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{{user sandbox|plain=yes}}
{{user sandbox|plain=yes}}
SOME PRELIMINARY SPECULATION ON NORMAN MAILER'S LEGACY reminds
me of a media-fixed auto derby that has already predetermined a Mailer finish as a questionable non-winner at the starting-gate.


Such derby flux began with the news of Mailer’s recent demise and
These developments fed the early LQ verdict in the January 2008 ''Smithsonian'', a print-medium legacy bible. The presumptive judge, Lance Morrow,dissects Mailer’s “huge ego” and finds it “unpleasant” and “poisonous.”Thus, Mailer “[I]n his own ways he embodied America’s worst faults: selfindulgence, bullying, sense of entitlement, irrelevant belligerence, the obnoxious American self-importance that is a corrupted Emersonianism—Emerson without the sweetness, the calm, the brains, the transcendence”(97).Such deconstruction gets a body English treatment when Morrow refers to a 1994 Valentine’s Day incident at Carl Bernstein’s fiftieth birthday party.Mailer was about to commit a social atrocity and was likened to a madcap Existential killer-driver:
became fast-tracked into obvious truth that Mailer’s Legacy Quotient (LQ) is
unique in that his “character” supersedes and eclipses his canon of work A
writer’s behavior, in short, is all that matters to some critics. The LQ axiom,
in Mailer’s case, remains commonplace: character overshadows canon.


Imagine such absurdity, historically speaking. To hell with ''The Ring'',Wagner was such a rotter. And up the LQ of Will Shakespeare with his blank bio,
====Citations====
but down the LQ of the thuggish Ben Jonson. And give a zero read to Ezra
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Pound, that Fascist. And don’t forget that old goat, Theodore Dreiser, and his
whorehouse antics. And, yes, Papa Hemingway, that macho bundle of character flaws. Heraclitus said that “Character is Destiny.” Enter Norman Mailer,
a literary bundle of flux, perhaps destined to have his ego read more than his
books. Also enter the ubiquitous media that increasingly preside over a
nation of gawkers rather than readers.
 
In 1948, a curtain rose and out trots an unknown with a big war book, an
overnight best seller and a corresponding big-eyed media. What a readymade twosome, Mailer and the media, mutual enablers, and Norman Mailer
becomes America’s leading literary celebrity. Unlike his two nearest competitors, Truman Capote and Gore Vidal, Mailer was typecast as ruffian
extraordinaire—a 24/7 bully-brawler in salons and saloons, the epitome of
egghead violence. Overnight, Mailer became the undisputed bad boy of
American letters, so said the drooling, yet chiding media.
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