...xt period was darker. Suddenly the radio was blasting the news that Norman Mailer had stabbed Adele; Norman’s inner demons, nightmares, and pressures to be
    9 KB (1,570 words) - 18:48, 7 July 2020
View ( | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)