51.1: Difference between revisions

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=====''Barbary Shore''. New York: Rinehart, 24 May; London: Cape, 21 January 1952. Novel, 312 pp., $3.=====
====''Barbary Shore''. New York: Rinehart, 24 May; London: Cape, 21 January 1952. Novel, 312 pp., $3.====


The 1971 Cape hardcover edition and the 1973 softcover Panther edition (a Cape imprint) contains a "Note from the Author", which consists of "Second Advertisement for Myself: Barbary Shore" (minus final sentence, with one other small change) from [[59.13]]. Dedication: "To [[Jean Malaquais]]". A dramatic version was presented at the New York Shakespeare Festival Public Theater, 10-27 January 1974. Jack Gelber wrote and directed the adaptation, which has never been published. Rpt: 59.13 (eight brief excerpts from novel, nine pp. total); [[98.7]] (partial). See [[03.7]], 23–26 and [[13.2]], 122–35.
The 1971 Cape hardcover edition and the 1973 softcover Panther edition (a Cape imprint) contains a “Note from the Author,which consists of “Second Advertisement for Myself: Barbary Shore” (minus final sentence, with one other small change) from [[59.13]]. Dedication: “To [[Jean Malaquais]].A dramatic version was presented at the New York Shakespeare Festival Public Theater, 10-27 January 1974. Jack Gelber wrote and directed the adaptation, which has never been published. Rpt: 59.13 (eight brief excerpts from novel, nine pp. total); [[98.7]] (partial). See [[03.7]], 23–26 and [[13.2]], 122–135.


{{cquote|I started Barbary Shore as some sort of fellow-traveler, and finished with a political position which was a far-flung mutation of Trotskyism. And the drafts of the book reflected these ideological changes so drastically that the last draft of ''Barbary Shore'' is a different novel altogether and has almost nothing in common with the first draft but the names.|author=Norman Mailer |source=[[64.1]]}}
{{cquote|I started Barbary Shore as some sort of fellow-traveler, and finished with a political position which was a far-flung mutation of Trotskyism. And the drafts of the book reflected these ideological changes so drastically that the last draft of ''Barbary Shore'' is a different novel altogether and has almost nothing in common with the first draft but the names.|author=Norman Mailer |source=[[64.1]]}}