Norman Mailer’s Letters on An American Dream, 1963–1969
An American Dream | Expanded | Bibliography | Letters | Timeline | Word Count Comparison | Credits |
An American Dream Expanded.
J. Michael Lennon
Copyright ©2004 by Sligo Press. (04.7)[1]
67 South Pioneer Avenue, Shavertown, PA 18708
From the Introduction
Until he wrote An American Dream, his most evocative and lyrical novel, Norman Mailer did not invest his major fictional characters with his deepest concerns and beliefs: a desire to grow at all costs, a distrust of pure reason, a willingness to take risks, trust in the authority of the senses, faith in courage as the cardinal virtue, fear and loathing for the incipient totalitarianism of American life and, most importantly, a belief in an heroic but limited God locked in struggle with a powerful, wily Devil, conceivably with the fate of the universe in the balance. Stephen Richards Rojack, the novel’s protagonist, has these concerns and shares Mailer’s theological beliefs. Rojack is a war hero, former congressman, college professor, talk show host, celebrity intellectual and nascent alcoholic. Preternaturally alert to omens and portents and susceptible to every premonition, he hears voices, studies the phases of the moon, and waits for either cancer or madness to strike him. His wife Deborah taunts him with her infidelities and attacks his manhood in a variety of insidious ways, driving him to a physical attack that ends with her murder. Rojack then throws her body out of the apartment window ten stories down to the pavement on the east side of Manhattan. He claims that her fall was suicide, and the brunt of the story is devoted to his attempts to convince his and her friends, the police and Deborah's father, Barney Oswald Kelly, the “solicitor for the devil,” of his innocence. Narrated in an edgy, rococo style by Rojack, the novel shows Mailer at the height of his word power as he delineates the dread-filled inner life of his embattled hero. The air of the novel is haunted, swarming with demonic and divine presences, especially in the final chapter, when Rojack confronts Kelly in his penthouse apartment in the Waldorf Towers.
The Letters
Date | To | Notes |
---|---|---|
September 18, 1963 | Ambassador Gutierres-Olivos | Sergio Gutierrez-Olivos was the Chilean ambassador to the United States, 1963–1965. |
October 15, 1963 | Andre Deutsch | Andre Deutsch was the principal director of Andre Deutsch Limited, Mailer’s British publisher from 1959–1966. |
October 15, 1963 | Alan Earney | Alan Earney was an editor at Transworld Publishers Limited. |
October 15, 1963 | Reed Whittemore | Reed Whittemore, an American poet, biographer, critic, literary journalist, was the editor of Carleton Miscellany. |
October 16, 1963 | Eiichi Yaminishi | Eiichi Yaminishi was Mailer’s longtime Japanese translator. |
October 21, 1963 | Willie Morris | Mailer met Morris in New York after Morris became editor of Harper’s in 1963. |
November 4, 1963 | Andre Deutsch | |
November 4, 1963 | Alan Earney | |
November 5, 1963 | Adeline Lubell Naiman | A college friend of Mailer’s sister Barbara, Lubell met Mailer in 1946. |
November 9, 1963 | Francis Irby Gwaltney | Mailer served in the Army with “Fig,” a teacher, novelist and native of Arkansas. |
November 26, 1963 | Eiichi Yaminishi | |
November 26, 1963 | Edmund Skellings | Skellings, then a professor at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, and an admirer of Mailer’s work, met Mailer at an Esquire symposium at the University of Iowa in December 1958. |
November 26, 1963 | David Susskind | David Howard Susskind was an American producer of TV, movies, and stage plays and also a TV talk show host. |
December 11, 1963 | Mary Jane Shoultz | Mary Jane and Ray Shoultz were acquaintances of Mailer’s. |
December 15, 1963 | Eiichi Yaminishi | |
December 17, 1963 | Mickey Knox | Knox, one of Mailer’s closest friends, met Mailer in Hollywood in the summer of 1949. |
December 20, 1963 | Francis Irby Gwaltney | |
December 20, 1963 | Rita Halle Kleeman | Kleeman was a staff member at P.E.N., the international writers organization. |
January 15, 1964 | Don Carpenter | Carpenter was a west coast novelist who corresponded regularly with Mailer in the 1960s. |
January 16, 1964 | Vance Bourjaily | Bourjaily, an American novelist, met Mailer in 1951. |
January 17, 1964 | Eiichi Yamanishi | |
February 11, 1964 | Harvey Breit | Mailer became friendly with Harvey Breit, a reporter and novelist who spent summers on Cape Cod. |
February 17, 1964 | Mickey Knox | |
February 17, 1964 | 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. |
