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  • Continues work on “the Egyptian novel.” Summers in Mt. Desert, ME.
    374 bytes (51 words) - 12:59, 2 June 2019
  • |File:1988 NM in Miami.jpg|NM at Miami Bookfair International, 1988. {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    442 bytes (55 words) - 15:06, 3 June 2019
  • ...ovel, ''A Transit to Narcissus'' ([[78.2]]), is published by Howard Fertig in January. ...ally becomes Mailer's secretary and continues in that role until her death in 2006.
    757 bytes (105 words) - 13:01, 2 June 2019
  • |File:1985 NM.jpg|NM in 1985. |File:1985 NM bourbon.jpg|The bourbon portrait, 1985.
    524 bytes (74 words) - 16:30, 22 September 2020
  • ...3]], [[71.21]] for contemporaneous comment, and Willie Morris’s ''New York Days'' (New York: Little Brown, 1993) for a retrospective discussion. {{1970s|state=expanded}}
    844 bytes (108 words) - 11:05, 18 December 2018
  • ...rman Mailer|Mailer]] meets Barbara Norris (later [[Norris Church Mailer]]) in Arkansas through his army friend “Fig” Gwaltney. ...in ''Playboy''. It is the last of eight consecutive books in which he uses the third person to depict himself, a technique called [[Wikipedia:Illeism|ille
    965 bytes (141 words) - 11:09, 2 June 2019
  • {{1970s|state=collapsed}} [[Category:Days]]
    598 bytes (83 words) - 15:12, 7 January 2019
  • ...Mervyn Kurlansky and [[w:Jon Naar|Jon Naar]]) is published simultaneously in ''Esquire'' and book form. ...fight in Zaire which Ali wins by a knockout in the eighth round to regain the championship.
    939 bytes (139 words) - 11:08, 2 June 2019
  • In January, testifies at the trial of the “Chicago Seven.” ...}} is awarded Harvard University's Signet Society Medal for Achievement in the Arts.
    995 bytes (148 words) - 10:41, 2 June 2019
  • ''An American Dream'' ([[65.7]]) is serialized in ''Esquire'', January-August, with {{NM}} completing each chapter six weeks ...o for ''Esquire''. “In the Red Light” ([[64.20]]), his account, appears in the November issue.
    747 bytes (104 words) - 10:23, 2 June 2019
  • In February and March, {{NM}} attends meetings and writes statements in support of [[w:Salman Rushdie|Salman Rushdie]]. ...the Emerson-Thoreau Medal for distinguished achievement in literature from the [[w:American Academy of Arts and Sciences|American Academy of Arts and Scie
    722 bytes (103 words) - 15:08, 3 June 2019
  • On 25 February, {{NM}} is awarded the Gold Medal for Literature by the National Arts Club. ...er, he profiles presidential candidate [[w:Jimmy Carter|Jimmy Carter]] for the ''New York Times Magazine''.
    1 KB (157 words) - 16:26, 22 September 2020
  • ...esident Nixon “the living embodiment of Uriah Heep,” and implicates him in the death of four students at Kent State University. See [[68.8]], [[70.9]]–[ {{1970s|state=expanded}}
    657 bytes (88 words) - 18:33, 17 December 2018
  • On 25 May, [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]] receives a $1,500 award from the National Institute of Arts and Letters. ...November issue. The essay is generally seen as one of foundation stones of the New Journalism.
    1 KB (172 words) - 11:55, 30 December 2018
  • ..., but because of financial problems he never completed a final version and the film was produced by Paul Gregory for Warner Brothers, “with very inferio {{1970s|state=expanded}}
    687 bytes (96 words) - 13:35, 21 December 2018
  • ...Cannes Film Festival|Cannes Film Festival]]. On 16 September, it premieres in New York. Reviews are mixed; it wins an [[w:Independent Spirit Award for Be |File:1986 NM in Ptown.jpg|NM in Provincetown while filming ''TGDD'', 1986. Photo by Ken Regan.
