Norman Mailer: Works and Days/Bibliography/Criticism: Difference between revisions

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* {{Anchor|Leeds (2002)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |date=2002 |title=The Enduring Vision of Norman Mailer |url= |location=Bainbridge Island, Wash. |publisher=Pleasure Boat Studio |ref=harv }} Examination of Mailer’s later works, including an interview with Mailer, and a deft descriptive chapter, “The Critical Climate: Books on Mailer.”
* {{Anchor|Landow (1986)}}{{cite book |last=Landow |first=George P. |date=1986 |title=Elegant Jeremiahs: The Sage from Caryle to Mailer |url= |location=Ithaca, NY |publisher=Cornell University Press |pages=101–104, 128–129, 144–150 |isbn= |author-link= }} Careful tracing of the pattern of definition, revilement, warning and visionary promise in Mailer, Joan Didion, Tom Wolfe and earlier writers such as John Ruskin and Henry David Thoreau.
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1969)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |date=1969 |title=[[The Structured Vision of Norman Mailer]] |url= |location=New York |publisher=NYU Press |ref=harv }} First major study of Mailer’s work; valuable for its analysis of ''An American Dream'' ([[65.7]]), and consideration of ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]) and ''Deaths for the Ladies (and Other Disasters)'' ([[62.3]]).
* {{Anchor|Langbaum (1970)}}{{cite book |last=Langbaum |first=Robert |date=1970 |chapter=Mailer's New Style |title=The Modern Spirit: Essays on the Continuity of Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Literature |url=https://archive.org/details/modernspiritessa00lang |location=New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages= |isbn=147–163 |author-link= }} Rpt: [[#Bloom (1986)|Bloom (1986)]]. Important essay on the evolution of Mailer’s “hallucinated realism.”
 
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1992)}}{{cite journal |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |date=1992 |title=Boxing as a Moral Paradigm in the Works of Norman Mailer |url= |journal=The New Review |volume=1 |issue=September/October |pages=12–16 |access-date= }} The most complete discussion of the topic.
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1991)}}{{cite journal |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |authormask=1 |date=1991 |title=Mailer and Marilyn: Prisoners of Sex |url= |journal=North Dakota Quarterly |volume= |issue=winter |pages=110–117 |access-date= }} “The coherence of Mailer’s vision of [Marilyn] Monroe, of women, and of heterosexual love.”
* {{Anchor|Leeds (2002)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |authormask=1 |date=2002 |title=The Enduring Vision of Norman Mailer |url= |location=Bainbridge Island, Wash. |publisher=Pleasure Boat Studio |ref=harv }} Examination of Mailer’s later works, including an interview with Mailer, and a deft descriptive chapter, “The Critical Climate: Books on Mailer.”
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1969)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |date=1969 |authormask=1 |title=[[The Structured Vision of Norman Mailer]] |url= |location=New York |publisher=NYU Press |ref=harv }} First major study of Mailer’s work; valuable for its analysis of ''An American Dream'' ([[65.7]]), and consideration of ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]) and ''Deaths for the Ladies (and Other Disasters)'' ([[62.3]]).
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1994)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |authormask=1 |chapter=Tough Guy Goes Hollywood: Mailer and the Movies |date=1994 |title=Take Two: Adapting the Contemporary American Novel to Film |editor-last=Lupack |editor-first=Barbara Tepa |url= |location=Bowling Green, OH |publisher=Popular Press |pages=154–168 |access-date= }} Most nuanced discussion of the adaptation of ''Tough Guys Don’t Dance'' ([[84.17]]) to the screen.
* {{Anchor|Lehan (1973)}}{{cite book |last=Lehan |first=Richard |date=1973 |title=A Dangerous Crossing: French Literary Existentialism and the Modern American Novel |url=https://archive.org/details/dangerouscrossin00rich |location=Carbondale |publisher=Southern Illinois University Press |pages=81–95 |isbn= |author-link= }} Mailer’s cosmology as an existential recreation.
* {{Anchor|Lehan (1973)}}{{cite book |last=Lehan |first=Richard |date=1973 |title=A Dangerous Crossing: French Literary Existentialism and the Modern American Novel |url=https://archive.org/details/dangerouscrossin00rich |location=Carbondale |publisher=Southern Illinois University Press |pages=81–95 |isbn= |author-link= }} Mailer’s cosmology as an existential recreation.
* {{Anchor|Leigh (1990a)}}{{cite journal |last=Leigh |first=Nigel |date=1990 |title=Getting It Wrong: The Cinema of Norman Mailer |url= |journal=Journal of American Studies |volume=24 |issue=3 |pages=399–413 |access-date= }} Comment on Mailer’s films and those made from his novels.
* {{Anchor|Leigh (1990a)}}{{cite journal |last=Leigh |first=Nigel |date=1990 |title=Getting It Wrong: The Cinema of Norman Mailer |url= |journal=Journal of American Studies |volume=24 |issue=3 |pages=399–413 |access-date= }} Comment on Mailer’s films and those made from his novels.