February 19, 1964 | Eiichi Yamanishi | |
March 16, 1964 | Vahan Gregory | Gregory was a literary acquaintance of Mailer’s. |
March 17, 1964 | George Lea | George Lea was writer friend. |
March 17, 1964 | Martin Peretz | Mailer met Peretz, Harvard professor and editor-in-chief of The New Republic, in the early 1960s. |
April 16, 1964 | Andre Deutsch | |
April 17, 1964 | Louis and Moos Mailer | Louis Mailer (his wife was Moos) was the brother of Mailer's father, Isaac Barnett “Barney” Mailer and lived in South Africa. |
April 19, 1964 | Mickey Knox | |
May 15, 1964 | Francis Irby Gwaltney | |
June 1, 1964 | Don Carpenter | |
June 2, 1964 | Mrs. Jose Casanova | Mrs. Casanova was a Mailer fan. |
June 2, 1964 | Mickey Knox | |
July 5, 1964 | Diana Athill | |
July 6, 1964 | Pete Hamill | Journalist and novelist, Pete Hamill had been a friend of Mailer since they met in Chicago in 1962. |
July 7, 1964 | Eiichi Yamanishi | |
August 21, 1964 | Diana Athill | |
September 29, 1964 | Robert F. Lucid | Longtime professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania, Lucid was one of Mailer’s closest friends and his authorized biographer. |
October 5, 1964 | Don Carpenter | |
November 4, 1964 | Andre Deutsch | |
December 15, 1964 | Ester Whitby | Esther Whitby was a Mailer fan. |
December 18, 1964 | Arnold Kemp | Kemp met Mailer in Bellevue Hospital where Mailer was under psychiatric observation after he stabbed Adele with a penknife on 20 September 1960. |
December 18, 1964 | Mickey Knox | |
December 18, 1964 | Bill McLaughlin | McLaughlin was a Mailer fan. |
December 21, 1964 | Virginia Mangrum | Mangrum was still another Mailer fan. |
January 27, 1965 | Eiichi Yamanishi | |
February 25, 1965 | Diana Athill | |
March 22, 1965 | Richard Kluger | Kluger was an editor at the literary supplement, Book Week. |
March 23, 1965 | Diana Athill | |
March 23, 1965 | Alan Earney | |
March 25, 1965 | Jason Epstein | Epstein was the longtime editorial director at Random House,
where he was Mailer’s editor. |
March 25, 1965 | Don Carpenter | |
March 25, 1965 | Diana Trilling | Trilling was a literary critic and wife of the Columbia professor and man of letters, Lionel Trilling. |
April 6, 1965 | Diana Trilling | |
April 20, 1965 | Donald Kaufmann | Kaufmann was a professor at the University of Alaska who became friendly with Mailer when he spoke at the University in 1965. |
April 23, 1965 | John W. Aldridge | John W. Aldridge became friends with Mailer in 1951 shortly after Aldridge’s After the Lost Generation: A Study of Writers of Two Wars appeared earlier that year. |
April 23, 1965 | Moos Mailer | |
June 8, 1965 | John W. Aldridge | |
June 8, 1965 | John William Corrington | Corrington wrote a favorable review of AAD in the Chicago Review in 1965. |
June 8, 1965 | Roger Shattuck | Mailer met Roger Shattuck, the art critic, in Brooklyn in the 1950s. |
June 8, 1965 | Diana Trilling | |
June 12, 1965 | John A. Meixner | Meixner was a writer friend. |
July 14, 1965 | Diana Trilling | |
August 17, 1965 | John W. Aldridge | |
August 26, 1965 | Irving J. Weiss | A literary host at a radio station in New York, Weiss sought Mailer’s involvement in a couple of literary projects. |
February 28, 1966 | Lionel Abel | Abel was a drama professor and critic who wrote for Partisan Review and moved in the same leftist intellectual circles as Mailer. |
March 24, 1966 | Mann Rubin | Rubin wrote the first screenplay for An American Dream. |
April 16, 1966 | Lonnie L. Wells | Wells was a Mailer fan. |
September 24, 1966 | Susan Abrams | Abrams was a Mailer fan. |
September 24, 1966 | Yale M. Udoff | |
September 24, 1966 | Nancy Weber | Weber, an American writer, interviewed Mailer in the March 1965 New York Post, one of only a few interviews he gave on the novel before it was published. |
September 25, 1966 | Louis and Moos Mailer | |
September 26, 1966 | Sanford Sternlicht | Sanford Sternlicht was an English professor at New York State University College at Oswego. |
1969 | Whit Burnett | Burnett published Mailer’s story Mailer’s story “The Greatest Thing in the World” in November 1941, marking the beginning of Mailer’s literary career. |
Note
- ↑ In addition to what’s featured, the original volume contained a list of illustrations, an index, and four appendices: Appendix I: Norman Mailer: Key Publications, 1948-2003; Appendix II: An American Dream: Selected Bibliography; Appendix III: Timeline of Events, 1962-1966; and Appendix IV: An American Dream: Word Count Comparison, Esquire and Dial Versions. The appendices are not labeled as such in this digital edition, but all information in contained herein.