    859 bytes (120 words) - 12:20, 10 June 2020
  • ...irected by [[Lawrence Schiller|Schiller]], airs in November. Mailer writes the screenplay. |File:1982 NM in NYC.jpg|NM in NYC, 1982.
    911 bytes (122 words) - 12:04, 10 June 2020
  • In June, {{NM}} purchases a house in Provincetown, 565 Commercial Street, where he will live with Beverly and th ...eads: “To Lyndon B. Johnson, whose name inspired young men to cheer for me in public.” He speaks at several anti-Vietnam War rallies this year.
    933 bytes (131 words) - 13:32, 23 November 2019
  • ..., tempting the evil eye. Mailer says that wearing jeans in temple offsets “the perfect day.” {{1970s|state=expanded}}
    837 bytes (129 words) - 10:10, 30 May 2020
  • ...out in a few years, but {{NM}} is prescient: the Watergate break-in occurs in June. ...print. It is the first of a string of biographies Mailer will publish over the next thirty years.
    1 KB (213 words) - 11:27, 10 June 2020
  • {{NM}} begins work on what for the next several years will be called “the Egyptian novel,” later published as ''Ancient Evenings'' ([[83.18]]). ...rrears to the I.R.S, he speaks at more than 20 colleges to earn money over the year.
    2 KB (239 words) - 10:50, 2 June 2019
  • ...after Mailer and several others in the literary community write letters to the parole board attesting to [[w:Jack Abbott (author)|Abbott]]’s literary ab ...and sentenced for the crime. Mailer attends his trial, and is attacked by the media for his sponsorship of Abbott.
    984 bytes (157 words) - 13:12, 2 June 2019
  • ...ngthen Nixon’s hand.” He characterizes Nixon’s fears of losing the war as “the babblings of a Chekovian character.” See [[68.8]], [[70.8]]–[[70.10]]. {{1970s|state=expanded}}
    824 bytes (109 words) - 18:37, 17 December 2018
  • ...iler]] made to Mike Wallace on is TV program two days after the stabbing. “The knife to a juvenile delinquent is very meaningful. You see. It’s his swor {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    512 bytes (72 words) - 13:04, 9 December 2018
  • ...Brooklyn apartment, after divorcing [[w:Jeanne Campbell|Jeanne Campbell]] in Juarez, Mexico on 16 December. ...d the chair was airbrushed out when the same photo is used on the cover of the 1964 Bantam paperback edition.
    1 KB (233 words) - 10:17, 2 June 2019
  • ...lage Gate, three days after winning the Pulitzer Prize for ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]). Rpt: [[69.80]]. See [[69.30]]. {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    529 bytes (70 words) - 19:17, 16 December 2018
  • ...for the first time in March; returns with [[Norris Church Mailer|Norris]] in June. In June, he receives an Honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Mercy College in White Plains, NY.
    1,016 bytes (154 words) - 19:15, 6 June 2019
  • ...us stories as bookends: one about [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]]’s first days in the 112th Cavalry and another about going to a Brooklyn bar with Truman Capote. {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    585 bytes (79 words) - 09:40, 23 December 2018
  • ...of State [[w:George Shultz|George P. Shultz]] to speak without consulting the board of PEN. ...'Of Women and Their Elegance'' ([[80.15]]), is staged by the Actors Studio in New York with [[Kate Mailer]] as Marilyn Monroe.
    1 KB (171 words) - 09:41, 2 April 2019
  • ...es on Politics, Sex, God, Boxing, Morality, Myth, Poker and Bad Conscience in America'' ([[06.2]]). In August, ''Letters on ''An American Dream'', 1963-69'' ([[04.7]]), a collect
    1 KB (192 words) - 11:35, 10 June 2020
  • ...days than on others.” Rpt: As the second part of “In Search of the Devil” in [[82.16]] (partial). See [[75.1]]. {{1970s|state=expanded}}
    1 KB (139 words) - 13:33, 20 December 2018
  • ...decided to use the word fug before the book was even begun. In those days the big brother of fug was simply not ready for public hire.” Rpt: [[14.3]]. {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    663 bytes (88 words) - 17:23, 16 December 2018
  • ...ed. There’s enough in that one work, an expression of his best pieces over the years . . . to keep my mind interested for many a year.” See [[81.16]], [ {{1970s|state=expanded}}
    2 KB (301 words) - 11:26, 15 February 2021
  • ...carried out shortly after his conviction. He is executed by a firing squad in January 1977. ...d for the National Book Critics Circle Award, and wins the Best Major Work in Fiction Award from ''Playboy''.
