Martin Peretz, March 17, 1964: Difference between revisions

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I still have my nose deep in the serial and I’m not sure I ever want to write a novel this way again. For cumulative fatigue may get in the way of finishing the book properly. I hope not, I think I still haven’t lost the book, but I’m feeling wrung out, dull, and smoking too many cigarettes these days. Forgive the lugubrious tone—I think I’m still recovering from the Clay-Liston fight. One of my secret dreams was to see Patterson and Liston have a great third fight.
I still have my nose deep in the serial and I’m not sure I ever want to write a novel this way again. For cumulative fatigue may get in the way of finishing the book properly. I hope not, I think I still haven’t lost the book, but I’m feeling wrung out, dull, and smoking too many cigarettes these days. Forgive the lugubrious tone—I think I’m still recovering from the Clay-Liston fight. One of my secret dreams was to see Patterson and Liston have a great third fight.
:::::::::::::::::::::Best for now,<br />
::::::::::::::::::::Best for now,<br />
:::::::::::::::::::::Norman
::::::::::::::::::::Norman
:::::::::::::::::::::Norman Mailer
 
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Revision as of 12:12, 6 April 2019

NORMAN MAILER’s Letters
142 Columbia Heights
Brooklyn 1, New York
March 17, 1964

Dear Marty,[1]}

Thanks for your letter. I’m not sure I’m going to go into a ski cabin next year, for it proved expensive, and full of headaches this season.

I still have my nose deep in the serial and I’m not sure I ever want to write a novel this way again. For cumulative fatigue may get in the way of finishing the book properly. I hope not, I think I still haven’t lost the book, but I’m feeling wrung out, dull, and smoking too many cigarettes these days. Forgive the lugubrious tone—I think I’m still recovering from the Clay-Liston fight. One of my secret dreams was to see Patterson and Liston have a great third fight.

Best for now,
Norman
This page is part of
An American Dream Expanded.

Notes

  1. Mailer’s letter to Martin Peretz, Now editor-in-chief of The New Republic, Peretz (1939-) was a professor at Harvard when Mailer met him in the early 1960s. Mailer watched Cassius Clay, now known as Muhammad Ali (1942-), defeat Sonny Liston for the heavyweight championship in Miami on 25 February 1964}