    2 KB (262 words) - 13:05, 2 June 2019
  • ...([[91.26]]) and explained, “When I’m writing a novel, I work at least 200 days a year, maybe 250. I write about five or six pages a day.” {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    699 bytes (102 words) - 13:30, 9 March 2019
  • ...m. Mailer also collaborated with Angelo Badalamenti on one of the songs in the film: “You’ll Come Back (You Always Do).” See [[84.17]], 1986 and 198 {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    770 bytes (106 words) - 18:32, 8 March 2019
  • In January, testifies on behalf of William Burroughs's novel, ''Naked Lunch'', ...write a preface to Torres’s biography of Muhammad Ali, ''Sting Like a Bee: The Muhammad Ali Story''.
    1 KB (230 words) - 10:36, 2 June 2019
  • On 14 April, ''[[The Executioner’s Song]]'' wins the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. In November, {{NM}} divorces [[w:Beverly Bentley|Beverly Bentley]], marries an
    1 KB (236 words) - 13:09, 2 June 2019
  • ...ne''. In it he discusses at length his years at Harvard, and also explains the origins of ''Ancient Evenings'' ([[83.18]]). ...t the novel climbs to number six on the ''New York Times'' bestseller list in mid-May.
    2 KB (238 words) - 14:51, 3 June 2019
  • ...in Hollywood are going to commit suicide.” Rpt: Mailer included an excerpt in ''Maidstone: A Mystery'' ([[71.28]]). See [[68.15]]–[[68.17]], [[68.28]], {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    860 bytes (123 words) - 13:29, 16 December 2018
  • ''Wild 90'' premieres 7 January, and ''Beyond the Law'' 2 April. ...and enthusiastic reviews, including a front page review by Alfred Kazin in the ''New York Times Book Review'' on 5 May.
    2 KB (250 words) - 11:31, 10 June 2020
  • ...as the work of a man with a disordered mind.” Mailer was released after 17 days. {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    897 bytes (141 words) - 13:02, 9 December 2018
  • ...Early Training,” of “The Alpha Manuscript”) describes a lunch at “21.” In the final version, Mailer makes several small but significant changes. See [[41 {{1970s|state=collapsed}}
    1,015 bytes (150 words) - 13:53, 9 March 2019
  • ...written on scraps of paper when Mailer was drinking, which he did a lot of in [[1961]]–62. In late February, divorces [[w:Adele Morales|Adele]] in Juarez, Mexico.
    2 KB (261 words) - 10:15, 2 June 2019
  • ...nducted partly in Brooklyn and partly in London, where Mailer traveled for the 15 October publication of ''Tough Guys Don’t Dance'' ([[84.17]]), [[Norma ...hose joke situations where they give Popeye the can of spinach. It took 61 days.|author=Mailer|source=84.24}}
    977 bytes (157 words) - 09:16, 26 December 2018
  • ...after 127 performances. {{NM}} underwrites the production and loses money. The cast includes his wife [[w:Beverly Bentley|Beverly]], ex-wife [[w:Adele Mor ...co” (mid-November); makes two experimental films, ''Wild 90'' and ''Beyond the Law'', co-produced by his close friend, Buzz Farbar.
    2 KB (279 words) - 17:29, 15 April 2019
  • ...blished by this firm. It is later nominated for the National Book Award in the sciences category. ...ch ''Harper’s'', which displeases the magazine’s owners and contributes to the resignation of its editor, Willie Morris.
    3 KB (445 words) - 10:47, 2 June 2019
  • ...iege of Chicago'' ([[68.25]]) is a finalist for the National Book Award in the history and biography category. ...t Wagner wins, only to lose to Independent Party candidate John Lindsay in the general election.
    2 KB (351 words) - 15:50, 10 June 2020
  • ...world know that Mailer influenced the growth of graffiti. And graffiti is the art of deconstruction.  ...r in 1973 writing ''[[The Faith of Graffiti]]'' and then I think of all of the years I spent painting my name and obsessed with graffiti, and I wonder “
    2 KB (318 words) - 10:06, 20 May 2022
  • ...rk: New American Library, late October, softcover. Nonfiction narrative on the 1972 political conventions, 229 pp., $1.50.==== ...of Books'' ([[72.20]]); [[76.5]]; with an introduction by John Leonard in the first hardcover and (simultaneous) softcover editions. New York: Arbor Hous
    3 KB (420 words) - 13:19, 25 December 2018
  • ...word became part of his chapter on the occult in his book about writing, ''The Spooky Art''. ...in Brooklyn Heights in those days, and Mr. Mailer’s brownstone was across the street from where Judith lived and about a block from my apartment.
    7 KB (1,267 words) - 18:03, 7 July 2020
  • ...nfeld and Nicolson, October. Nonfiction narrative on the anti-war March on the Pentagon, 317 pp., $5.95.}} ...y Bentley|Beverly]]; An acknowledgment to Sandy Charlebois for work beyond the call of duty.”
    8 KB (1,010 words) - 09:34, 24 June 2020
  • ...Lennon is also writing a memoir, “Getting on the Bus: Mailer’s Last Years in Provincetown,” which chronicles his experiences with Norman Mailer.}} with me and talking about the state of Mailer Studies, which is obviously a
    46 KB (8,093 words) - 18:08, 1 March 2021
  • ...n ''Drunken Boat'' 6 (Spring 2004). Cross-posted here with permission from the editor and Barry H. Leeds. See [[96.4]].}} ...nded ''[[The Naked and the Dead]]''. My father, particularly impressed by “The Time of Her Time,” gave me ''[[Advertisements for Myself]]''. I still hav
    25 KB (4,502 words) - 07:39, 11 March 2019
  • ...he following has been incorporated into ''[[NM:WD|Norman Mailer: Works and Days]]''.|url=http://prmlr.us/mr13zin}} ...te=2018 |chapter=''An American Dream'' |title=Norman Mailer: Four Books of the 1960s |editor-last=Lennon |editor-first=J. Michael |location= |url=https://
    41 KB (5,384 words) - 16:27, 30 April 2021
  • ...lume 9, 2015/</span>Introduction to Taschen Edition of ''Superman Comes to the Supermarket''}} ...orman’s Mailer’s classic 1960 ''Esquire'' essay on JFK, “Superman Comes to the Supermarket.”|url=https://prmlr.us/mr15lenn}}
    13 KB (2,076 words) - 17:24, 18 September 2020
  • ...dentify key references to the worlds (and ''demimondes'') Mailer has moved in, sometimes with reference to him, sometimes not. This section is far from e ...k= }} Historical chronicle of major literary developments and critiques of the most significant post-World War II writers, including Mailer.
    26 KB (3,633 words) - 12:29, 1 June 2021
  • ...ering Norris: Excerpts from an Unpublished Account of Norman Mailer’s Last Days}}__NOTOC__ ...ris is on almost every page, and it was easy to select three dozen entries in which she is described and/or quoted. Note: [[Norris Church Mailer]] is ide
    29 KB (5,361 words) - 09:48, 5 July 2020
  • ...iews, commentary, discussions, and other rare content by Norman Mailer and the people who knew him best. This archive currently runs from 2015 though 2018 ...er’s ’60s ambitions, ''[[The Deer Park]]'', Picasso, and ''[[The Naked and the Dead]]''. || [https://archive.org/details/nms-podcast-1 Archive] || [https
    22 KB (3,167 words) - 11:07, 29 July 2019
  • ...-size:22px;">''The Mailer Review''/Volume 5, 2011/</span>Norman Mailer and the Novel 2.0}} ...:Main Page|GRLucas]]. I would also like to elicit comments and feedback on the ideas I attempt to explore within.}}|url=https://prmlr.us/mr11luca}}
    45 KB (7,149 words) - 09:45, 20 September 2020
  • ...e final chapter, when Rojack confronts Kelly in his penthouse apartment in the Waldorf Towers. ...bestseller list on 11 April 1965.</ref> and went through several printings in both hard and soft cover. It has been translated into several languages and
    28 KB (4,564 words) - 16:11, 28 May 2020
  • ..., but restrained by the metes and bounds of reality. The next, he could be the celebrated novelist, startlingly fresh, daring and powerful. He could reach ...rd while in the background arose a damnable Asian war that left us mocking the principles, self-reliance and patriotism of our parents and their parents,
    36 KB (6,105 words) - 10:33, 25 June 2021
  • ...y of possibility. [[w:Lee Harvey Oswald|Lee Harvey Oswald]], as he appears in ''[[Oswald’s Tale]]'', was a loser’s loser whose chance of fame would a ...emed then to stand at noon. After the fall of John Kennedy in Dealey Plaza the shadows kept lengthening.
    24 KB (4,096 words) - 09:05, 4 July 2021
  • ...this paper was given at the 2008 Norman Mailer Conference, October 16–18, in Provincetown, MA.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr03vin}} ...fn|The music parallel to Eliot’s ''Four Quartets'' is sometimes said to be the “late” quartets of Beethoven, but Kenner (relying on information from H
    51 KB (8,331 words) - 09:53, 23 June 2021
  • ...on & Schuster on October 15, 2013. This interview took place over two days in late July 2013.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr13sipi}} '''Sipiora''': When and where did you meet Norman for the first time? What were your first impressions of him, both as a person and a
    102 KB (18,334 words) - 07:38, 6 July 2020
  • ...ive this reader, and thousands of other readers, Norman Mailer, a trace of the man.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr03mar}} blood sport, a voyeur’s dream. When I proposed to review the four central
    70 KB (11,273 words) - 17:43, 2 July 2021
  • ...ts, inviting comparisons between his reporting of political campaigns with the reporting of Hunter Thompson.|url=http://prmlr.us/mr13mos}} ...stic strategies to meet the challenge of creating compelling narratives in the relative absence of real-life drama.
    33 KB (4,929 words) - 07:01, 15 March 2021
  • ...de in order to begin a final revision of ''The Deer Park'', which Putnam’s—the seventh publisher to consider it—accepted for fall publication. ...of the duality of human identity, discussed at length in ''Lipton’s'', as the Alpha-Omega theory of Kittredge Gardiner, a CIA analyst.}}
    33 KB (5,221 words) - 09:25, 15 July 2022
  • ...ressed edition of the journal to be published in the future and to include the Mailer-Lindner correspondence. [This system has been updated to correspond ...s. The true history of the mind is not preserved in learned volumes but in the living mental organism of everyone.|author=[[w:Carl Jung|Carl Jung]]|source
    64 KB (10,074 words) - 10:53, 17 May 2021
  • {{byline|first=Allen |last=Ahearn |abstract=An examination of the dimensions, complications, and rewards of collecting works by Norman Mailer ...t good art provokes strong feelings—positive or negative. Well, if that is the measure, I would say that Norman Mailer was
    83 KB (10,805 words) - 10:16, 28 June 2021
  • ...he 2009 edition of ''[[MR09|The Mailer Review]]'', so the “essay” below is the setup for that chapter, as well as for chapters — one each — on ...d there is no Truth in us.|author=Betty Jean Craige|source=''Relativism in the Arts''}}
    57 KB (8,513 words) - 07:22, 12 October 2020
  • ...ont-size:22px;">''The Mailer Review''/Volume 3, 2009/</span>Norman Mailer: The Magician as Tragic Hero}} {{Byline|last=Begiebing|first=Robert J.|abstract=A detailed examination of the reception and importance of Norman Mailer’s novel, ''[[Ancient Evenings]]
    135 KB (22,498 words) - 10:03, 11 October 2020